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Fax-to-Email Security; Web-to-PDF Clipping Tips; File Shredder Review

By Sara Skiff | Thursday, October 1, 2009

Coming today to Answers to Questions: Darrell Stewart discusses security considerations when choosing a fax-to-email service, Ashley Hallene explains how to save Web pages with Adobe Acrobat Professional and PrimoPDF, and Philip Franckel reviews File Shredder for securely erasing hard drives. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive Answers to Questions
Do you believe in the wisdom of crowds? In Answers to Questions, TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers. This newsletter's popularity stems from the relevance of the questions and answers to virtually everyone in the legal profession. The Answers to Questions newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Business Productivity/Word Processing | Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Coming Attractions | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Privacy/Security | TL Answers | Utilities

DevonThink Review; Mac Web Clipping Tips; KeePass Password Safe Review; Word 2007 Fact Versus Fiction

By Sara Skiff | Thursday, October 1, 2009

Coming today to Answers to Questions: Stephen Lenzner reviews DEVONthink Pro and explains how to archive Web pages on a Mac, Christopher Spizzirri reviews KeePass Password Safe, and Sharmil McKee sets the record straight in Microsoft Word 2007. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive Answers to Questions
Do you believe in the wisdom of crowds? In Answers to Questions, TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers. This newsletter's popularity stems from the relevance of the questions and answers to virtually everyone in the legal profession. The Answers to Questions newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Business Productivity/Word Processing | Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Coming Attractions | Privacy/Security | TL Answers | Utilities

Document Management (Not); Billing Matters v. Timeslips; Philips Pocket Memo Review; ScrapBook for Firefox Review; Exercise Ball

By Sara Skiff | Thursday, September 3, 2009

Coming today to Answers to Questions: Michael Schley explains how his firm manages documents without true document management software, Michael Schwartz compares Time Matters integration with Timeslips versus Billing Matters, Ted Bartenstein reviews Philips' Pocket Memo digital recorders, Christopher Spizzirri reviews ScrapBook for Web clippings, and Steve Hall reviews his experience using an exercise ball as an office chair. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive Answers to Questions
Do you believe in the wisdom of crowds? In Answers to Questions, TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers. This newsletter's popularity stems from the relevance of the questions and answers to virtually everyone in the legal profession. The Answers to Questions newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Coming Attractions | Dictation/OCR/Speech Recognition | Document Management | Furniture/Office Supplies | Legal Research | Practice Management/Calendars | TL Answers

PBworks Legal Edition: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Neil J. Squillante | Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire covers an online collaboration suite for law firms (see article below), an online legal research and practice management application, a 27 inch LCD widescreen monitor, a Windows utility for inventorying PCs, and a GPS-based navigation app for the iPhone 3G and 3GS. Don't miss the next issue.

Collaborate Online Just Like the Big Boys

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In most industries, prices increase over time thanks to inflation and product improvements, cars being a prime example. But this law doesn't apply to technology. Prices tend to decrease even as functionality increases. As a result, large firms no longer have a monopoly on client-pleasing technologies — like online collaboration tools.

PBworks Legal Edition … in One Sentence
PBworks Legal Edition is an online collaboration suite for case management, client extranets, deal rooms, legal knowledgebases, and intranets.

The Killer Feature
You have probably experienced a visit from a consultant or sales representative who tries to persuade you to re-organize your firm's workflow to fit their product. While many law firms could benefit from fine-tuning, flexibility should go both ways.

While PBworks Legal Edition provides a general framework for online collaboration, the tools enable you to create your own custom workflows.

For example, suppose you store all of your notes and research in Microsoft Word files. PBworks Legal Edition enables you to import Word files into the Legal Knowledgebase. Once there, anyone in your firm can search them. On the other hand, if you prefer, you can place this information directly into the Legal Knowledgebase's wiki, which is also searchable.

PBworks Legal Edition also offers customizable templates. You can use these templates to ensure that everyone in your firm handles specific matters in a uniform manner. You can also create client-specific templates.

"Our goal for our legal customers is to help them get their work done more efficiently and effectively," PBworks CEO Jim Groff told us. "Enabling law firms to customize and standardize how they collaborate puts the focus on the work, rather than the technology."

