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AT&T 8525 Smartphone; Wordperfect Caveat; New York Advertising Rules; Photo Conversion; Acrobat 8

By Sara Skiff | Friday, August 17, 2007

Coming August 24, 2007 to Fat Friday: Jean Mahserjian reviews the AT&T 8525 smartphone, Ben Schorr discusses one minor misconception about Word and one major misconception about WordPerfect, Joshua Stein provides some further comments on his TechnoFeature about New York's Lawyer Advertising Rules, Dixon Robertson shares how he got 60 years worth of his father's photos into digital format, and Roy Ackerman discusses what it took in terms of phone calls and downloads to activate Acrobat 8. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Fridays, Fat Friday is a weekly newsletter that features a grab bag full of genuinely useful product reviews and tips on a wide variety of topics. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Backup/Media/Storage | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Fat Friday | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Online/Cloud | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

iCreate and the iHyperstyles Toolbar: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, August 8, 2007

In today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire, lawyer and legal technology legend Dennis Kennedy covers an easy-to-use document assembly program, a new case management program available online or in a client/server format, and a backup utility capable of backing up open database files. Don't miss the next issue.

Below you'll find one of the three articles from today's edition:

I Came, I Saw, I Created Legal Documents
By Dennis Kennedy

All legal documents are created in one of three ways — staring at a blank page, using an existing document as a model, or using document assembly software. A classic trilemma, staring at a blank page means you have to reinvent the wheel, using a model is prone to embarrassing copy and paste errors, and document assembly software is difficult to set up.

Fortunately, someone forgot to tell Esquire Innovations about document assembly software being difficult to set up. Esquire's iCreate 4.0 comes out of the box with many useful templates ready to go, including letters, memos, fax cover sheets, pleadings, agreements, Bates labels, address labels, envelopes, etc. You can easily tweak these templates as you see fit such as adding your logo and lawyers to your letterhead.

Of course, you can also use iCreate to build your own templates for any document type. The design philosophy behind iCreate is to enhance Microsoft Word (and Excel and PowerPoint), not force you to learn something entirely new. Nowhere is this philosophy more apparent than with iCreate's iHyperstyles Toolbar, which iCreate adds to Word. The iHyperstyles Toolbar turns the daunting and difficult job of working with Styles in Word into a much simpler process that enables your firm to standardize its approach to document formatting.

With the iHyperstyles Toolbar, everyone in your firm can create, modify, apply, and manage styles and paragraph numbering in Word. From the toolbar, you can create new numbering schemes and save them for use on other documents, apply headings, simplify the creation of tables of contents and authorities, and of course apply formatting. You can also apply multiple styles and numbering schemes in the same document, automate the handling of paragraphs, and clean up manually-typed documents.

iCreate's other features include QuickMerge, which integrates with the address books of Outlook, GroupWise, Lotus Notes, and InterAction to make the insertion of contact information seamless, iCreate Label, which creates any imaginable label size, icCalendar, which can grab an Outlook calendar and place it in Word, and iBatesLabel for Bates stamping.

As you might expect, iCreate integrates with popular document management systems such as Hummingbird, InterWoven, NetDocuments, and Worldox.

The company offers two purchasing options. If you need a full-blown document assembly tool for creating templates, you can of course purchase iCreate, which includes the iHyperstyles Toolbar. If you just want to make Word's Styles easier to use and standardize them across your firm, you can purchase the iHyperstyles Toolbar by itself. Learn more about iCreate and the iHyperstyles Toolbar.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Wednesdays, TechnoLawyer NewsWire is a weekly newsletter that enables you to learn about new technology products and services of interest to legal professionals. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Automation/Document Assembly/Macros | Backup/Media/Storage | Online/Cloud | Practice Management/Calendars | TL NewsWire | Utilities

BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide: Free eBook

By Neil J. Squillante | Monday, July 30, 2007

Blawgworld_tilt_c2_free_450

BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide is a free eBook. Actually, it's two eBooks in one PDF file.

BlawgWorld 2007 is the best way to explore and discover legal blogs (blawgs). It features 77 remarkable essays from 77 of the most influential blawgs. Each blogger handpicked their best essay of the year for inclusion in the eBook.

The 2007 TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide is a revolutionary new way to find Solutions to Problems your law firm is experiencing. Specifically, it contains 185 Problems and corresponding Solutions.

