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BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide: Free eBook

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

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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

$12,000/Year and Not a Penny More; Password Generator Review; No Paperless Office For Me; Word Up; IV League Lawyers

By Sara Skiff | Friday, July 27, 2007

Coming August 3, 2007 to Fat Friday: Miriam Jacobson tells us what public interest lawyers really earn and what she sees as the problem, Charles T. Lester, Jr. reviews an online password generator service, Douglas Shachtman explains why one lawyer's paperless workflow won't work for his litigation practice, Celia Elwell clarifies a previous Post she penned about Word v. WordPerfect, and Meg Spencer Dixon pokes fun at Seth Rowland's defense of his now infamous "recovered attorney" quip. 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: Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Document Management | Fat Friday | Law Office Management | Online/Cloud | Privacy/Security

From 0 to 250,000 Readers: How I Transformed My Practice With a Blog and You Can Too

By Sara Skiff | Friday, July 27, 2007

Coming July 31, 2007 to TechnoFeature: When the first blogs began cropping up in 1994, most people probably never believed blogging would catch fire. Little did they know that blogs would one day become a valuable Internet resource. In this article, attorney and blogger Andrew Updegrove shares his experience joining the legal blogosphere. He discusses how blogging has become an important marketing vehicle for his practice — and in turn, a substantial time and effort commitment. Whether you're new to blogging or have a blog of your own, don't miss Andrew's insightful tips and tricks of the blogging trade.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Tuesdays, TechnoFeature is a weekly newsletter that contains in-depth articles written by leading legal technology and practice management experts. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: CLE/News/References | Coming Attractions | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Online/Cloud | TechnoFeature

GlobalCite: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, July 25, 2007

In today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire, lawyer and legal technology legend Dennis Kennedy covers an online legal research citation tool designed to save time, an online case management and time-billing application, and a new laser printer tailor-made for law firms. Don't miss the next issue.

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

Better, Faster, Smarter Citations
By Dennis Kennedy

Lawyers have used "hyperlinks" before hyperlinks even existed. In our vernacular, we called them citations. When we found a good case, we would then review the citations to that case, often finding even better cases and sometimes finding reversals, statutory supersession, etc. Nowadays, of course, online research services provide real hyperlinks to related cases. But even so, the number of citations listed can be overwhelming to review.

Wolters Kluwer's Loislaw, a leading provider of online legal research, has updated its GlobalCite feature to address this and other issues based on feedback from its customers. The result is a more powerful citation research tool designed to help lawyers find relevant cases, statutes, and secondary sources more efficiently than ever before. Specifically, Loislaw has added two major features to GlobalCite, each of which saves time and takes advantage of modern Web technologies.

First, GlobalCite now offers a pop-up box within the document you are viewing that summarizes the GlobalCite results and provides links to the types of sources that you want to explore further. The pop-up box arranges the results by category. For example, you can view all sources, cases only, statutes only, treatises only, or other documents only. GlobalCite also displays the number of links within each category. You can click directly in the pop-up box to move to exactly the set of results you want, saving an extra step or two and valuable time. If no citations exist, you'll also know that at a glance without having to click further.

Second, GlobalCite enables you to search directly within your set of citations. With this feature, you can narrow your search quickly, thus eliminating the all-too-common problem of "noise" or "clutter" of unrelated documents. You can conduct full Boolean searches within this pool of citations. For example, you might search for a statutory section, case name, "reversed" or other terms, or keywords. Lawyers have become comfortable with this search within a search paradigm thanks to Web search engines.

As an added benefit, subscribers get the full text of every document they find via GlobalCite at no additional charge no matter what their subscription level. GlobalCite works across Loislaw's entire collection. GlobalCite is included with the purchase of any Loislaw package that includes primary law. Learn more about GlobalCite.

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: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Copiers/Scanners/Printers | Legal Research | Online/Cloud | Practice Management/Calendars | TL NewsWire

Definitive iPhone Review; Avvo Welcome Critics; eDiscovery Treasure Trove; Zantaz; Juris; Printers That Squeak

By Neil J. Squillante | Tuesday, July 24, 2007

You don't have time to track 100 business and technology magazines and blogs. We do. Below you'll find our latest discoveries.

Review: Two Weeks With An iPhone

Defending Avvo’s Right to Provide Information and Guidance to Consumers

Ball 6 on EDD: Six Articles on Electronic Data Discovery

Autonomy Buys Zantaz

Juris Joins LexisNexis

What's In Your Printer?

About TechnoEditorials
A TechnoEditorial is the vehicle through which we opine and provide tips of interest to managing partners, law firm administrators, and others in the legal profession. TechnoEditorials appear first in TechnoGuide, and later here in TechnoLawyer Blog. TechnoGuide, which is free, also contains exclusive content. You can subscribe here.

