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Archive for ‘Miscellaneous’

Looking Inside With XRAY

Unless you’re someone who builds or modifies web pages, you can unfurrow that brow and relax into a “what will they think of next” state of mild wonder. And until they think of that next thing, XRAY is worth a look. It’s a patch of JavaScript, acting as a bookmarklet, that takes the source code and css of the page you’re on in your browser, sends it back to the home planet from where a small window is sent to overlie your browser window: click on any area in your browser and that area’s bone structure, so to speak, is . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Zoho Writer Offline

The latest lovechild of the Zoho-Google cuddlefest is an offline capacity for Zoho Writer. After installing Google Gears (see my post on Understanding RIA), you’ll see that there’s an offline button that appears in your Zoho Writer toolbar. According to an information video, this currently lets you download 15 documents to be read — but not edited — offline. A full editing, document creation function is to be added in about a month’s time.

All of which is cool for two groups of people, I guess: the advantaged (or driven), who fly a lot and are, thus, . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

American Law Reports Being Removed From Lexis

According to a post today on Information Today’s Newsbreaks page, Thomson West will be making the American Law Reports exclusive to Westlaw as of January 2008. In the post, Carol Ebbinghouse, director of the California Second District Court of Appeal Library, writes about the origin and history of the ALRs. She also says:

As a legal research educator and a librarian who has worked with law students and attorneys as well as judges, I can tell you that there are users who won’t know a product like ALR is gone from an online service until they really need it.

. . . [more]
Posted in: Miscellaneous

Carl Malmud Publishes Cases

Today’s New York Times has reports that “activist… internet gadfly… self-styled Robin Hood” Carl Malmud has begun a direct challenge to the big online publishers by copying and placing online 1000 pages of court decisions from the 1880’s that he acknowledges getting from a Thomson microfiche. He says he aims to make freely available up to ten million pages of caselaw.

The judgments Malmud has published are available on his site, public.resource.org. At the moment there is a hyper-compressed tiff file of all of the thousand pages — nearly 4G in size, itself a formidable barrier to access I . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Ridiculous Rules

According to a list of laughable laws, fit for the summer silly season, it’s treasonable in Britain to place a postage stamp bearing the image of the monarch upside down. And in England, all men over the age of 14 must carry out two hours of longbow practice a day. And… there are 25 of these odd survivors for you to enjoy on the Times Online. There are also over a hundred comments to enjoy, most, however, being aimed at the poor American lawyer who didn’t read carefully enough and thought the item about York was about New York. . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

The Friday Fillip

More music today — because there’s less music available lately. At least online. The internet radio folks have been having their problems with the DRM and copyright people in the U.S. And the differences between U.S. copyright laws and those of other jurisdictions has led to a number of streaming music sites being unable to reach outside the republic’s borders. About a year ago I mentioned Pandora in the course of a Friday Fillip on Etta Baker; this was the website I used to listen to popular music, blues, jazz and other non-classical ditties. But no more.

So it was . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Two New Canadian Blawgs

This is obviously a day for new blogs. Connie posted just now about All About Information, and I am glad to have discovered the University of Alberta Faculty of Law’s Faculty Blog. Posting seems regular since it launched a couple of months ago, so this is clearly one to bookmark. And from the Faculty Blog I learn about Bouck’s Law Blog, a brand new blawg by John C. Bouck, a retired B.C. Supreme Court judge. His is the only judicial blawg I know of in Canada. . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

New Canadian Law Blog: All About Information

Dan Michaluk of Hicks Morley LLP has started a new blog about the legal aspects of information called, appropriately enough, All About Information. He is covering subjects such as freedom of information, privacy, e-discovery, e-mail, records management, and many other subjects. Some good, substantial discussion here, which he hopes to expand upon as he goes along.

Welcome to the blawgosphere, Dan!


Posted 7:30 a.m. from home.
. . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Librarian Blogger in the NYT

A recent New York Times article focuses on how blogging can boost your career. What’s really cool about this article is that librarian Ellyssa Kroski is mentioned. The article describes how Kroski decided to start blogging about her professional interests to build connections that could lead to a job. Not only did her blog lead to a job, but she is now being invited to speak at national conferences and has even completed her first book Web 2.0 for Librarians and Information Professionals. . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Translation Tools

We talk a fair bit on Slaw about translation between French and English, as befits a blog on law in Canada. See, e.g.:

I’ve recently been introduced to a pair of translation tools that I ought to have known about but that for some reason I didn’t. Just in case you aren’t aware of them, let me briefly describe them.

First, and most obvious, I suppose, is Quebec’s Grand dictionnaire terminologique, a clear upside to the Office québécois de la langue française. Here you’ll find . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

Quebec Hearings on Reasonable Accommodation of Minorities

Public hearings into what is referred to as reasonable accommodation of minorities are to begin in September in the province of Quebec.

Internationally famous philosopher and McGill University scholar Charles Taylor and sociologist Gérard Bouchard will co-chair the consultations that will take place in some 17 cities of the province.

The Consultation Commission on Accommodation Practices Related to Cultural Differences was created by the provincial government last spring after a number of incidents involving clashes or controversies between members of minority groups, in particular religious minorities, and the members of the highly secularized French-speaking majority that overthrew the restraints of . . . [more]

Posted in: Miscellaneous

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This project has been made possible in part by the Government of Canada | Ce projet a été rendu possible en partie grâce au gouvernement du Canada