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Why Spam Plummeted This Week; Top 5 Reasons Not to Build Your Own PCs; Excel-Word Paste Tip; Bill4Time Data Import

By Sara Skiff | Friday, November 14, 2008

Coming today to Fat Friday: Joseph Marquette explains why law firms should not build their own PCs, Chris Gibson explains how to copy and paste from Excel to Word, Edward Still criticizes challenge response software and shares his listserver pet peeves (plus we explain why spam dropped off a cliff this week), Edwin Eubank reviews Office 2007 on Windows Vista, and Leslie Shear writes in with additional concerns regarding importing data from Timeslips to Bill4Time. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Fridays, Fat Friday is a weekly newsletter that features a grab bag full of genuinely useful product reviews and tips on a wide variety of topics. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Desktop PCs/Servers | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Fat Friday | Law Office Management | Networking/Operating Systems | Online/Cloud | Privacy/Security

SmallLaw: Macs in Law Firms: Get Them for the Right Reasons, Not "Just Because"

By Ross Kodner | Thursday, November 13, 2008

Smalllaw_111008

[Publisher's Note: This issue of SmallLaw has sparked a fierce debate in TechnoLawyer and elsewhere. I would like to clarify one issue in particular. We wrote the original title of the column, not Ross (Why Macs Don't Make Sense Once You Look Past the Cool Factor). It's common in publishing for the production team to write titles as opposed to the author. We have changed the title to prevent any confusion about the nature of the article. The article itself remains unchanged. I think people who read the article will find it well-reasoned even if they disagree with Ross' suggestions. Thank you for the lively debate. Please keep it civil. (I'm writing this note on a 2008 Mac Pro.) — Neil J. Squillante, November 25, 2008]

Originally published on November 10, 2008 in our free SmallLaw newsletter.

I hate evangelism. I hate it in the context of religion. I hate it in the context of computer operating systems. Evangelism always seems like an attempt to supercede reality with surreality, overriding fact with embellished opinions masquerading as fact. It's dangerous because it's often presented by those who sound convincing and well-informed.

Recently on the ABA's Solosez listserver, subscribers posted questions such as: "I have to replace my computers. Should I switch to Macs?" Responses, from the MacEvangelistas appeared nearly immediately as: "of course." Neither qualifying questions, nor any inquiries into the software being used by these folks on their Windows systems. Just a quick "yes!"

Let me say that I absolutely love Mac OS X. It's what Windows should have been. I am actually "bi-platform" (I run Tiger on my late '05 vintage PowerBook G4). But the discussion of why small firms should switch to a Mac seems all too often based on misinformation and personal preference versus sound business logic and appropriate needs analysis.

If you want a Mac at home, get a Mac! Born without impulse control, I quiver when I walk into an Apple Store. I experience a nearly uncontrollable urge to splurge (I know I'm in trouble when the "rationalization-of-buying-random-crap" voice in my head starts to play through the "so how many frequent flier miles would this MasterCard charge get me" script).

But when outfitting your small firm, apply business logic. If the apps you want to run come in native OS X versions, great — get a Mac. But what if the apps you need are Windows programs? For example, you use Time Matters, PracticeMaster, PCLaw, Abacus, Amicus Attorney, etc. You use Worldox GX to manage your documents and email. You're an Outlook addict. You have the Tabs3 or Timeslips billing system. You have a slew of Windows utilities like Payne Group's Metadata Assistant, Levit & James' CrossEyes, Payne's Numbering Assistant. You have BestCase Bankruptcy. You're using HotDocs 2008 to generate estate planning documents. Etc.

It makes no business sense to run these Windows apps on a Mac. Period.

Why Not Run Windows on Your Mac?

  • Software Costs: You have to buy Windows, rig up the machine for dual-booting with Apple's Bootcamp or virtual machine operation with Parallels or Fusion.

  • Time Costs: You have to pour time into getting Windows working, install and configure each app, download all the Windows updates, and move over all your data.

That's at LEAST a half a day or more of time. If you do this during the business day, each hour costs $150-$300 of otherwise billable time.

  • Technical Support: If you plan on running the Windows system in a "virtual machine" you can kiss most legal software technical support good-bye. Most legal software companies won't support you if they find out you're running their programs under an "unsupported" operating system. Logical? No. But in an era of technical "unsupport," vendors will look for any excuse to blame problems with their software on you.
     
  • Hardware Costs: Is Mac laptop pricing comparable to Windows machines? Yes, but comparable to higher-priced Windows machines. Many sub-$1000 Windows laptops and sub-$500 netbooks exist. Mac laptops are usually more expensive than the comparably spec'd Windows laptops people actually buy. Plus Apple's bundled iLife suite won't help you much at the office so it's not as much of a bonus as it is for a home user.