Topics: Copiers/Scanners/Printers | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | Online/Cloud | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | TL Editorial

Me and my Blog: The Story of One Lawyer's Blog From Creation To Client Development

By Sara Skiff | Friday, July 20, 2007

Coming July 24, 2007 to TechnoFeature: Blogs may serve as your daily dose of entertainment, news, or information — but have you ever thought of what the blogger gets in return? In this article, attorney Dean Kirby explains why he decided to enter the crowded field of legal blogs (or "blawgs") in addition to maintaining his firm's official Web site. He discusses how to select a blog platform and use your RSS feed beyond your blawg, and also shares his tips for attracting an audience. In short, Dean explains how he uses his blog as a modern marketing tool — and how you could do the same.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Tuesdays, TechnoFeature is a weekly newsletter that contains in-depth articles written by leading legal technology and practice management experts. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Coming Attractions | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Online/Cloud | TechnoFeature

LogMeIn Review; Word Hater; Dell Hater; Mac Hater; Good Lawyer

By Sara Skiff | Friday, July 13, 2007

Coming July 20, 2007 to Fat Friday: Matt Baker reviews LogMeIn for secure remote access, Brett Thompson challenges Word lovers with a list of gripes, Carroll Straus reviews her experience with Dell customer service and tech support, David Caracappa responds to Dennis Kennedy's prediction that many lawyers will move to Mac notebooks this year, and Colleen Appleton praises one TechnoLawyer's kind-hearted Post about what he would do if he won the lottery. 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: Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Fat Friday | Law Office Management | Networking/Operating Systems | Online/Cloud | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

scanR: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, June 27, 2007

In today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire, lawyer and legal technology legend Dennis Kennedy covers an online service that can turn your camera phone into a scanner, a new high-speed scanner with a tiny footprint, and a universal driver that can make virtually any scanner Mac compatible. Don't miss the next issue.

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

MacGyver Your Next Meeting
By Dennis Kennedy

Remember MacGyver? Often confronted with a near-impossible situation, he managed to use only the materials he found at hand to solve the problem and win the day. Imagine, if you will, that you find yourself in a situation where you need to make a copy of a document and have only your cell phone, or just a digital camera. What would MacGyver do?

He might very well use scanR, which has created applications and services that enable you to copy and fax documents using a camera phone or a digital camera. With scanR, you'll impress your clients and colleagues by capturing and sending the information you need.

scanR is a Web-based service. You create a user account. When you want to scan a document, you simply take a picture of the document, trying to fill the whole screen with your document. You can take pictures of documents, white boards, and even business cards. You can easily scan and store business cards from events or save what you've written on whiteboards before they get erased. For certain phones, you can download and install the scanR Mobile application to make the process easier and faster.

You then send your image to scanR from a camera phone using the MMS protocol or send JPEG photo images. Shortly thereafter, you'll receive in your email digital copies of your image in PDF format for you to use and print.

scanR provides a quality score to help you perfect the art of taking pictures of your documents. You even get messages alerting you that a photo is out of focus. You can send up to 15 pictures in one batch.

scanR supports sending faxes to most phone numbers in North America, Western Europe, and East Asia. You scan, fax, or email your images from your My Scans page. If you don't receive a copy, your scans are collected at your My Scans page in a searchable gallery. scanR is currently a free service. A premium service is planned. Learn more about scanR.

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: Copiers/Scanners/Printers | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Networking/Operating Systems | Online/Cloud | TL NewsWire | Utilities

Dumb and Dumber: Avvo and the Browne Lawsuit

By Neil J. Squillante | Monday, June 25, 2007

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Avvo is a new venture-backed lawyer rating site.

Think Zagat for lawyers except that Avvo uses its own algorithm in conjunction with publicly-available information to generate its ratings. Personally, I think a combined Zagat/Amazon approach would generate more reliable results and better protect Avvo from lawsuits.

Speaking of which, Steve Berman of Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro has filed a class action lawsuit against Avvo even though the site just launched earlier this month. Talk about jumping the gun. See Browne v. Avvo.

Berman has a point. I just take issue with his method. A class action lawsuit comprised of a bunch of whiny lawyers is not likely to generate much sympathy.

Wake up class — it's 2007. Like it or not, you can no longer completely control what the world thinks of you. And the answer doesn't lie in a lawsuit.

The lawsuit lists criminal lawyer John Henry Browne as the representative plaintiff.

Like I said, he and Berman make some valid points. For example, Avvo's CEO Mark Britton has an 8.2/10 rating. That's like us giving us one of our TechnoLawyer @ Awards. Britton should pull his listing from Avvo.

