More Great On-Line Resources

Stephanie Kimbro over at the Virtual Law Practice blog has posted a GREAT list of on-line resources that are more-or-less law-related or at least of interest to lawyers.  These were culled from Ms. Kimbro’s CLE presentation at the NC Bar Center for the Bar’s Annual Practice Skills seminar. The list from the presentation, dubbed “Sixty Websites in Sixty Minutes,” includes some of my old favorites, as well as many new sites that I had not yet heard of but look forward to exploring.  Just doing my part to pass along the “free” and “useful” to anyone willing to hear!  Thanks Stephanie!

Ooops! Guess They Got West's Attention

Back a few posts ago, I mentioned a Firefox extension called Jureeka that recognizes citations on webpages and creates links to open source court documents. Another extension, called Zotero, developed by George Mason University goes one step further: it couples “automatic citation capture” from webpages with formatted citation export and WordPress integration to create “one stop shopping” for academic and legal writing. 

Guess this news was not lost on Thompson / Reuters, Westlaw’s parent, which has promptly brought suit against the University, as reported by Richard Koman on ZDNet. Thompson is claiming that Zotero user are impermissibly accessing Thompson’s EndNote software in violation of license agreements. Specifically, Thompson complains that Zotero improperly converts Thompson’s proprietary .ens file style to free, open source, easily distributable .csl files.

Guess the best defense (in the open source wars) is a strong offense!

Ooops! Guess They Got West’s Attention

Back a few posts ago, I mentioned a Firefox extension called Jureeka that recognizes citations on webpages and creates links to open source court documents. Another extension, called Zotero, developed by George Mason University goes one step further: it couples “automatic citation capture” from webpages with formatted citation export and WordPress integration to create “one stop shopping” for academic and legal writing. 

Guess this news was not lost on Thompson / Reuters, Westlaw’s parent, which has promptly brought suit against the University, as reported by Richard Koman on ZDNet. Thompson is claiming that Zotero user are impermissibly accessing Thompson’s EndNote software in violation of license agreements. Specifically, Thompson complains that Zotero improperly converts Thompson’s proprietary .ens file style to free, open source, easily distributable .csl files.

Guess the best defense (in the open source wars) is a strong offense!

See, I'm Not The Only One Thinking About It

A couple of posts ago, in an entry titled The Internet: All This And ESP Too, I talked about how great it would be to be able to speak at our devices and have them follow our detailed instructions to “tweet” or otherwise communicate, hands and keyboard free and how one of my Twitter follows “tweeted” about such a service, Dial2Do. ESP alive and well.

Well, I am not alone in my imaginings. Caught this note on PrawfsBlog which links to a statistic that Americans do more texting than talking! Adam Kolber then envisions that “Brave New World” where we could just “think” about what we wanted, a converter would then turn it into speech that sounds like our actual voice and the machines would be off and running, doing all the interacting for us.

Sounds crazy, I know, but given my own “Twilight Zone – Meets Tech” experiences of late, I won’t rule out any possibilities!

Psychic

See, I’m Not The Only One Thinking About It

A couple of posts ago, in an entry titled The Internet: All This And ESP Too, I talked about how great it would be to be able to speak at our devices and have them follow our detailed instructions to “tweet” or otherwise communicate, hands and keyboard free and how one of my Twitter follows “tweeted” about such a service, Dial2Do. ESP alive and well.

Well, I am not alone in my imaginings. Caught this note on PrawfsBlog which links to a statistic that Americans do more texting than talking! Adam Kolber then envisions that “Brave New World” where we could just “think” about what we wanted, a converter would then turn it into speech that sounds like our actual voice and the machines would be off and running, doing all the interacting for us.

Sounds crazy, I know, but given my own “Twilight Zone – Meets Tech” experiences of late, I won’t rule out any possibilities!

Psychic

Music & The Law Are At It Again

If you have been reading this blog, you probably know that I love the intersection of music and the law and have commented on it in prior posts on this blog. Music Law Well, I am not alone in my fascination. The Legal Writing Prof Blog tipped me off to this law review article to be published in Volume 64, 2007 of the Washington & Lee Law Review, by Alex B. Long at the University of Tennessee College of Law (what do you expect out of Nashville?). The Abstract reads as follows:

Abstract:
Legal writers frequently utilize the lyrics of popular music artists to help advance a particular theme or argument in legal writing. And if the music we listen to says something about us as individuals, then the music we, the legal profession as a whole, write about may something about who we are as a profession. A study of citations to popular artists in law journals reveals that, not surprisingly, Bob Dylan is the most popular artist in legal scholarship. The list of names of the other artists rounding out the Top Ten essentially reads like a Who’s Who of baby boomer favorites. Often, attorneys use the lyrics of popular music in fairly predictable ways in their writing, sometimes with adverse impact on the persuasiveness of the argument they are advancing. However, if one digs deeper, one can find numerous instances in which legal writers incorporate the lyrics of popular music into their writing in more creative ways.

Just like those lawyers and judges who use humor in their writing, there is nothing like a little anachronistic pair-up to catch the reader’s attention!  Hope you follow the link and enjoy the read!