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Choosing an eDiscovery Vendor; Annotating PDF Files; Choosing Practice Management Software; Time Matters-PCLaw Link; Amicus Small Firm

By Sara Skiff | Friday, October 12, 2007

Coming October 18, 2007 to Answers to Questions: Neil Packard discusses the task of selecting an eDiscovery vendor, Pamela Coleman provides detailed instructions for annotating PDF files with Acrobat, Sandra Adams shares her insight on choosing a practice management solution, LexisNexis Product Manager Alan Tuback responds to a recent question about the link between PCLaw and Time Matters, and Peter Bender reviews the accounting capabilities of Amicus Small Firm. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published 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 | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | Practice Management/Calendars | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | TL Answers

BlackBerry Versus Windows Mobile; Paperless Law Firm; What Is a Troll Anyway?; LogMeIn Review; That's Easy

By Sara Skiff | Friday, October 12, 2007

Coming October 20, 2007 to Fat Friday: Matt Baker reviews BlackBerry Desktop and Windows Mobile with ActiveSync (his firm didn't just compare these competing mobile solutions on paper, but used both in the field), Simon Laurent discusses the details of his firm's paperless workflow, John Feeney responds to a recent TechnoFeature article on successful legal blogging (plus adds a few comments about trolls, the online variety), James Atkins reviews LogMeIn for remote access while traveling, and Martin Dean unveils the easiest word processing program to learn on the job. 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: Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Document Management | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Fat Friday | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Networking/Operating Systems | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

eDiscovery: Everything You Need to Know About Collection and Processing

By Sara Skiff | Friday, October 12, 2007

Coming October 16, 2007 to TechnoFeature: Years ago, discovery involved a very well-known item — paper. Today, discovery encompasses much more than paper so a litigation team needs to adopt a multifaceted approach as they adapt to this ever-changing world. Fortunately, George Socha and Tom Gelbmann's landmark Electronic Discovery Reference Model (EDRM) lays out the major steps in eDiscovery. But what do these steps mean in terms of the day-to-day grind for Joe or Jane Litigator? For help we turn to trial attorney and legal technologist Bruce Olson who has written what we think will become a much-discussed three-part series on the most important components of Socha-Gelbmann's EDRM. In this first installment, he covers Collection and Processing.

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

Inspicio: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire covers a litigation document review application (see below), a new legal accounting and billing program, and an online service that helps you schedule meetings more efficiently. Don't miss the next issue.

Your Ticket Out of the Document Gulag
By Taeho Lim

Back in the day, law firms that handled document-intensive cases would often lease an entire floor just to house the documents. Associates would dread being assigned to such cases as it meant spending all their time in these document gulags instead of in their plush offices. With the advent of eDiscovery, these floors have gradually disappeared, but document review remains a dreaded task because the number of documents has increased.

Inspicio from Altep aims to streamline the document review process. Inspicio is a Web-based solution that enables you to review documents from anywhere. According to Altep, Inspicio features high-level navigability, flexibility, and powerful analytical tools that help ensure accurate and efficient review.

Inspicio features a spacious "data repository" in which you can store document collections for multiple matters. Inspicio supports hundreds of different file formats so you can open files right away in their native format without having to convert them.

As you review documents, you can use Inspicio's tagging technology to organize them. For example, mark a file with "Responsive," "Privileged," "Jones Deposition," etc. You apply tags by simply checking a box. You can apply a tag to one document at a time or multiple documents simultaneously.

Inspicio also enables you to search across all documents in the application for any matter. You can use "Basic Search" for simple searches and "Query Builder" to conduct more complex, custom searches with the Inspicio interface.

Inspicio's advanced reporting helps you keep track of document collections and progress on projects and matters. The ToDo List function enables you to plan a review and assign its components to members of the team.

Regarding security, Inspicio features "user domains" and "access levels" to determine who can see, create, access, or edit certain files. In addition, you can track every user action in any part of the application. Finally, Inspicio has its own messaging system so you can communicate with other users. Messages stay within Inspicio to preserve confidentiality. Learn more about Inspicio.

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: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | Online/Cloud | Practice Management/Calendars | TL NewsWire

How to Convert from POP to IMAP and Achieve Email Bliss

By Neil J. Squillante | Monday, October 8, 2007

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Have you every wondered why people refer to BlackBerrys as CrackBerrys? It's not because of mobile email. It's because of synchronized email.

