"The idea is to display real-time information useful to users: now you can find pizza with his mobile phone, but nothing on the public service," said Hugues Aubin, Chargé de Mission the city of Rennes, in charge of the project."City of Rennes to 953 meters, services open Monday to Friday 9h-12h30, 14h-17h30" soon, walking in the streets, simply click the finger on his mobile phone to view the services located nearby, with all practical details.The capital of Brittany is not the only community to engage in new technologies and innovations of Web 2.0, as shown by the forum "Cap'Com" this week on the theme "Social networks, identities, territories" .Sites participatory type "wi-ki, social networks such as" facebook "or" twitter ", RSS feeds, blogs or Flashmobs become means" to organize the meeting, sharing, linking the discussion to public space private space ", as explained at the forum Fabien Eychenne, association Cities 2.0.Small towns such as Carcassonne, Issoire or Blagnac already have an Internet platform to engage in "social web" creating communities of interest and neighborhood to promote exchange of services such as carpooling."The private offer products ultraconsuméristes must be absolutely positioned to develop the public service of tomorrow and think of new tools for users," said Sophie Trouillet, special assistant of the Great Cities Project Hauts de Garonne.His team is working on setting up a "digital platform for open innovation" to produce real and virtual link in this territory inner-city suburb of Bordeaux."This will be done in a fortnight or three weeks," Frederic Payen ensures that the pilot project. Bluffing, the prototype of augmented reality, "MY R.For the project "Living in Rennes, all data published on the website of the municipality and in its handbook of 537 pages have been stockpiled and geo-tagged by Ni-Ji, a specialized company which is awaiting final clearance of Apple to launch the program on iPhone.A ", developed in partnership with Orange Labs, offers the same digital information by adding virtual objects to the landscape that the user sees in real time with the aim of its iPhone."Users no longer need a computer, it reduces the digital divide," said Hugues Aubin.Recently launched by the RATP, to locate underground stations in Paris and points of interest nearby, the system relies both on the phone's GPS to position the user and its electronic compass that determines the direction of the camera.For those without computers or smartphone, the urban promenade in Augmented Reality is conceived with portable screens available at sites selected by the municipality, such as large construction sites.For if about a third of the population has no access to a computer, nearly 59 million French, or 91.8% of them using a mobile phone, according to latest figures from the Regulatory Authority telecom (Arcep).The table with its interactive touch screen responsive to fingers or objects equipped with a microchip is another method of research on points of interest of a city and its information practices.