Each Problem is written in the form of a question from the point of view of a law firm and organized by topic. Topics include case management, depositions, discovery, document management, legal research, time-billing, and many more — 58 topics in all.

Download Our eBook Now
Our eBook is truly free. You click the link and it downloads. No registration hassles.

Download your copy of the eBook now.

And then watch our press conference.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Automation/Document Assembly/Macros | Backup/Media/Storage | BlawgWorld eBook | Business Productivity/Word Processing | CLE/News/References | Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Computer Accessories | Consultants/Services/Training | Copiers/Scanners/Printers | Desktop PCs/Servers | Dictation/OCR/Speech Recognition | Document Management | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Entertainment/Hobbies/Recreation | Furniture/Office Supplies | Gadgets/Shredders/Office Gear | Graphic Design/Photography/Video | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Legal Research | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | Monitors | Networking/Operating Systems | Online/Cloud | Practice Management/Calendars | Presentations/Projectors | Privacy/Security | TechnoLawyer | TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | TL Editorial | Transactional Practice Areas | Utilities

Drobo: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, June 13, 2007

In today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire, lawyer and legal technology legend Dennis Kennedy covers a consumer-friendly hard drive array, an online service for managing medical information used in litigation, and document comparison software that can compare anything to anything. Don't miss the next issue.

Below you'll find one of the three articles from today's edition:

Drobo Arigato Mr. Roboto
By Dennis Kennedy

What's the second most annoying aspect of hard drives after disk failure? Running out of disk space! With our office computers bulging from our own documents not to mention the documents of our clients, and our home computers experiencing a similarly expanding digital waistline thanks to music, movies, and photos, the traditional hard drive just doesn't cut it anymore.

But the world of storage beyond the hard drive is filled with acronyms like RAID, SAN, NAS, and other terms that are too complex for the average lawyer, leaving us between a rock and a hard drive.

Enter Data Robotics and its new consumer-friendly Drobo automated storage robot that manages data storage for you. It's designed to ensure that your data is protected and expandable. And it minimizes your need to understand the intricacies of data storage management.

Drobo is a USB 2.0 enclosure that houses up to four 3.5 inch SATA hard drives of any size and make you wish. You need not use all four drive slots initially. LEDs display the status of drives and their remaining capacity. If the lights are green, all is good. Red lights tell you to add or replace a drive. Yellow lights let you know that you are at 85% of capacity and it's time to add another drive or replace an existing drive with a larger one.

On your PC or Mac, Drobo shows up as one very large hard drive — up to 2 TB at which point it shows up as two hard drives. You use this space like a regular hard drive, but behind the scenes it mirrors, protects, and manages your data to provide redundancy in case one hard drive fails.

You don't have to select RAID levels, match hard drive sizes, or delve into network storage esoterica. Drobo's approach to data management speeds up data migration, switches you to other drives if a drive fails, and gives you quick access to new capacity when needed. Drives slide into Drobo without the need for special tools.

Drobo currently works with both PCs and Macs. Expect a Linux-compatible version later this year as well as a version with an eSATA interface. Drobo sells for $499. Learn more about Drobo.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Wednesdays, TechnoLawyer NewsWire is a weekly newsletter that enables you to learn about new technology products and services of interest to legal professionals. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Backup/Media/Storage | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | Online/Cloud | TL NewsWire

Treo Gripes (Plus iPhone Sync News); The Problem With CLE; WordPerfect Easier to Learn?; IntelliPoint 6.1 Review; Mozy Review

By Sara Skiff | Friday, June 8, 2007

Coming June 15, 2007 to Fat Friday: David O'Connell reviews the Treo and the three features that really "bug" him (plus our publisher discusses iPhone synchronization with case management software), John Sens discusses the problem with CLE (at least in Iowa and Minnesota), Celia Elwell explains which of the two word processors is easier to learn on the job, Aaron Morris reviews IntelliPoint 6.1  mouse software for its window-switching capabilities, and Daniel Schultz reviews his experience with Mozy online backup service. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Fridays, Fat Friday is a weekly newsletter that features a grab bag full of genuinely useful product reviews and tips on a wide variety of topics. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Backup/Media/Storage | Business Productivity/Word Processing | CLE/News/References | Coming Attractions | Computer Accessories | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Fat Friday | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Online/Cloud | Utilities

Date Modified; Two Greatest Legal Technology Innovations; Mozy v. Carbonite; Flame Bait; Paper LESS Critique