On a BlackBerry that connects to a BlackBerry Enterprise Server and Exchange Server, your email is the same everywhere. For example, when you send a message on your BlackBerry, that message also appears in your Sent Mail in Outlook and vice versa. The same goes for any folders you create.

If your law firm doesn't use BlackBerry Enterprise Server, you can still have nearly the same experience using IMAP, an email protocol available on most email servers and from many ISPs (we use Webmail.us, an ISP that specializes in email).

Because IMAP is server-based, your email is identical everywhere you check it — work computer, home computer, laptop, smartphone, other computers, etc. The only major difference between IMAP and BlackBerry Enterprise Server is that you'll still have to manually check your email or set up your email program to check it periodically rather than have it pushed to you like a phone call.

WHY YOU SHOULD PART WITH POP ...

If you don't have an Exchange Server and don't currently use IMAP, chances are you use POP, the most common email protocol among consumers and small businesses.

Unlike IMAP, POP stores email on your hard drive and then deletes it from the server. POP has its advantages. Because the email resides locally, you can access it faster. But the day you no longer check your email on a single device is the day you should part with POP and switch to IMAP.

You can set up a POP account to keep incoming messages on the server so you can receive them from multiple devices, but this trick does nothing for your sent mail, which will become scattered across your devices. And no, bcc-ing yourself is not a solution. It's an abomination.

You could also forego dedicated email programs like Outlook and check your POP account using Webmail. While Webmail clients have come a long way on computers, they don't work well on smartphones. Even Gmail on iPhone via Safari — probably the best mobile Webmail experience currently available — doesn't hold a candle to the native email applications on BlackBerrys, Treos, and iPhone itself.

Don't bother with these kludges. Switch to IMAP.

MAKING THE SWITCH TO IMAP ...

To switch from POP to IMAP, simply set up your IMAP accounts, create folders in those accounts that mirror the folders in your POP accounts, and then copy your POP email to those matching folders.

Sounds simple, right? Unfortunately, a few gotchas exist.

1. STORAGE: Remember, all your email will reside on the server! This means your IMAP accounts must have enough storage space to hold all your email now and in the future. For example, our IMAP accounts have a 2 GB capacity plus we can increase that limit anytime nondestructively. My account currently uses about 600 MB of the 2 GB.

2. TIME: If your firm has its own email server, copying your email should not take too long since it will take place on your network. But if you use an ISP and have gigabytes of email to upload, prepare yourself for a time-consuming task.

3. SPEED: Most email programs can keep a local copy of your IMAP email. I recommend taking advantage of this feature. It will speed up access to your existing email because you won't have to download it from the server every time. Instead, you'll only have to download new messages.

4. SECURITY: Whether you use your own email server or an ISP, make sure it supports secure, encrypted access. This way you can use WiFi hotspots on your laptop or smartphone without having to worry about anyone snooping on your email.

THE ARCHIVE OPTION ...

Switching from POP to IMAP provides a good opportunity to reassess the way you organize your email. In addition to changing your folder structure, you may want to consider archiving older email rather than moving it to your IMAP accounts.

Many email archiving solutions exist. I'd like to quickly tell you about a free option (provided you don't need more than 2 GB of storage per account) that we currently use — Google Apps for Your Domain.

You could also use a regular Gmail account, but I recommend using your own domain name so that you can set up accounts like smith-archive@domain.com, jones-archive@domain.com, etc.

Just to be clear, you'll need to use a domain name other than your main one because Google inexplicably does not support IMAP, only POP. Thus, Google will not become your primary email provider, just an archive solution.

Also, this archive solution works only if your mail server or ISP supports simultaneous protocols, which means that you can access the same account via POP or IMAP.

Here's what you need to do:

1. Set up an account at your primary domain name — something like smith-archive@primarydomain.com

2. Set up this account in your email program using IMAP.

3. Upload the email you want to archive to this account. You can set up folders if you want or just dump all your sent mail into Sent and all your received mail into the inbox.

4. Set up a similarly-named Google account — something like smith-archive@secondarydomain.com.

5. In your Google account, under Settings/Accounts, use the "Get Mail From Other Accounts" tool to download all your archived email. Google will access that account using POP so nothing will remain on your server afterwards.

