Archive for 2006
CALL Conference Meetup?
I was wondering (offline) with Michael and Connie, how many Slawyers we have attending the Canadian Association of Law Libraries conference in early May?
And, if there are a significant number of us, what kind of interest there would be for a Slaw Blogger Meetup? (for Contributors & Readers both, of course.)
Ladies & Gentlemen, please chime in… :-) . . . [more]
CLIC
Simon (C’s) recent posting recalling the work of the Canadian Law Information Council (CLIC) set me thinking. None of the CLIC material is now online, I think, so I searched through the UVic law library catalogue. The work of CLIC on behalf of Canadian law and legal information and technology was truly astounding. It is worth bearing a look or a relook.
I don’t mean this to merely duplicative of Simon, nor to remiss fondly about the old days, but to revisit one of CLIC’s innovations that truly useful, and which could be reinvented in the online world. That is, . . . [more]
Blogs
As I was shovelling snow on the NS Public Highways last week, (btw Connie, the best shovel is 24-in. Yukon Ergonomic Snow Pusher, lightweight, gets 2 feet of snow at once) I got to thinking about blogs, the usefulness of which is a popluar Slaw topic. So in the midst of a particularly heavy shovel full, I decided to do a little legal lit. review of traditional sources (Canadian context) and review some caselaw where Blogs are being mentioned.
It seems that Blogs have not yet made a forceful entrance in the Canadian courtroom. My fairly quick and dirty . . . [more]
Canadian Blasphemy Law
With the escalation of fury we are witnessing over the publication (and re-publication) of the Danish cartoons my curiosity over Canadian blasphemy laws was aroused and I did a quick search of the CED on Westlaw. This is what results: “At common law, blasphemy and blasphemous libel consisted of the publication of contemptuous, reviling, scurrilous or ludicrous matter relating to God, Jesus Christ, the Bible, or the formularies of the Church of England. It was not blasphemy at common law to attack any religion except Christianity, and an attack on the Christian religion had to be such as tended to . . . [more]
Canadian Federal Statutes Online Now More Current
The Canadian federal Department of Justice finally appears to be improving the currency of its online legislation, with the following formal announcement at http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/index/index.html:
. . . [more]Updates to Justice Laws Web page
The Department of Justice is in the process of upgrading its online ability to consolidate legislation and to provide for regular and timely updating of Acts and regulations on our public Web site. As of January 27, 2006, all Acts on this site have been updated to September 28, 2005 at a minimum and many have been updated to dates beyond this point, as will be indicated at the
A Century of Slaw Postings – or What I Learned at the Monde du Blog
This is my hundredth Slaw posting and rather than post on legal information, research and the Technologies of access and knowledge analysis, I’d like to think about slaw as a community of knowledge and where we’ve come from since those trans-mondial postings about taxonomies of legal knowledge back in June en route to India.
Funnily enough what strike me this morning are not so much the innovations or the extraordinary Technologies of web-enabled collaborations, as much as the continuities.
We have in some sense been here before, but with tools of community that were less sustainable and more enclosed.
First . . . [more]
This Week’s Links: 060203
- Educause Review: J. Campbell, “Changing a Cultural Icon: The Academic Library as Virtual Destination”
- Boing Boing
- Baidu
- Guardian Unlimited: German ad boss apologises to bloggers
- Jung von Matt
- Spiegel Online, English Edition: The toilet walls strike back
- The Galloping Beaver: I’m a toilet wall
- coeruleus: Du Bist Deutschland
- Manchester Guardian
- Adweek: WPP Comments on French Controversy
- CNNMoney.com: 101 Dumbest Moments in Business
- CNNMoney.com: Imagining the Google Future
- CNNMoney.com: Google is the Media
- CNNMoney.com: Google as the Internet
- CNNMoney.com: Google is dead
- CNNMoney.com: Google is God
- Ray Kurzweil, The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology
- Teilhard de Chardin
- Wikipedia: Omega
Blogger Blahs
Continued problems with Blogger tonight. Things I’ve posted haven’t gone up, and you might not even be able to reach my blog. The problem appears to be with the (Blogger-owned) host, blog*spot. For anyone wondering, there is a “status” page that updates us on what is happening; not sure if you need a Blogger account to view it: Blogger status page. Blah! . . . [more]
Weblogs & Libraries – a Talk by Michael Stephens
Yesterday I attended a talk by fellow librarian blogger Michael Stephens at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Information Studies (FIS). The talk was called “Weblogs & Libraries: Communication, Conversation and the Blog People” which outlined the results from a survey he did of blogging librarians back in November for his PhD thesis at the University of North Texas. (I remember taking that survey!) He was in town as speaker at the OLA Superconference, and dropped by FIS to talk to MISt and PhD students, as well as the general librarian community. Thanks to Ted Tjaden for pointing . . . [more]
EBooks
There’s no escaping it, apparently. Almost every day I see articles on the coming of e-books, and declarations they will replace the lovely bound books that I collect, read, annotate, store and dust occasionally.
Here’s a link to a recent article, “A Hundred Books in Your Pocket”, from the Wall Street Journal, January 21, 2006 by Terry Teachout. If that link doesn’t work please contact me if interested and I can send you a copy of the article.
He describes Sony’s Reader, a pocket sized e-book reader that makes use of E Ink and is slated to be on . . . [more]
