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Archive for May, 2007

Salut À Notre Connie

This morning’s Post (yes it does actually arrive in a once daily delivery) brought Mélanie Raymond’s bright new edition of the Canadian Bar National. On page 9, Connie has a piece called “Too cool for school – Law firm legal research adapts to a new generation of studentsResearch geeks will note the reference to Fountains Of Wayne.

The Blog list looks familiar:

Blogroll
Consult these five blogs to stay on top of the legal research scene
in Canada:
Slaw.ca – A co-operative blog about Canadian legal research and IT, etc.
Connie Crosby Oft-cited blog by the Library Manager . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Scrybe

Online apps are great, but what about those times when you’re not connected? The thought is that the dis-connect deters people from relying on web apps for their basic computing needs, hence the current scramble to provide a way of working with such applications when you’re offline and having them sync when you connect once again. Scrybe, currently in closed beta, is one of the much-touted leaders in this quest, planning to provide calendaring, lists, note-taking and sharing of these.

I finally got a beta test account — one of the last to do so, I imagine, since Scrybe’s . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Taking Culture to the Cheese Eating Surrender Monkeys

The day after Président-élu Sarkozy announced a rapprochement in Franco-American relations comes word that our friends at Cornell’s Legal Information Institute are being dispatched to the city of light to bring the good news about American legal documentation to a culture anxious for more CSI and Court TV.

The Ithaca papers are abuzz with the list of celebrities:

Cornell Law School center to be dedicated in Paris in July
The Cornell University Center for Documentation on American Law in Paris will be dedicated July 17 before an audience of the world’s leading jurists at an international judicial conference.

The new

. . . [more]
Posted in: Miscellaneous

The Latest in Personal Knowledge Management?

Monday’s Globe and Mail has a story about personal outsourcing: The $2,000 Executive Assistant. New media law guru Rob Hyndman was interviewed:

“Last year, Mr. Hyndman paid nearly $2,000 for a ‘virtual administrative assistant’ to schedule his meetings, organize his contacts and do all the other office work that once kept him behind his desk until late. As the personal offshoring business evolves, he’s finding more and more tasks he can farm out to India.”

The article also talks about busy businessman and athlete Timothy Ferris who only puts two to four hours a week in at the office . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

An Obvious Posting

The most significant patent case in forty years is how the KSR v. Teleflex decision is being described.

For Slaw readers, who I suspect are not patent law afficionados, a sense of the impact of the decision can be gleaned from a good discussion in the Boston Globe and in Business Week.

And of course, Justice Kennedy’s decision is always worth reading. Whether KSR simply generates more uncertainty, one won’t know until lower courts try to make sense of its changes. But the decision is clearly important.

The question of what deserves a patent has turned on the conventional . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

First We … the Lawyers

First We … AACS*… The Lawyers

* AACS is pronounced, for present purposes, access.

Here are some links for those of you who have been following the HD-DVD movie decryption key gufuffle resulting from the posting one of the keys on Digg.

Blame the Digg revolt on lawyers? See Slashdot for links to a number of articles. One is on Market Watch where the writer (John Dvorak), under the heading “Digg’s DVD-decoder fiasco Commentary: Lawyers’ efforts can be counterproductive” pens gems such as “lawyers can be idiots and have no sense of public relations” and “the episode reemphasizes the new . . . [more]

Posted in: Substantive Law

CALL 2007 Pre-Conference: Managing Digital Collections

The 2007 conference of the Canadian Association of Law Libraries begins this weekend in Ottawa and continues until Wednesday, May 9, 2007.

Today, there was a pre-conference session on Creating and Managing a Digital Collection Project: From policy to technical requirements.

There were 3 presentations:

  • Sandra Wilkins, Law Librarian, University of British Columbia, described the British Columbia Reports Digitization Project: “The British Columbia Reports is a law report series that was first published in 1884 by the Law Society of British Columbia, with judgments dating back to 1867. The series ceased publication in 1948. This collection includes the
. . . [more]
Posted in: Miscellaneous

Merger Talks Sparks Rise in Legal Publishing Giants’ Stock Prices

The news that Thomson (West Publishing) is bidding for Reuters has sent the shares of the three major publishers dramatically higher, reports Forbes.

The trading day is far from over, but so far Wolters Kluwer NV is up 4.2 percent at 23.82 euros ($32.37) and Reed Elsevier has gained 4.3 percent to 14.29 euros ($19.42). Shares of Thomson rose 32 cents, or 1.7 percent, to $19.46. The target is up 25%.

Slaw readers may remember that Thomson is cash-rich because of its sale of Thomson Learning educational division, expected to close by September. The sale of the division, which sells . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

The Friday Fillip

I am filling in today and next week for Simon Fodden’s Friday Fillip, so this will have a more–for lack of a better phrase–“girlie” bent to it. Today we are looking at the low-tech side of the high-tech world: lugging around your laptop and other electronic gadgets when travelling. Definitely the unglamorous side of being wired (or wireless)! I have personally tried all sorts of solutions–knapsacks, bags on wheels, conference bags–but they all just spelled “geek”.

Until now! As soon as I purchased my funky, sleek and professional Monaco from Mobile Edge, I have been way cool, daddy-o. People . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Back to Jamaica

A few days ago we mentioned Soulette Gray’s proposal for another Legal Information Institute.

The Justice Department in Jamaica released a comprehensive paper on the reform of the justice system which included this recommendation:

PROPOSAL 4.30
The Task Force proposes that a Jamaica Legal Information Institute be established as an agency of the Ministry of Justice in order to increase accessibility to legal materials in a timely and effective manner. The Canadian Legal Information Institute can serve as a model for this initiative.

And a big round of applause to the Canadian Bar Association for their assistance to the . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Canada Post Are Using Their Noodle

Canada Post have made a few changes since the last time you bought stamps. Aside from the price going up by the usual cent a year, they have updated the process for the future. Ah! There is no longer a need to supplement last year’s stamp with those one cent stamps. They now have Permanent stamps (identified with a “P” rather than a monetary value). If you buy stamps this year and the price goes up next year, you continue to use those stamps without having to add any postage. This new scheme only applies to regular postage within Canada. . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Do Not Hesitate to Forward This

A post in the Law.com blog summarizes a theory put forth by Ned Snow, assistant professor at the University of Arkansas School of Law, who found a 250-year-old common law tradition granting copyright protection to authors of personal correspondence and now claims that forwarding an e-mail is a violation of copyright law… Here is the paper: A Copyright Conundrum: Protecting Email Privacy.

I am of the opinion that, if no means are taken to protect the copyrights, it is not an infringement to forward the email. In fact, unless the sender uses IRM (Information Rights Management), that . . . [more]

Posted in: Substantive Law

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