6. If you want, you can have Google tag the email it downloads with a "label" — the equivalent of a folder. Some people don't bother on the theory that once you can take advantage of Google's search technology, such categorization becomes irrelevant. Also, you can only apply one label at a time, which means you must first upload the messages from one folder and then download and label them, and then repeat the process for each additional folder. As a happy medium, you could download all your Sent Mail and then download all your Received Mail, labeling each accordingly. This way, you can separate what you sent from what you received.

7. Once you complete your initial archive, continue to archive messages on a regular schedule that best fits your needs. Once per year works fine for me.

WELCOME TO EMAIL BLISS ...

Though time-consuming, switching from POP to IMAP will do more to help you overcome email overload than any other tactic. The ability to access and respond to email anywhere and have all your messages automatically synchronize will make you wonder how you ever lived without IMAP.

About TechnoEditorials
A TechnoEditorial is the vehicle through which we opine and provide tips of interest to managing partners, law firm administrators, and others in the legal profession. TechnoEditorials appear first in TechnoGuide, and later here in TechnoLawyer Blog. TechnoGuide, which is free, also contains exclusive content. You can subscribe here.

Topics: Email/Messaging/Telephony | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | TL Editorial

Disaster Planning at Home and Work; Oce Im7230 Review; Windows on Mac; Nastygram Credo; Voicemail Via Email

By Sara Skiff | Friday, October 5, 2007

Coming October 12, 2007 to Fat Friday: Wells Anderson provides a detailed disaster plan for the home and office, Lynn York reviews the Oce im7230 multifunction printer, Craig Humphrey discusses running Windows on a Mac (and we respond), Todd Richardson adds a tenth step to David Canton's instant classic Think Before Sending Nastygrams, and Jenny Jolinski shares her concerns about voicemail delivered by email. 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: Backup/Media/Storage | Coming Attractions | Copiers/Scanners/Printers | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Fat Friday | Law Office Management | Networking/Operating Systems

eDiscovery: Everything You Need to Know About Preservation

By Sara Skiff | Friday, October 5, 2007

Coming October 09, 2007 to TechnoFeature: In the past, preservation meant simply asking a client to set aside a pile of paper documents. In today's world, attorneys need to impress upon their client, the client's employees, and the client's IT professionals to remain constantly vigilant in the preservation of email, electronic documents, and a whole host of other potentially relevant digital data collections. In this article, eDiscovery expert Brett Burney explores the broadening responsibility associated with the preservation of electronic data. Brett's advice is so good, you'll want to get started by preserving this very newsletter.

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

SnapDone Review; Multiple Monitor Secrets; Legal Mac Training; Tabs3; Passwords Plus Review

By Sara Skiff | Friday, October 5, 2007

Coming October 11, 2007 to Answers to Questions: Robin Stickney reviews her firm's experience using SnapDone to manage case-related email, Steven Rosen reviews the VT Book PCMCIA card and UltraMon for multiple monitors, Brett Burney provides some helpful resources for legal professionals switching to a Mac, Software Technology Certified Reseller Katrina Curfiss clarifies some misconceptions about purchasing Tabs3 from a reseller, and Charlotte Quiroz reviews Password Plus for password management. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published 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 | CLE/News/References | Coming Attractions | Computer Accessories | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Monitors | Networking/Operating Systems | Practice Management/Calendars | Privacy/Security | TL Answers | Utilities

Discovery360: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire covers a comprehensive eDiscovery suite (see below), a new case management program for small law firms, and a Web-based intranet/extranet application. Don't miss the next issue.

All-In-One eDiscovery and Document Review
By Taeho Lim

Wouldn't it be nice to tap into every type of document analysis or search tool available today? If you want to do that with your eDiscovery cases, you have two choices — use multiple single-function programs and hope you can get them to integrate with one another, or use a single multiple-function program that does everything. If the latter approach sounds better to you, check out Discovery360 from InterLegis.

Discovery360 aims to streamline the eDiscovery process by providing the functionality of multiple eDiscovery applications in one convenient package. Its functionality includes: eDiscovery culling and processing, document attribute and conceptual clustering, natural language search, Boolean search, similarity matching, metadata filtering, email threading, proactive relevancy alerts, native or TIFF review, real-time reviewer reporting, on-the-fly productions, bulk issue coding, and more.

With all these tools in one application, Discovery360 simplifies each of the steps in the eDiscovery process, enabling you to cull and process documents, store, manage, analyze, review, and produce them as needed.

