This is a collection of the links related to the brief presentation on History Trends that I am doing at the Massachusetts Library Association Conference tomorrow.
Facial Recognition
Picasa and other image management systems have facial recognition that can help identify and tag people in photographs. Systems need to be taught who people are, but the software can be very useful with historic images as well.
- Screenshot — Picasa screenshot showing a gallery of faces waiting to be identified
- Update To Google Picasa 3.6 With Face Recognition — From the MakeUseOf website
Mass. Memories Road Show
Mass Memories Road Show — Official site where you can search and browse images “The Mass. Memories Road Show is an initiative of the Massachusetts Studies Project at UMass Boston, co-sponsored by Mass Humanities and the Joseph P. Healey Library.”
Mass. Memories Road Show Presentation — Great presentation by Heather Cole, Assistant Director of the Mass. Memories Road Show
“Wakefield Then and Now” Photo Contest
“Wakefield Then & Now” Photo Contest — Contest announcement
“Wakefield Then & Now” Photo Contest Winners — Announcement of the winning photographs
“Wakefield Then & Now” — Flickr set
Corner of Water Street and Wakefield Avenue — Record for a then & now set in the library catalog
Names

Eastman Building, 1888 — Photograph of the Eastman Building in Melrose, Massachusetts, on Flickr
Jenny Greenwood — Photograph of the grave of Jenny Greenwood, 1851-1862, Laurel Hill Cemetery, Reading, Massachusetts, on Flickr
World War I Monument — Transcription of names and dates from monument in Hamilton, Massachusetts
Places
Boulevard Diner — Worcester Lunch Car Company #730, 1936, on Flickr
Revolution of 1689 — Photograph of Massachusetts Bay Colony Tercentenary Marker on Flickr
The Historical Marker Database — Crowdsourced database of historical markers around the world with transcribed text, photographs, longitude and latitude, categories and more

Dr. P.H. Peach, Dentist — Screenshot of old advertisement from a book in the Internet Archive on Flickr
Worcester History Images from the Internet Archive — Blog post
$5K homes in Mt. Pleasant, 1905 — From a set of historic images of Washington, DC by rockcreek on Flickr
Solving Mysteries
Hugh Butterworth — Flickr member phototrack123 and his wife buy old portrait photographs, identify the subjects and research the family with a goal of sending the photograph to descendents
Harry Montague as Captain Molyneux in “The Shaugraun” 1875 — Read the comments to see a group working together to identify the subject of this photograph
Unclaimed Persons — Volunteer genealogists work together to identify possible relatives for cases where the identity of the deceased is known but the next of kin is unknown
Mobile
MobileGenealogy.com — “Dedicated to news, reviews and information about mobile devices and genealogy software”
QR codes in use at the Powerhouse Museum — Linking exhibits to more information
Encyclopedia Virginia — Using Layar with the Encyclopedia’s geolocated content out in the real world
Wikitude — Another augmented reality browser that overlays information and images on your view of the world


An easy way to connect with your mobile users is to add a QR barcode with your contact information to your library website. Users can scan the barcode right from the screen to add your library to their contacts. This is faster than adding the library information by keying it into the phone’s contacts program, and the information added by scanning the barcode is likely to be more accurate and more complete than what would have been keyed in by hand (or thumb?) on a tiny keyboard.
You can use QR barcodes for all sorts of things, on and off your website. The one to the right is in the calendar format, and scanning it makes it easy for a mobile user to add a library event directly to their phone’s calendar program. QR barcodes are especially useful when you want to direct users to a service that’s specifically aimed at mobile devices users, like a reference by texting service, or the mobile version of your library’s catalog or databases.