Even the government is podcasting these days, and Free Government Information has compiled a list of federal and state government podcasts. The sleeper of the lot: Inside NYPD, the New York Police Department daily podcast.…
Help the government monitor your searches
All the Justice Department asks is to monitor your online searches, but Google is resisting. If you want to be a patriot and help the federal government snoop on its citizens, then switch your search engine to Patriot Search. Its policy to is to make certain the government is informed should you search…
Two new UK law blogs
What’s new on the UK legal web? reports on two new blogs: Family Lore, from a family law solicitor practicing in England and Wales, and The Landlord Law Blog, offering thoughts on residential landlord and tenant law.…
Two new lawprof group blogs:
Via The Volokh Conspiracy comes news of two new lawprof group blogs: Empirical Legal Studies and International Economic Law and Policy Blog.…
Blargon: Safire on the language of blogs
In his “On Language” column this week, William Safire takes on Blargon, the lingo of blogging. [Via Depraved Librarian.]…
Track U.S. currency through the Web
Remember when your mother used to warn you, “Don’t put that money in your mouth — you don’t know where it’s been!” Well, now you do, thanks to Where’s George?, a site where you can track the travels of paper money. Prefer to track Canadian currency? Use Where’s Willy?.…
An index of medical image databases
If images of gastrointestinal endoscopy or neuroimaging start your heart racing, you are probably a personal-injury lawyer. Medical images are important, both to help you understand the plaintiff’s injuries and as demonstrative evidence to use in the courtroom. Medical Image Databases on the Internet is a useful compilation not of images, but…
Run IE within Firefox
Firefox devotees know that sometimes, you just gotta run Internet Explorer. Now, there is a Firefox extension that lets you run IE in a Firefox tab.…
Take the pulse of the blogosphere
I’ve written before about Googlism, a fun tool that searches Google to arrive at a characterization of a person, place or thing. Now there is something similar for the blogosphere, Opinmind. Type a name or topic in its search box, and it returns two side-by-side lists of pro and con comments from…
Amazing archive of classic live rock
In 2002, entrepreneur Bill Sagan bought the complete archives of legendary rock promoter Bill Graham. The archives included Graham’s never-released tapes of thousands of live performances by the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, The Doors, The Grateful Dead, Cream, Jefferson Airplane, Van Morrison, Santana, Otis Redding, Steppenwolf, Marvin Gaye, Led Zeppelin, Eric Clapton, Bob…
C2C: The business of law
Coast to Coast this week looks at the business of law with special guest Reid Trautz, lawyer, blogger, director of the D.C. Bar Practice Management Advisory Service, and nationally recognized author and speaker on law practice management topics.
Coast to Coast is the weekly legal news podcast cohosted by J.…
The lawyer who quit; the e-mails that roared
Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly Publisher David L. Yas does a great job recounting the tale of the e-mail that roared — a much-forwarded series of e-mails in which a young lawyer turns down a job, in not-quite textbook fashion. To see the e-mail, check out Legal Twilite Zone.…