---------------------------------------- From: "Andreas Orphanides" <andreas_orphani...@ncsu.edu> Sent: Saturday, February 18, 2012 8:51 PM To: dtal...@preciserecall.com Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] CODE4LIB Digest - 12 Feb 2012 to 13 Feb 2012 (#2012-42)
> a redesign of the touchscreen is in the pipeline, and one of our primary goals is to make it more consistent with other > experiences that we offer (especially the mobile website) Mobile & kiosk seem like a good match within the overall library IA. Either will emphasize a subset of the whole package that's relevant in the specific user context, and I can well see the mobile user approaching the kiosk upon entering the library, so continuity there makes a lot of sense. > in the portion of the article you quote, I was really trying to say that the interface for the touchscreen was intended not to betray > the fact that it was really just a web browser running on an off-the-shelf computer. Sorry if I misrepresented that. I did get what you were saying, and I had almost the opposite thought -- that if users recognized the kiosk as showing a subset of the website specifically, it might build their overall mental model. I have no research to cite on that, but it's always interesting how the overall information package gets presented via the various options available and what priorities shape those decisions. A kiosk would be especially challenging to fit into an overall program, because it performs such a specific set of services -- topical notices, promotion, wayfinding, etc.