You Can't Run a Business on "Cool"

Are Macs cool? Sure, we've all been manipulated by 24 years of the cleverest product branding and advertising anywhere. But can you run your small law firm on "cool?" If you're running Windows apps primarily, does it make sense to opt for form over function? Likely not — unless you make a conscious choice to defy common sense. Paraphrasing Monsieur Voltaire, I may not agree with your choice of computing platform, but I will defend to the death your right to do so.

The "Macs Cool, PCs Suck" mantra of the evangelists is too simplistic. But some Mac evangelists are wiser and use a different argument.

They claim you can just use Web applications (a.k.a. SaaS — Software as a Service). Technically true. But I'm just not convinced they're ready for prime time for practical and logistical reasons. Many experts argue persuasively that it's premature to use Web apps for mission-critical needs.

Now, before all Mac-addicts turn on their flamethrowers, let me be clear. Again. I love Macs! I use a Mac! But I use it the way it was intended to be used — running the objectively superior OS X. I use it with OS X native apps — in particular Microsoft Office 2004 and 2008.

And let me be even more clear by making a much needed public outcry right here: We need legal software developers to produce Mac OS X native versions of their products. When these products exist for my clients, I'll tell everyone: "Get a Mac" — if you can justify it using sound business logic of course.

Photo by Etchasketchist. All rights reserved.

Written by Ross Kodner of MicroLaw.

How to Receive SmallLaw
Small firm, big dreams. Published first via email newsletter and later here on our blog, SmallLaw provides you with a mix of practical advice that you can use today, and insight about what it will take for small law firms like yours to thrive in the future. The SmallLaw newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Networking/Operating Systems | SmallLaw

How to Shop for a Scanner; Amicus Attorney Versus AbacusLaw; RTGBills Review; Digital Dictation; Walk at Work

By Sara Skiff | Thursday, November 13, 2008

Coming today to Answers to Questions: David Hudgens discusses his firm's switch from Time Matters to PCLaw, Judy Overholt reviews the installation and tech support for Amicus Attorney 7 versus AbacusLaw, Thomas Bower reviews RTG Bills for time-billing, Neal Frishberg explains why he switched to dictation digital, and Cathy Kenton shares a unique way to get fit and work at the same time. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Thursdays, Answers to Questions is a weekly newsletter in which TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers (including you if you join TechnoLawyer). Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Coming Attractions | Copiers/Scanners/Printers | Dictation/OCR/Speech Recognition | Furniture/Office Supplies | Practice Management/Calendars | TL Answers

SmartRules.com: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire covers an online court rules service for small law firms (see article below), an application for reviewing discovery documents, a 24 inch monitor, a financial calculator for iPhone, and an information service for BlackBerrys. Don't miss the next issue.

If You Know the Rules, You Won't Lose Your Cool (or Clients)
By Neil J. Squillante

PRT-9-NPP-450

In a perfect world, courts and legislators would work together to create a simple set of procedural rules so that lawyers could spend more time on the key issues in their cases and less time worrying about arcane requirements. Here's a news flash — we don't live in a perfect world. That's why we have technology. When it works, it can simplify complex data sets such as court rules.

SmartRules.com ... in One Sentence
Practice Technologies' SmartRules.com provides step-by-step instructions for handling procedures in state and federal courts throughout the country.

The Killer Feature
Figuring out which rules apply to a given scenario such as filing a motion to dismiss often requires consulting multiple sources — civil procedure, rules of evidence, standing orders, local rules, etc. — some of which may conflict with each other or be out of date.

SmartRules.com eliminates the need to make sense of all these rules sources individually. Instead, just enter your jurisdiction and select your task. SmartRules.com then provides you with a SmartRules Guide — a step-by-step checklist for that particular task, including up-to-date drafting and filing requirements from all applicable rules sources.

Other Notable Features
SmartRules.com is not a 1.0 product. For the past six years, over 50 of the largest law firms in the country have used SmartRules firm-wide to manage their litigation portfolio. What's new is a Web version for small firms and sole practitioners.

SmartRules.com covers all courts in the country (state, federal, trial and appellate), with premium SmartRules Guides available for California, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Virginia and Federal District Courts.

Two forms of membership exist — Basic and Premium.

The Basic Membership gives you access to all the applicable codes, courts, and forms for every civil trial and appellate court in the United States. It also provides you with subpoena guides for most states as well as SmartRules Alerts to warn you in advance about rule changes.

The Premium Membership gives you access to SmartRules Guides for thousands of topics, which obviates the need for you to research the various rules.

