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legalSPY

coolhunting for lawyers and legal professionals 

Wednesday, February 23, 2005

9:57 AM - Better Trial Advocacy Through Technology

Normally I don't grab verbatim from other sites, so I'll just point you to this great article about using technology to improve your trial law practice. Although I really enjoyed the summary, I think it's particularly good as a starting point to many great net sources, full of interesting links to cool stuff.

Twelve Ways Technology Can Make You a Better Trial Lawyer - By David Swanner

(Via Notes from the (Legal) Underground.)

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Wednesday, February 16, 2005

6:53 AM - Visually Mapping Discovery Docs?

Reviewing (and understanding) hundreds of thousands of documents in a complex case can be quite a bear. E-discovery systems have made things a bit easier. Companies scan and OCR the documents, which are then available for attorneys to review and search via web-based systems. I've encountered two such systems, Amici, LLC and CaseVault. Still, rather than boxes of documents to manage, you still have lots of documents online that must be organized somehow. Enter Stratify Legal eDiscovery. The company has evidently created a new system to visually map complex sets of emails, "identifying critical relationships." It's true that emails can be tough to wrangle, considering all the recipients and respondents, replies, attachments, etc. There's so much information duplicated, and identical emails appear in the document collections from many key individuals in cases. This sounds very helpful. I'd like to see visual mapping for more than just email, though I bet emails make up the bulk of documents when dealing with modern companies. I couldn't find any pictures showing how the system works, and you may need to sign up for a demo on their website. But it sounds a little like how Kartoo.com works. That would be super-cool if we could really do something like that, getting visual maps of the universe of documents in a case. Even better if the system could do it intelligently, without requiring too much extensive meta-tagging of documents for key terms, topics, individuals, etc. Perhaps this will be possible. I've already been very impressed with the OCR advancements I've seen on other systems. Anyway, I have always been intrigued by Concept Maps, and would love to see new ways of applying them to legal document review and analysis during eDiscovery.

Referred by Law.com.

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Tuesday, February 15, 2005

4:53 PM - LawSchoolNumbers

Law school applicants, check out LawSchoolNumbers.com for a cool site. The site developers have set up a system where applicants from across the country can enter their vitals (LSAT, GPA, etc.) and see how your fellow applicants are faring with the application process. Add to the data set by entering the schools to which you applied and dates when your application was complete, decision rendered, etc. It's a good way to see when you can expect to hear back from your schools and how likely you are to be accepted. I found the LSAT/GPA plots particularly interesting.

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Wednesday, February 09, 2005

11:31 PM - Secure Access Tokens

Depending on the sort of work you do, this may or may not be new to you, but it must be relatively new, and it's most definitely cool. I'm told that more and more companies are using things like this to allow key individuals (like their attorneys) access to confidential resources. In fact, RSA Security says that more than 15 million people are using their SecureID system for two-factor (something they know and something they have) hardware authentication. Basically you get a "token," a key fob with an LCD screen. The screen shows a number with 6 digits. The number changes every 60 seconds or so. To gain access, you have to enter that specific code and your personal password. The code only works at that moment in time and only with the second factor as well. Naturally, details are confidential, but I encountered one of these today and was impressed with the system since I hadn't seen it before.

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8:08 AM - Google Maps!

They've done it again. The wizards at Google deliver something super-useful and better than anything else around with Google Maps. I've been trying it and it way trumps the competitors. Use it to zoom in on any location, locate maps at any scale, and plot directions between two addresses. The best thing to do is check it out, but I was particularly impressed with the speed and clarity of the maps, plus informative pop-up info about the location you're searching for (powered by google's directory services). I'll be headed to this service regularly. For those of you who have to give clients directions, it's easy to email maps. Time will tell whether their directions are more reliable than those at Mapquest or other sites that have been around for a while. It worked best for me when using the Firefox browser.

Referred by urbanSPY.

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Monday, February 07, 2005

5:17 PM - LawSchoolStuff

Spork T-Shirt
Into Intellectual Property? Check out this shirt, depicting the spork patent, along with other humorous law-related apparel at LawSchoolStuff.com. Their bestseller is the "Working Hard to Be Average" shirt, which they insist "every law student understands" (perhaps I'll learn about that in the Fall...). Or for one who would prefer to advertise his/her intent to dominate... the "Gunner" shirt. I think there's probably something for every sort of law student here.

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