By Sara Skiff | Friday, March 9, 2007

Coming March 16, 2007 to Fat Friday: Barron Henley explains the dangers of relying on "date modified" in your document management system, Joe Hartley shares his top two legal technology innovations, Carroll Straus reviews Mozy for online backup (and shares what the company had to say about rival Carbonite), Peter Summerill discusses why the legal market could never be "friction free," and Chris Shows responds to Ross Kodner's renowned "Paper LESS" system. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Fridays, Fat Friday is a weekly newsletter that features a grab bag full of genuinely useful product reviews and tips on a wide variety of topics. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Backup/Media/Storage | Coming Attractions | Document Management | Fat Friday | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Online/Cloud | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

Catalog Your Backups; Review of Dragon with Acoustic Magic Microphone; Tracking Referrals; Secure Your Files During PC Repair; Oh No Not Again

By Sara Skiff | Friday, February 23, 2007

Coming March 1, 2007 to Answers to Questions: Thomas Stirewalt offers up some tips for cataloging files on backup CDs, Edward Poll reviews Dragon NaturallySpeaking 9 and his microphone of choice, Katrina Curfiss reviews PracticeMaster for tracking client referrals plus Tabs3 for integrated invoicing, William Tait shares two sure-fire ways to keep your files secure when in the hands of a technician, and David Stuckel adds his two cents to the Word v. WordPerfect debate. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published Thursdays, Answers to Questions is a weekly newsletter in which TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers (including you if you join TechnoLawyer). Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Backup/Media/Storage | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Computer Accessories | Dictation/OCR/Speech Recognition | Practice Management/Calendars | Privacy/Security | TL Answers

Enterprise Vault 7.0: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, February 14, 2007

In today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire, lawyer and legal technology legend Dennis Kennedy covers an FRCP-ready email archiving tool, a personalized news site that learns what you like, and a free suite of online services, including email at your own domain name. Don't miss the next issue.

Below you'll find one of the three articles from today's edition:

Vault into Email Bliss
By Dennis Kennedy
Email is essential, but the way we now use it serves as a textbook example of the law of unintended consequences. Its growing volume has produced a number of pain points. For example, how do you manage all your messages? How do you archive and search old messages? How do you handle bulging PST files? Do you find yourself deleting messages and attachments because you've reached the storage quota for your inbox? And what about email in discovery?

Symantec's Enterprise Vault 7.0 aims to solve these problems by providing and archiving tool for managing organizational data, including email, instant messages, and other content. Enterprise Vault's intelligent classification engines help you bring order to the growing chaos with a suite of helpful tools. As a result, you gain better control of data in a simpler manner with reduced storage costs.

Enterprise Vault offers a variety of useful tools. Automated management tools help you avoid annoying mailbox storage and size limitations. You can better manage PST files, expedite backups, and improve disaster recovery with centralized email management, and improve your ability to archive data. Archiving features enable you to store and retrieve email and other data in ways that meet your compliance and electronic discovery requirements. Archiving files may reduce your local storage requirements by 50 to 75%.

These tools automate the archiving of data in a number of useful ways, including content-based archiving. You might use the fifty predefined rules, pop-up menus to require users to select among pre-defined categories, or work in connection with your content or document management system. As a result, you can manage data based on your unique retention, deletion and compliance policies based on content, not just by senders and receivers. As you would expect, administrators have a lot of granular control over application of policies to individual users.

Enterprise Vault 7.0, the newest version, also offers a module for electronic discovery needs called the Discovery Accelerator, designed to help you with the new amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The Discovery Accelerator has three components to help you with predisclosure meetings, legal holds, and native file presentation. Users of Symantec's Information Foundation 2007 will appreciate the integration of Enterprise Vault with this security tool to help manage enterprise information policies.

Enterprise Vault 7.0 integrates with Microsoft's latest applications, including Exchange Server 2007 and Windows Rights Management Services, and enable you to search encrypted email and view email natively without using Exchange. Enterprise Vault also handles data from a wide range of content management and other commonly-used document management systems.

Enterprise Vault starts at about $40 per user license per year for 25 users. Learn more about Enterprise Vault 7.0.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Wednesdays, TechnoLawyer NewsWire is a weekly newsletter that enables you to learn about new technology products and services of interest to legal professionals. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Backup/Media/Storage | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Online/Cloud | TL NewsWire

MyOtherDrive: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, February 7, 2007

In today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire, lawyer and legal technology legend Dennis Kennedy covers an online file sharing and backup service, a new cost recovery tool for legal research, and an online task manager. Don't miss the next issue.