What Else Should You Know?
The SmartRules.com Basic Membership is free. Premium Membership is sold on a subscription basis based on jurisdiction. A Daypass is available too for one-time needs. Learn more about SmartRules.com.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Wednesdays, TechnoLawyer NewsWire is a weekly newsletter that enables you to learn about new technology products and services of interest to legal professionals. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Legal Research | Online/Cloud | TL NewsWire

Review: Zetadocs 5

By Sara Skiff | Friday, November 7, 2008

Coming November 11, 2008 to TechnoFeature: Sometimes repetition works in your favor — practicing an instrument, dining at your favorite restaurant, etc. But repetition in your legal practice often wastes time and hinders productivity. For example, preparing agreements such as a real estate closing, trust, etc. In this article, attorney Daniel Fennick reviews Zetadocs, PDF software with a twist that aims to automate the production and delivery of documents created in Microsoft Office and elsewhere. Daniel discusses the Stationary and Attachment modules in depth, as well as his experience with technical support. Thanks to this detailed review, you'll be able to assess whether Zetadocs can help your law firm become more productive.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Tuesdays, TechnoFeature is a weekly newsletter that contains in-depth articles written by leading legal technology and practice management experts. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | TechnoFeature

Web Clipper Reviews; Eorotech Ergohuman Chair Review; Adhesion Contracts; iTunes Tip; Secure Passwords Algorithm

By Sara Skiff | Thursday, November 6, 2008

Coming today to Answers to Questions: Doug Rice reviews Microsoft OneNote 2007, Evernote, and HTTrack, Robert Bass reviews the Eurotech Ergohuman leather high back desk chair, Steven McNichols discusses the dark side of adhesion contracts (citing a few personal examples), Fred Brock suggests a fix for those having trouble with iTunes and their CD/DVD drives, and Victoria Herring provides more information on creating a unique password based on a personal algorithm. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Thursdays, Answers to Questions is a weekly newsletter in which TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers (including you if you join TechnoLawyer). Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Business Productivity/Word Processing | Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Coming Attractions | Entertainment/Hobbies/Recreation | Furniture/Office Supplies | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Privacy/Security | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | TL Answers | Utilities

Mumboe: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire covers a contract management application (see article below), a CLE courseware program, a cost recovery system, anti-virus software, a voice recording application for iPhone, an online store for BlackBerrys, and a case management application for Windows Mobile. Don't miss the next issue.

Cut Through the Mumbo Jumbo
By Neil J. Squillante

Management. The most overused word in legal software? First came case management. Then knowledge management. Contact management. Client relationship management. Etc. Cliche or not, this word underscores the growing need of the legal profession to, yes, manage disparate types of electronic information. Well, it's time to add new one to the list — contract management.

Mumboe ... in One Sentence
Mumboe is an online application that enables you to manage existing agreements and also store and share templates from which to create new agreements.

The Killer Feature
Most contracts drone on for pages and pages. This level of detail is necessary, but some details are more important and more likely to be referenced than others. Also, some details exist in virtually all contracts regardless of subject matter.

When you upload contracts into Mumboe for storage, Mumboe extracts the most critical data so that you can review it at a glance and also compare it across other contracts. It even extracts this data if you upload a scanned contract thanks to its built-in OCR technology.

What does it extract? The parties, addresses, term, choice of law, etc. You can review the data extracted and make corrections and remove details you don't want to track before saving. Mumboe refers to this information as "contract intelligence."

Other Notable Features
Like most online applications, Mumboe provides a dashboard from which you can access all of Mumboe's functions. For example, you can search for an agreement, view all agreements, and create an agreement.

Mumboe offers simple and advanced search. You can search the full text of agreements or just extracted data. The advanced search mode provides you with Boolean operators, date ranges, and other tools to narrow the results.

Mumboe also enables you to create reminders for important milestones, create tasks and assign them to others, bookmark agreements for quick access, and import contacts so that you can more easily populate agreement templates.

What Else Should You Know?
Like most online applications, Mumboe offers a free "gateway" version, Mumboe Express, which provides you with storage for 10 agreements. Mumboe Pro costs $24/month for 250 agreements. You can purchase additional storage at a rate of $12/month per 100 agreements. Learn more about Mumboe.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Wednesdays, TechnoLawyer NewsWire is a weekly newsletter that enables you to learn about new technology products and services of interest to legal professionals. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Online/Cloud | TL NewsWire | Transactional Practice Areas

SmallLaw: Lawyers Turn the Technology Corner (Maybe)

By Mazyar Hedayat | Monday, November 3, 2008

TechnoGuide 10-27-08-450

Originally published on October 27, 2008 in our free SmallLaw newsletter.

