What’s the point of a tweeting mobile library?

17 December 2009   

@SutMobLib Twitter screenshot

Last week I launched @SutMobLib, a Twitter account that tweets the location of Sutton’s mobile library in real time. No, I’m not sitting here all day sending messages. A program does that automatically. Every time the library gets to a new stop it posts up its location.

@SutMobLib Bing Maps Twitter search screenshot

@SutMobLib on Bing Maps Twitter Search

The utility of such a thing isn’t immediately obvious. While I don’t like to generalise or assume too much, I suspect that the vast majority of mobile library users don’t use Twitter. So far a grand total of nine  people have signed up to follow @SutMobLib and most of those are various sock puppets of mine.

@SutMobLib Tweetie 2 screenshot

@SutMobLib on Tweetie 2 "nearby search" for iPhone

Unlike most Twitter accounts that belong to real people, @SutMobLib isn’t great for conversation. It’s even less intelligent and interactive than it looks. Anyone that wants to be reminded when the library is visiting their neighbourhood would be better off just putting the relevant day in their calendar.

@SutMobLib is useful because Twitter is now more than just a social network connecting people. It’s become a platform for realtime geospatial information, where things like the mobile library can post up what they’re doing and where they’re doing it, as they’re doing it.

Experienced Twitter users know that while half the power of Twitter is following people you’re interested in and conversing with them, the other half is reading realtime searches for keywords, phrases and hashtags. Recently, Twitter enhanced the power of its search by allowing members to post up their precise geographical location with each tweet, which other members can then discover by searching around an area rather than around a hashtag or topic.

So Twitter has become a radar. Tweetie 2, a Twitter client for the iPhone, allows users to search “Nearby” based on the user’s current location and shows a map covered with plotted tweets. Web users can do something similar using Bing Maps’ Twitter Search. The popular client TweetDeck shows pop-up maps underneath geotweets.

Realtime geospatial search brings a new dimension to finding out about the world. For the first time we can pull up live information about a place, whether that’s people’s conversations and observations or the solipsistic self-reporting of things that tweet like Sutton’s mobile library. Various urban annotation and virtual graffiti projects have existed before now but Twitter brings this capability to a mass-market social network with tens of millions of members. Through reading conversations about coffee in Soho or chemo at the Royal Marsden Hospital, our awareness of the world around us just got a great deal broader.

@SutMobLib TweetDeck geotweet

@SutMobLib showing as a geotweet in TweetDeck

For some, that will mean discovering, spontaneously and without specifically searching for it, that a friend — or the mobile library — is around the corner and might be pleased to see us. The world around us is constantly shifting, with opportunities and hazards popping up and then disappearing again, often without leaving a trace. Now we can see those traces. Serendipity is the spice of life and it’s just got a very big helping hand. Fire up your radar.

Further reading on where ambient intelligence is taking us:

Peter Morville, Ambient Findability
Malcolm McCullough, Digital Ground
Adam Greenfield, Everyware

Design theory  Software design  Sutton  Urban design

7 comments

  1. Julian Burgess

    Great idea, Twitter is perfect for this. I guess you could also produce KML, as that can have time/space information in, but Twitter is a more useless interface.

  2. julian burgess

    Whoops, more useful I meant.

  3. Diana Edmonds

    Love the idea …

  4. Twitted by MatthewMezey

    [...] This post was Twitted by MatthewMezey [...]

  5. Karl Roche

    Adrian, how is the van producing the tweetjects? Are they programmed just to go off at a certain time or linked to GPS or something else?

    Great idea. Much like the RedJet ferries on the Isle of Wight that a colleague of mine set-up.

    Any other plans, such as buses in the area?

  6. Adrian Short

    At the moment it’s just tweeting to a schedule but I’d be keen to have a crack at putting some hardware on the vehicle to tweet its actual position in real time.

    How do the ferries work?

    Buses sounds like a possibility. I’ll have a think about that. Twitter isn’t really a great platform for this kind of thing but it’s the best one I know of at the moment.

  7. Karl Roche

    We also have a twittering bus in Hursley so people don’t have to wait around for it.

    Also with the snow this week my daughters school has been closed and ParentMail because it was overloaded.. wish the schools looked in to Twitter too.

    The ferries were originally using public positioning data that all ships have to send out so they don’t crash. Some guy in Belgium I think was aggregating that data. So my co-worker came up with the idea just taking that and based on the updates it determines if the ferry is leaving or arriving at a port.

    It was originally set-up as a bit of fun by said co-worker but the company saw it and now have a proper system installed that doesn’t rely just on the goodwill of others.

    Fullish story in The Telegraph http://bit.ly/80Qz8x

    You can find Andy (the master inventor) on Twitter @andysc

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