New Details About the Zinio Update

Today we learned a few new details about the March 10th update to Zinio, as well as some future enhancements to look forward to.

As you hopefully all know by now, the major change will be the elimination of the two-account sign-in process. Patrons will no longer need to login twice or access the Zinio consumer site to complete the check-out process and read their titles. All of their browsing and check-out activity will take place on our Zinio for Libraries site.Here are the details that are new (or clarified):

  • Our Zinio site will have messaging notifying patrons about the new app. (This is a completely different app from the current Zinio app, so there will not be an update notification for people who have already downloaded the existing app.)
  • The first time patrons sign in using the new app they will be prompted to select their country, state, and library.  We will be listed as “Pittsburgh Area Libraries (Allegheny County).”  After that step they will be prompted to select their specific library.  Users will only need to do this the first time they log in.
  • According to our rep, the iPad app is also for iPhone. However, the test site for the new Zinio for Libraries page lists the newly available apps as iPad and Android.  Hopefully they will change the wording to add iPhone to the list before the March 10th launch date, but we wanted to let you know, just in case.

Here’s what else we already shared about the update:

And finally, here’s what near-future enhancements we can look forward to:

  • By the end of March online reading should be possible on iOS, Android, and Windows 8 tablets.  Patrons will be able to immediately start reading their magazines in their browsers as long as they are connected to the internet. For offline reading they will still need to download the magazines.
  • A device detector will also be added at the end of the month, making it even easier for patrons to complete the check-out, downloading, and reading process.
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eResource Challenge Lite #5

Truly, spring is on the way! The calendar – and don’t forget Phil – said it will be so. Spring is associated with “renewal” – this may be your time to renew your commitment to the eResource Challenge Lite!

We congratulate Whitney W., February’s eResource Challenge Lite winner. Give us your response to March’s challenge in the comment box below – respond by March 17 – St. Patrick’s Day! – and you might be the lucky winner of our fabulous prizes.

This month’s challenge:

A patron comes in expecting your library to have old city directories. You don’t have physical copies but many are available elsewhere. Where?

Continue ReadingeResource Challenge Lite #5

Bookshelf Bamboozlement – My Most Frequent Overdrive Question

As Tech “Guru” at my library, I get all the Overdrive questions, and the most frequent one is this: “I have the book on my bookshelf, but it won’t let me read it!” I get this question at least a few times a week, as I’m sure many of you do as well.

Here’s how I answer it: “I know – it’s confusing, but there are TWO bookshelves. One is on your online account, showing you what you have checked out, but not yet downloaded. The other is in the App itself, with titles you have downloaded and can read.” Once I explain this, there more often than not seems to be a light-bulb moment, and the patron changes from frustrated Overdrive attempter to savvy Overdrive user. Two bookshelves – who knew?

“Online” Bookshelf:

Untitled

“App” Bookshelf:

app_chromebook_bookshelf_622x408

In future, perhaps Overdrive could rename one of the bookshelves – I suggest “Checkouts” on the online cart and “Bookshelf” on the App itself. Until then, this is the best way I have found to explain to patrons this constant conundrum. If you have found another good way to resolve the “two bookshelf” question, please share it!

Heather Blake – Western Allegheny Community Library

Continue ReadingBookshelf Bamboozlement – My Most Frequent Overdrive Question

Siyo! Tsalagis hiwonisgi? *

Have your patrons mastered Spanish, Italian and Pirate in Mango Languages? Challenge them to Mango’s newest language – Cherokee- a beautiful and endangered language (there are only 16,000 native speakers worldwide). The course was developed in partnership with the Cherokee Nation and the Tulsa City-County Library.

Mango has tweets, newsletter blurbs and other promotional materials ready for your library to promote Cherokee language learning at http://bit.ly/1DXYWz0

*[Hi! Do you speak Cherokee?]

Debi

ACLA

 

Continue ReadingSiyo! Tsalagis hiwonisgi? *