Also, my rating is 6.4 (Good) whereas Browne's rating is 5.5 (Average). I practiced law for 4 years before jumping ship to start PeerViews whereas Browne has practiced for 35 years. Can an average lawyer remain in business for that long and represent high-profile clients like basketball stars and police chiefs?

But the biggest problem is that Avvo cannot possibly take into account a lawyer's work product since much of it never becomes public.

Case in point — I wrote some pretty amazing research memos in my day, including a 50 state survey for a celebrity CEO about how he could legally spy on his employees. This memo was was a top secret project. As far as I know, the memo had an audience of just three people — me, the partner who assigned the project, and the CEO. I was told not to discuss the project with my colleagues. During those 3-4 weeks, I was shielded from other assignments.

How could Avvo possibly rate me on this research memo?

But be that as it may, I think we need Avvo. Or more precisely, those seeking legal services need Avvo. It's just that consumers need an Avvo with a more transparent Zagat-style rating system driven entirely by clients and ex-clients — plus Amazon-style reviews to go along with the ratings.

That's my take. What do others think? Check out the June 18, 2007 Lawyer to Lawyer podcast in which hosts J. Craig Williams and Bob Ambrogi interview Browne along with Carolyn Elefant and Denise Howell.

For his part, Browne lists some amusing errors on Avvo (e.g., deceased lawyers), but he weakens his case by dishing out over-the-top pronouncements (e.g., "The people that run Avvo completely lack integrity because the system is basically a joke.").

But at least Browne showed up. Avvo was a no-show despite an invitation. Then again, Avvo is facing a lawsuit thanks to Berman and Browne. If you watch enough Larry King, you'll note that plaintiffs typically want to discuss their case while defendants typically shun the media.

The two stars of the show are Carolyn and Denise who make many excellent points, including the following:

• Most state bars do not provide lawyer ratings or reviews so you can't blame Avvo for seizing an opportunity.

• If Avvo shuts down, it should be the result of market forces, not a lawsuit.

• Google doesn't disclose its algorithm because doing so might enable people to game the system so why should Avvo?

• You cannot opt out of Google so why should you be able to opt out of Avvo?

• A site like Avvo could help raise the profile of outstanding lawyers in small firms.

Bottom line — Avvo launched prematurely and needs to fix its ratings system, or better yet, replace it with Zagat-style ratings and Amazon-style reviews. Plus it should slap a "beta" disclaimer on its Web site. And Berman and Browne should drop their lawsuit.

About TechnoEditorials
A TechnoEditorial is the vehicle through which we opine and provide tips of interest to managing partners, law firm administrators, and others in the legal profession. TechnoEditorials appear first in TechnoGuide, and later here in TechnoLawyer Blog. TechnoGuide, which is free, also contains exclusive content. You can subscribe here.

Topics: Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Online/Cloud | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | TL Editorial

Decisiv Email: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, June 20, 2007

In today's special eDiscovery issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire, lawyer and legal technology legend Dennis Kennedy covers a new email archiving and search solution, an eDiscovery software suite, and an online litigation document repository. Don't miss the next issue.

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

Take Decisive Action
By Dennis Kennedy

Trying to reduce your or your client's litigation risk and eDiscovery costs? Looking for a way to easily and securely search and share email across your organization?

Recommind, best known in the legal community for its conceptual search and categorization software, recently launched Decisiv Email, which automatically categorizes "massive amounts" of unstructured email data. Decisiv Email employs advanced categorization and conceptual search technology to automatically tag, organize, and file email messages and associated attachments with virtually no user involvement.

Additionally, you can use Decisiv Email as an email archiving tool. Recommind claims that using Decisiv Email to store business records delivers up to 500% in storage savings over traditional email archiving systems while substantially reducing litigation risk and eDiscovery costs.

Fully integrated with Microsoft Outlook, Decisiv Email facilitates collaboration within an organization by accurately correlating email-based information with related information in email archives, content management systems, document management systems, records management systems and countless other information repositories. By automatically organizing and filing information as it enters and leaves the email system, Decisiv Email significantly reduces time spent sorting through email correspondence in search of specific data and allows for near real-time knowledge transfer.

Other notable features of Decisiv Email include automated tagging and filing of incoming and outgoing messages, semi- or fully automatic modes of operation, a virtually invisible filing system that can prompt the sender to file email messages, support for Microsoft Office documents, scanned documents, voicemails, and other popular formats, and integrated project management functions such as roles, project templating, and activity reporting.

Decisiv Email sells for $300 per user for perpetual licenses. Learn more about Decisiv Email.

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: Document Management | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | Online/Cloud | TL NewsWire
 
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