Other Notable Features
The five components of PBworks Legal Edition — Legal Knowledgebase, Case Management, Client Extranet, Legal Intranet, and Electronic Deal Room — interconnect with one another when appropriate and offer full-text searching. Because PBworks Legal Edition resides on the Web, you use it within your Web browser and need not install software or buy servers.

As noted above, the Legal Knowledgebase offers a place to capture research. You can organize this information by client/matter if applicable. When you do so, you can access it from the Case Management component, which records all information related to a particular matter. This component also offers a Case Chronology, Tasks and Milestones, and automated email notifications for approaching deadlines.

The Legal Intranet serves as a storehouse for all internal records such as human resources. Similarly, the Client Extranet enables your clients to access key files and final deliverables. PBworks provides "enterprise-grade" security with the ability to restrict access to individual pages or files. You can also automatically remind clients of important dates such as depositions.

For matters that require collaboration with several parties, you can create an Electronic Deal Room, which differs from the Client Extranet by providing an Audit Log of all activity and even more granular control over who can access what.

What Else Should You Know?
You can use PBworks Legal Edition on a Mac or PC and also on a BlackBerry or iPhone. PBworks Legal Edition costs $50 per attorney per month with no minimum requirement (i.e., a solo would pay just $50 per month). Your assistants, paralegals, and other non-lawyer staff can use it for free. Learn more about PBworks Legal Edition.

How to Receive TechnoLawyer NewsWire
So many products, so little time. In each issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire, you'll learn about five new products for the legal profession. Pressed for time? The "In One Sentence" section describes each product in one sentence, and the "Killer Feature" section describes each product's most compelling feature. The TechnoLawyer NewsWire newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Online/Cloud | TL NewsWire

Working in the Cloud Plus 82 More Articles

By Neil J. Squillante | Monday, August 3, 2009

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 60 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Post of the Week. Here's a sample:

10 Things SharePoint Can Do for Your Firm

Closing the Client's File

Don't Let the Bar's Ethics Rules Scare You Offline

This issue also contains links to every article in the August 2009 issue of Law Technology News. Don't miss this issue or future issues.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. To stay on top of all the noteworthy articles published in blogs and other online publications you could either hire a research assistant or simply subscribe to BlawgWorld. The BlawgWorld newsletter has received rave reviews and is free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Coming Attractions | Document Management | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Practice Management/Calendars

SmallLaw: A Law Practice Survival Guide for the Involuntarily Solo

By Mazyar Hedayat | Monday, July 27, 2009

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Originally published on July 20, 2009 in our free SmallLaw newsletter.

If you hung out a shingle at a leisurely pace with cash reserves, strong credit, a book of business, and no regrets, dust off a copy of How to Start and Build a Law Practice by Jay Foonberg. The rest of you might want to keep reading, however. This installment of SmallLaw addresses the swelling ranks of the newly unemployed (law firm layoffs) and involuntarily self-employed (178 law schools, 40,000 graduates) who thanks to this year of breathtaking economic free-fall have decided to go solo.

Top 10 Solo Traps to Avoid …

As you read through the list below, keep these common traps in mind, as they represent the most palpable and often the most fatal blows to would-be sole practitioners:

10. Isolation, insecurity, fear.
9. High-maintenance clients.
8. Unrelenting competition.
7. Technology whiplash.
6. Employee nightmares.
5. Nowhere to turn for advice.
4. Underestimating costs (software and services).
3. Ethical quagmires.
2. Notoriously uneven cash-flow.
1. Deadbeat clients.

The Envelope Please …

By and large I've organized these tools based on cost, coverage, and effectiveness. I encourage you to try as many as you can and share your experience with your fellow solos. So let's get started.

Web Sites

The .com revolution ended over 10 years ago, so why is Web site development and hosting still a mystery? Explore free and low cost Web site resources before you agree to pay (and pay, and pay, and pay) for a site.

My Recommendations: Avvo, Justia, Template Monster.

Social Networks

When it comes to reaching prospects and other lawyers on social networks, I've lectured, written, and given presentations until I was blue in the face and worked up a whopping case of carpel-tunnel. So I guess one more mentioning won't hurt.

My Recommendations: Avvo, Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, JD Supra.

Blogs

Blogs developed from outlets for pure self-expression into "premium" services run by "legal blogging experts" (whatever that means). Frankly, I'm not convinced, so I split my vote between free and paid services. You be the judge.

My Recommendations: Blogger, TypePad, WordPress, LexBlog, Justia.