Below you'll find one of the three articles from today's edition:

No Problem, It's On My Other Drive
By Dennis Kennedy
The world has moved from file-storing to file-sharing. Even novice computer users have files on several computers, hard drives, USB drives, and, increasingly, online storage sites. Accessing, moving, and managing all of our files can become quite a chore. Plus we often want to send files too large for email inboxes. And let's not forget the importance of backing up all our files. What's a busy lawyer to do?

MyOtherDrive.com offers a suite of online file storage and sharing tools. It's a online storage site with a familiar Explorer-style interface, and a set of useful tools. If you have access to the Internet, you will have access to your files. Best of all, especially for lawyers, you can control who accesses your files — from the public to specific individuals.

MyOtherDrive.com began as a photo-sharing site, and offers a full set of photo-sharing tools. However, it handles all types of files — documents, PDFs, audio, and video. Simply join the service and upload your files. The site's viewers also let you preview files without downloading them.

MyOtherDrive.com sets itself apart from similar services in the ways you specify who can access your files. You can make files fully public or accessible only by you for backup purposes. You can share with specific individuals or groups, such as family, friends, colleagues, or clients. As you invite people to access your files, MyOtherDrive.com helps you build a "social network" with other members of MyOtherDrive.com. You can email hyperlinks to non-members so they can access your files.

The free version gives you 5GB of storage and 10GB/month of bandwidth. The "Pro" versions offer unlimited bandwidth and from 25GB to 200GB of storage at annual costs ranging from $19.99 to $99.99. Learn more about MyOtherDrive.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Wednesdays, TechnoLawyer NewsWire is a weekly newsletter that enables you to learn about new technology products and services of interest to legal professionals. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Backup/Media/Storage | Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Legal Research | Online/Cloud | TL NewsWire

NatiView Analytics 2.0: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, January 24, 2007

In today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire, lawyer and legal technology legend Dennis Kennedy covers new e-discovery review tool, an online backup service, and a free blog hosting service. Don't miss the next issue.

Below you'll find one of the three articles from today's edition:

E-Discovery Goes Native
By Dennis Kennedy

The new electronic discovery amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedures sounded the alarm for many lawyers. Among other things, the new rules place a strong emphasis on review of files in their native formats. In other words, Word documents should be reviewable as .doc files, not scanned and produced as .pdf or .tiff images. Native file format is uncharted territory for many litigators.

ACCESS Litigation Support Services' NatiVIEW Analytics 2.0 seeks to provide you with a toolbox for handling native file review. In doing so, it addresses the criticism about native file review not being practical. Indeed, ACCESS claims that NatiVIEW Analytics 2.0 costs less than traditional image-scanning in cases of all sizes, including those involving a massive number of documents.

NatiVIEW Analytics 2.0 grew out of ACCESS's experience handling hundreds of millions of pages of data in large litigation matters. Built on .NET and SQL and housed in a data facility with multiple redundancies and virtually unlimited bandwidth, NatiVIEW Analytics 2.0 is a secure, Web-based tool with review, search, annotation, and categorization tools designed for the average lawyer, not just power users. At its heart lies a native file review platform for large collections of documents.

Features include a centrally-managed rules-based workflow system with complete control over access rights, "smart auto-tagging" that groups related documents, customizable workspaces that enable you to view everything you need for a given task, the ability to search specific metadata fields, one-click translators for more than fifty languages, and the ability to append comments to documents in a thread-like manner and receive alerts when someone else adds to the thread.

NatiVIEW Analytics 2.0 works like an electronic container for your documents and corresponding metadata. You can even customize a view to display a document with the relevant metadata, tags, and comments, or search specific metadata fields. Language translations are stored as comments that you can easily compare to the original text.

Administrative features enable you to set up roles and permissions to control a user's rights to work with documents, monitor workflow, and provide a secure way for multiple parties to review the data collection. Reporting and audit tools facilitate project management and tracking.

For more information about pricing, including data hosting options, contact ACCESS Litigation Support Services. Learn more about NatiView Analytics 2.0.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Wednesdays, TechnoLawyer NewsWire is a weekly newsletter that enables you to learn about new technology products and services of interest to legal professionals. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Backup/Media/Storage | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | Online/Cloud | TL NewsWire
 
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