If you need someone to create a screencast for your product or service, I’ve got just the guy. Sure, he happens to be my son. Ben Ambrogi. But he does good work. Below are some examples. If you’d like to get in touch with him, let me know (ambrogi-at-gmail.com).…
JD Supra is Now Linked Up to LinkedIn
For lawyers, this is a marriage made in social-networking heaven: JD Supra, a leading site for sharing legal content, is now partnering with LinkedIn, the leading professional-networking site, so that JD Supra content will now be seamlessly integrated into LinkedIn.
The integration will involve two primary features.
First, any lawyer who is a registered user…
Site offers Better Access to Federal Rulemaking
For any lawyer who follows or participates in federal rulemaking, the U.S. government’s launch a few years ago of Regulations.gov was a great leap forward. Finally, from a single site, you could find and track proposed rules from nearly 300 federal agencies and even submit formal comments.
But Regulations.gov is difficult to use for…
New Site Crowdsources the Legal Treatise
Spindle Law describes itself as “a new kind of legal research and writing system.” Its goal is to make legal research “faster and smarter.” It seeks to do this in two ways: by structuring information more intuitively and by building on the knowledge of the lawyers who use it.
Spindle Law resembles a treatise…
Are You a ‘Lawyer’ or an ‘Attorney’?
Somewhere along the line, I picked up the idea that a lawyer is always a “lawyer,” but should only be called an “attorney” in connection with representing a client. (“John went to law school and became a lawyer. He is now the attorney for an accused bank robber.)
At his blog You Don’t Say,…
Former Sun GC Bikes – and Blogs – Cross Country
In legal-blogging circles, Mike Dillon is known as the first Fortune 500 general counsel to launch a blog. That was in 2006, when Dillon was GC of Sun Microsystems. Earlier this year, Oracle acquired Sun. With Sun’s demise, so went Dillon’s blog (although the archives remain up).
With the acquisition over…
The WSJ Reports on Bloomberg Law
Last February, Law.com published my review of Bloomberg Law, in which I wrote, “Bloomberg’s biggest challenge may lie in convincing the legal market that it needs another high-end research service.” That is essentially the same conclusion reached by Wall Street Journal reporter Russell Adams, who writes about the service today in a piece titled,…
A New Research Service for Cases, Statutes
Promising a comprehensive legal research tool at an affordable price, a new legal research site, eLaw, launched yesterday. Although the service provides access to case law and statutes for all 50 states, it is available only to attorneys in New York and New Jersey.
My guess is that the geographic limitation is because eLaw…
How to Find if an Attorney Has Been Disciplined
Had an e-mail this morning from someone trying to find out whether an attorney had ever been disbarred or disciplined. I knew that most states, including mine, now publish this information on the Web. But finding it isn’t always easy.
Thus, I was happy to come across this FindLaw page, Researching Attorney Discipline. It…
Preview of Fastcase’s App for the iPad
As I said here last week, Fastcase is preparing to launch an iPad version of its popular iPhone app. The iPhone app, which I first previewed in January, last week was named 2010 New Product of the Year by the American Association of Law Libraries.
Meanwhile, the iPad version of…
Slideshow: Rockport’s Fourth of July Bonfire
Our town’s bonfire just off the beach is even more spectacular than fireworks. (Click to open in larger window.)…
The Right of Free Access to Court Decisions
In 1886, the Supreme Judicial of Massachusetts ruled that, because every citizen is presumed to know the law, then every citizen should have free access to court opinions. See Massachusetts Law Updates for more.…