Software as a Service

Today you can manage complex recordkeeping, file management, billing, calendaring, task management, communications, and a dozen other vital functions on your iPhone. Ten years ago they said it would never happen, but we proved them wrong! Thanks, Google.

My Recommendations: Google Apps, Basecamp, Zoho, Clio, Rocket Matter, OpenOffice. (Bonus: Microsoft Office 2010 online next year).

Custom SaaS

In a perfect world you would only use tools suited to your practice. But the world isn't perfect. Luckily, customizable SaaS enables you to add, subtract, and modulate applications so that you don't have to pay for features you never use (Are you reading this Microsoft?).

My Recommendations: Google Apps, Basecamp, Advologix/Salesforce.com, Zimbra.

Research

Remember when the price of gas went down last summer? Remember when the cost of legal research subscriptions went down? Me neither. Even the Saudis get it so how come it costs more to review a Supreme Court decision today than it did 10 years ago?

My Recommendations: My Findlaw, Lexbe, LII (Cornell), Fastcase.

Communications

From email to instant messaging, conference calls to faxing, message management to call routing, the telecommunications market has proven to be almost as stubborn as the legal market when it comes to change. But change it has, and there are now more choices than ever.

My Recommendations: eFax, Google Voice, Free Conference Call, GoToMeeting.

Prospecting

Lawyer marketing often offends older lawyers used to a more genteel approach. Of course they didn't have to compete with 30,000 other unemployed graduates. Since you do, check out these sites designed to help you get a jump on the competition.

My Recommendations: LawFiles, Avvo, LegalMatch, Twitter (yes, Twitter).

Billing

Sure it takes money to make money. But why so much? Since the days of Red Gorilla (bonus if you remember that .com darling), Web-based billing has been the fevered dream of a madman. Or at least it was until a surge of do-it-yourself timers and time-keeping services hit the market.

My Recommendations: Tempo, Clio, Rocket Matter, Bill4Time, TimeSolv, Chrometa, MonetaSuite, Proximiti. (The last three are experimental but worth trying.)

Document Backup and Sharing

Making files ubiquitous has proven to be harder than it sounds. Limitations on bandwidth, file-size, extensions, and a variety of other factors have conspired to keep file sharing clumsy and uninspired. Luckily, you have options.

My Recommendations: Dropbox, Google Docs, Docstoc, JD Supra, Microsoft Live Office. (Bonus: Office 2010 will have a free online component.)

Collaboration

"Collaboration" sites let you display information like a Web host, share and exchange documents like Google Docs, and interact with one another like a social network. So why give them a separate category? Because most of the time these sites represent a useful compilation of features perfect for everything from ad hoc bar association groups to teams of lawyers working on a case with national scope.

My Recommendations: Basecamp, Clio Client-Connect, Groupsite, Google Sites.

Online Chat

With the aid of the ubiquitous instant messaging client, you'll never need to yell out the office door at your associates again. But you will anyway. Just saying.

My Recommendations: Google Talk, MSN, AIM.

Onward and Upward …

If I've left anything out I apologize, but I feel confident that this list should stand you in good stead, at least for now. If you have suggestions of your own please let me (and everyone else) know.

Written by Mazyar M. Hedayat of M. Hedayat & Associates, P.C.

How to Receive SmallLaw
Small firm, big dreams. Published first via email newsletter and later here on our blog, SmallLaw provides you with a mix of practical advice that you can use today, and insight about what it will take for small law firms like yours to thrive in the future. The SmallLaw newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Backup/Media/Storage | Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Graphic Design/Photography/Video | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Legal Research | Online/Cloud | SmallLaw | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

SugarSync: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Neil J. Squillante | Thursday, July 23, 2009

Today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire covers a backup and sync service (see article below), an online service for securing digital signatures on documents, a Web site that helps you make decisions, a network security camera, and a GPS-based note-taking app for iPhone. Don't miss the next issue.

Sweeten Up Your Backups

For a supposedly boring technology, backup software sure has received lots of media attention lately. There's a simple explanation. A talented public relations professional can make virtually any topic appear fascinating. Now that backup software has become a big business, big businesses have bought all the backup software companies — and invested heavily in public relations. So here we are reporting on the the latest media darling — but it may very well deserve all the hype.

SugarSync … in One Sentence
Sharpcast's SugarSync offers online backup of your files and file synchronization among multiple PCs and smartphones.