Last month I spoke with a successful lawyer-entrepreneur who did IT consulting for small and mid-sized firms. Before our conversation was cut short after about 5 minutes he agreed that the legal community had long been in technology's rearview mirror. Then he offered a provocative opinion: the profession had turned a corner when it came to the use of technology. I never got a chance to follow up with him, and ever since have been trying to figure out what he could have meant.

Have we really reached a watershed in our attitude towards, and use of, technology? Based on my experience, the answer is ... a definite maybe.

Maybe So (We've Made the Breakthrough)

Getting RSSified: An increasing number of federal courts now provide RSS feeds of their decisions — quite a mind-bender when you consider that most lawyers don't know what RSS is much less how to use it.

Practice Without a Net: Online suites like Clio are popping up all over, meaning that a critical mass of lawyers now consider them (a) practical, (b) secure, (c) not too complicated, and (d) not too pricey.

Social Networking: This development has accelerated in the last few months and is nothing less than stunning. Networks like FaceBook, Plaxo, and LinkedIn have become virtually choked with lawyers and now feature more than a few federal and state court judges. I'm speechless.

Top-Down Mandate: Nothing beats coercion to enforce systemic change. The more courts incorporate and acknowledge RSS feeds, blogs, wikis, and microblogs, the sooner those tools will become as common as eDiscovery. Enough said.

Maybe Not (Right Back Where We Started)

Despite such ostensibly positive developments, lawyers have yet to use even tried and true forms of technology to collaborate in a sustained way or help one another overcome common barriers like the traditional law-firm pyramid, overpriced vendors, marketing scams, unrealistic judicial and client expectations, or persistent over-regulation.

Where We Stand

So, have we turned a corner? Frankly, I'm not sure. But I do have a few thoughts about what that lawyer-entrepreneur meant:

• Maybe he was referring to the fact that more law firms than ever are networking their computers and using email to communicate with clients and each other. Not exactly the cutting edge, but still ...

• Maybe he was referring to way that the ubiquity of mobile email via BlackBerry, iPhone, etc. has eased a generation of lawyers into the world of always-on technology since email is a "gateway technology" for many others.

• Maybe he just meant more lawyers than ever find that the rapidly changing technological environment favors them — something that was bound to happen as younger lawyers rose to power and reacted to their bosses who simply accepted the status quo.

In the end I'll have to wait for this lawyer-entrepreneur to call me again and explain what he meant. That is, assuming he ever gets around to doing so. It seems he's too busy networking computers in the offices of Chicago law firms to comment on what it was he had in mind. I'll let you know if he ever gets back to me.

Written by Mazyar M. Hedayat of M. Hedayat & Associates, P.C.

How to Receive SmallLaw
Small firm, big dreams. Published first via email newsletter and later here on our blog, SmallLaw provides you with a mix of practical advice that you can use today, and insight about what it will take for small law firms like yours to thrive in the future. The SmallLaw newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: SmallLaw | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

Build or Buy?; So Long Palm; BlackBerry Not the Answer; Nationalization of the Legal Profession; Excel Blues; Legal Web Apps

By Sara Skiff | Friday, October 31, 2008

Coming November 7, 2008 to Fat Friday: Thomas Stirewalt addresses a recent TechnoFeature article about why lawyers should understand how to build a PC, Alan Kaminski discusses his experience upgrading to a 64 bit laptop and the Palm/BlackBerry dilemma that ensued, George Ross questions the the need for BlackBerry Enterprise Server, Mickie Whitley responds to a recent SmallLaw column about a nationalized legal system, and Brian Sherwood Jones links to a news story about the collapse of Lehman Brothers, a wayward spreadsheet, and a junior associate. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Fridays, Fat Friday is a weekly newsletter that features a grab bag full of genuinely useful product reviews and tips on a wide variety of topics. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Coming Attractions | Desktop PCs/Servers | Fat Friday | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Office Management | Networking/Operating Systems | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

Review: Discovery Cracker 5.2

By Sara Skiff | Friday, October 31, 2008

Coming November 4, 2008 to TechnoFeature: Steve Martin famously complained that most celebrity biographies focus only on the fame, but not on the path to fame. Electronic discovery is similar. For many years, lawyers have outsourced the processing phase — transforming raw electronic data into a load file for document review software. But for smaller cases, law firms increasingly want to perform this processing on site. In this article, legal technology consultant and eDiscovery expert Brett Burney reviews Discovery Cracker 5.2, a processing tool that can prepare hundreds of file types for import into just about any review platform. If you would like to prep electronic files at the earliest stages of litigation, read Brett's in-depth review of Discovery Cracker.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Tuesdays, TechnoFeature is a weekly newsletter that contains in-depth articles written by leading legal technology and practice management experts. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Coming Attractions | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | TechnoFeature
 
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