Month: January 2011

Blogging – been there, done that?

All the talk these days is about social networking. Have you got a Facebook page? Do you Tweet? Are you LinkedIn? But we should not forget that the granddaddy of the so-called social media is blogging and that’s been around for a long time; so long, in fact, that blogging is now unremarkable; blogging is […]

Read More

Specialised websites

Most specialised websites relate to a particular work area, usually with a work-related domain name. Instead of a firm trying to cover all its work areas in one website, the task is split up into a number of separate sites with each concentrating on one legal area. I have collected all the firms with specialised […]

Read More

Free web resources for criminal lawyers

The Criminal Justice System is often perceived as being rather antiquated, but in reality it is quite technologically advanced. Take for example, the XHIBIT system (eXchanging Hearing Information by Internet Technology) in which court clerks record events in their Crown Court contemporaneously on computer, enabling you to view a hearing’s progress in real time via […]

Read More

Legal Eagles

How technology helped me to produce it, all from New Zealand Two years ago, I decided to write my third book. My first, Why Lawyers Should Eat Bananas, was self-published ten years ago and went on to sell nearly 10,000 hard copies worldwide. My second book, an adaptation of the first, titled Why Entrepreneurs Should […]

Read More

Quill Pinpoint outsourced legal cashiering service

Outsourcing and hosted systems are topics we have covered frequently in the Newsletter over recent issues since we consider that these developments will, over the next few years, transform the legal IT world. Quill Pinpoint (www.quill.co.uk) was established by Tony Landes in 1978 to supply legal software, with Hilary Fisher joining in 1979, Andrew Sherwin […]

Read More

Law ebooks – guidance and questions

In the last issue I wrote of the launch by LexisNexis of a clutch of practitioner ebooks, with plans for more to follow in 2011. Sweet & Maxwell have also now made a start but seem keen not to rush release content; they are releasing a selection of legal texts aimed more at the student […]

Read More

The paperless office – second time lucky?

In a previous article, long, long ago, I described how we tried to go paperless in 2003 but failed largely for human reasons. On 6 September 2010 we succeeded. Why? This article explains. We have been scanning in post since 2003. I personally have been paperless ever since then, but no one else joined me. […]

Read More