The Killer Feature
Increasingly, lawyers are traveling light with only their smartphones. A laptop makes you look like a drone whereas a smartphone makes you look like a master of the universe.

Recognizing this trend, Sharpcast offers a SugarSync app for BlackBerry, iPhone, and Windows Mobile. With these apps, you can access your files anywhere you have Internet access. You can also stream your music collection and wirelessly sync photos taken with your smartphone back to your PC. If you have a Palm Pre or other smartphone without a dedicated SugarSync app, Sharpcast offers a mobile-optimized Web site you can use.

Other Notable Features
SugarSync continuously backs up your files to a secure online repository, and stores the five most recent versions of each file (only the most recent version counts towards your storage quota). You can also archive files to preserve them no matter how many future versions you create.

SugarSync can also synchronize files among multiple computers, including Macs and PCs. Because your files also reside online, you can access them from any computer even if SugarSync is not installed. You can even upload the changes you make and SugarSync will update that file on your synchronized computers.

What Else Should You Know?
SugarSync also provides secure sending of files too large or sensitive to send by email. A free account contains 2 GB of storage and imposes some limits such as keeping only two versions of every file. The other four plans consist of 30 GB for $4.99/month, 60 GB for $9.99/month, 100 GB for $14.99/month, and 250 GB for $24.99/month. Learn more about SugarSync.

How to Receive TechnoLawyer NewsWire
So many products, so little time. In each issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire, you'll learn about five new products for the legal profession. Pressed for time? The "In One Sentence" section describes each product in one sentence, and the "Killer Feature" section describes each product's most compelling feature. The TechnoLawyer NewsWire newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

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

Mactastic; Timeslips Address Violation; ESET NOD32 Review; Adobe Connection Review; Document Management; Much More

By Sara Skiff | Thursday, July 2, 2009

Coming today to Answers to Questions: Mark Fidel discusses the key factor when deciding between Mac or PC, Mark Deutsch provides some tips regarding a Timeslips error, Douglas Folk reviews ESET NOD32 antivirus software, Steven McNichols discusses the state of today's tech support, and Guy Mailly reviews Adobe Connect. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive Answers to Questions
Do you believe in the wisdom of crowds? In Answers to Questions, TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers. This newsletter's popularity stems from the relevance of the questions and answers to virtually everyone in the legal profession. The Answers to Questions newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Coming Attractions | Desktop PCs/Servers | Networking/Operating Systems | Online/Cloud | Privacy/Security | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | TL Answers | Utilities

Palm Pre Review; Assignment Memos; BlackBerry Bold Review; Small Firm, Big City; Dimdim Review; Do You Blog?

By Sara Skiff | Friday, June 19, 2009

Coming today to Fat Friday: Rob Foos reviews the new Palm Pre, Lane Trippe responds to a recent BigLaw issue on the "assignment memo," Morris Tabush reviews the BlackBerry Bold and his favorite apps, paralegal Leigh Crawford points to an article about how her small firm survives in a big city, and David Gulbransen compares Dimdim to WebEx for online collaboration. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive Fat Friday
Our most serendipitous offering, Fat Friday consists of unsolicited contributions by TechnoLawyer members. You'll no doubt enjoy it because of its mix of interesting topics and genuinely useful knowledge, including brutally honest product reviews and informative how-tos. The Fat Friday newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Coming Attractions | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Fat Friday | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Office Management | Online/Cloud | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

World's Smallest Mobile "Computer"; Legal Social Networks; TalkSwitch Review; Second Copy Review; Screenshot Tip

By Sara Skiff | Friday, June 12, 2009

Coming today to Fat Friday: Miriam Jacobson shares how she travels light buts stays connected, Mazyar Hedayat responds to criticism of his take on social networking for lawyers, Claire Pater reviews TalkSwitch, Harold Atencio reviews Second Copy for automated backup, and Angie D'Urso explains how to create and edit screenshots in Windows. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive Fat Friday
Our most serendipitous offering, Fat Friday consists of unsolicited contributions by TechnoLawyer members. You'll no doubt enjoy it because of its mix of interesting topics and genuinely useful knowledge, including brutally honest product reviews and informative how-tos. The Fat Friday newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Backup/Media/Storage | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Coming Attractions | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Fat Friday | Online/Cloud | Privacy/Security
 
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