What? Haven’t had enough of law school? LLM-Guide.com claims to be the most comprehensive directory on the Internet of master of laws programs, listing more than 370 postgraduate law programs in North America, Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia/New Zealand. The guide is published by Benjamin & Johannes Kroymann, Berlin, Germany.…
Court’s archive documents 19th century slavery lawsuits
In 1819, a woman slave named Winny filed a lawsuit in St. Louis Circuit Court that would establish an important judicial precedent. Winny sought freedom for herself and her children, charging one Phebe Whitesides with trespass, assault and battery and false imprisonment. On Feb. 13, 1822, a jury agreed and the court declared Winny and…
Census Bureau releases two useful statistical reports
While the Web is useful to lawyers for legal research, it is even more so for non-legal research — for finding the facts a lawyer can use to back up the legal argument. One of the best sources on the Internet for pure facts is the U.S. Census Bureau, which recently added two reports…
Off again, on again: LLRX publishes anew
After LLRX.com announced last week that it would no longer publish updates, what did it do? Publish an update, of course. The highlight is Competitive Intelligence (CI) Resources for the Legal Community by LLRX co-founder Sabrina I. Pacifici, author of the beSpacific blog.…
Google Buys Pyra: Blogging Goes Big-Time
Silicon Valley.com’s Dan Gillmor says today in a special report that Google, which runs the Web’s premier search site, has purchased Pyra Labs, the San Francisco company that created some of the earliest technology for writing weblogs, including the popular Blogger.…
Lawyers, Doctors Warn U.N. Over U.S. Attack on Iraq
Inter Press reports on a statement issued by groups representing more than 300 international lawyers, jurists and physicians warning that a military attack on Iraq would not only be a blatant violation of international law but could kill over 260,000 people.…
Global Action to Prevent War – Lawyers and Jurists Appeal
On this day of protest against war, consider the International Appeal by Lawyers and Jurists against the “Preventive” Use of Force.…
Consult a ‘live’ law librarian via the Web
Final testing is underway for a new service that will allow lawyers to consult law librarians in real time, via chat, over the Internet. The service, Legal Reference Services Inc., began a six-week pilot Feb. 10 with five law firms in New York City. They are using the service for free to help identify…
Two new blogs aimed at solo lawyers
Two Washington, D.C., lawyers have each launched Web logs intended to serve as resources for solo and small-firm lawyers.
Jonathan Bender’s site, SohoAttorney, focuses on attorneys practicing from small offices or home offices. More than just a blog, SohoAttorney allows other lawyers to register and participate in developing the site’s content. For example, Bender…
LLRX suspends operations
LLRX.com, a consistently outstanding resource for legal professionals who use the Internet ever since its launch in 1996, announced today that it is “going on hiatus.” The site will remain available, but without the twice-monthly webzine or other updates.
Here is the announcement that appeared on the LLRX front page:
Dear LLRX Readers,
This…
Discovering a flaw in RSS autodiscovery
Jonas Luster over at J/files posted this enormously helpful item explaining how to make RSS autodiscovery work on a blog or Web page. With autodiscovery, news aggregators such as Newz Crawler and discovery tools such as discover/it can automatically detect whether a blog has an RSS feed and, in the case…
ADR Cyberweek 2003 set for Feb. 24-28
From Ethan Katsh, director of the Center for Information Technology and Dispute Resolution at UMass/Amherst:
“The UMass Center for Information Technology and Dispute Resolution, in collaboration with the Online Dispute Resolution Section of the Association for Conflict Resolution, is pleased to be holding Cyberweek 2003 this year from February 24-28th. This is the…
Robert Ambrogi Blog