For example, the new "DataMapper" module enables case administrators to cull relevant documents using a wide range of criteria — keywords, custodian, date ranges, concepts, relevant metadata, or just about anything else you specify. Culling can eliminate 20-80% of irrelevant files depending on the situation. DataMapper can find and eliminate duplicates, and can also run "What If" scenarios so that you can get a sense of how many documents a certain decision would remove before actually doing so. DataMapper provides real-time reports throughout the process, all the while giving you control of your data and saving money too.

Once you have your data set in place, Discovery360 makes all document attributes searchable, including keywords, concepts, all metadata, timelines, and document relationships. During this process, Discovery360 also places documents into concept folders, identifies and groups email threads and similar documents (near duplicates), etc. — all aimed at reducing your workload. You can also add relevant paper documents to the mix to maintain a single, normalized database. Learn more about Discovery360.

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: Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | Online/Cloud | Practice Management/Calendars | TL NewsWire

TechnoLawyer Linkathon: Link to Our eBook for Your Chance to Win Up to $500

By Neil J. Squillante | Monday, October 1, 2007

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Please Note: TechnoLawyer Linkathon has ended. Read about the winners.

We recently published a free eBook — BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide. It continues to garner favorable reviews, most recently from LLRX. If you don't yet have a copy, please download it now (PDF file).

Today we're launching TechnoLawyer Linkathon — a sweepstakes in which you could win a first prize of $500 or a second prize of $200! The beauty of cold hard cash is spending it however you see fit. Buy the latest must-have gadget or 150 ice cream cones. Indulge yourself!

How to Enter Technolawyer Linkathon ...

Anyone with a blog or Web site that caters to the legal community can participate. TechnoLawyer membership is not required so please tell your friends.

If your blog or site qualifies, just do the following:

1. Link to Our eBook
Simply use this URL to send people to our site where they can download a copy of our eBook (no registration required): http://www.toplaw.news/r.asp?L12085&M1

You can link to us in one of two ways:

  • Place an image of the eBook that we provide along the side of your home page and simply link the image.
  • Write about the eBook in a blog post or in an article on or accessible from your home page. Your post/article should contain the eBook's title and the link plus whatever else you want to say (review, description, etc.). Or you can simply use a blurb that we provide.The title of the eBook is: BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide. You can download some blurbs about the eBook as well as some graphics here (.zip file).

Here again is the URL to use in your link: http://www.toplaw.news/r.asp?L12085&M1

2. Enter the Drawing
Once you have linked to us as outlined above, please email the corresponding Web address of that page on your blog or site along with your contact information (including city and state) to us at: linkathon1007@peerviews.com

After you enter, you'll receive a confirmation message. If you don't, please contact our customer service department (use the email address listed on the bottom of this page).

We will hold a drawing on November 21, 2007. There will be two prizes. The first prize winner will receive $500, and the second prize winner will receive $200.

Just one entry per blog or Web site. United States residents and blogs/sites only. You must send us your entry by October 31, 2007.

3. The Fine Print
There's no step 3! But we do have official rules. Please review them below. Good luck!

TECHNOLAWYER LINKATHON OFFICIAL RULES

1. ELIGIBILITY: NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. TechnoLawyer Linkathon is open to legal residents of the fifty (50) United States and the District of Columbia who have reached the age of majority in their state of residence as of the date of entry and who operate a blog or Internet Web site that caters to the U.S. legal community. Employees and directors of PeerViews Inc., as well as immediate family members (spouses, children, parents, siblings) and those living in the same household as employees and directors, are not eligible to participate. Eligibility will be determined in the sole discretion of Sponsor. By entering, you agree to these Official Rules and to all decisions of the Sponsor, which are final and binding. Linkathon is sponsored by PeerViews Inc., 825 Third Avenue, Second Floor, New York, NY 10022 ("Sponsor").

2. TO ENTER: To enter, add the link provided below to your Web site or blog post to send people to our site where they can download our eBook "BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide." The link must be added to your Web site or blog between October 1, 2007 and October 31, 2007. Links added before or after those dates are not eligible for the drawing. Link to our site in one of two ways: (1) place an image of the eBook that we provide along the side of your home page and link the image; or (2) write about the eBook in a blog post or in an article on or accessible from your home page that includes the title of the eBook, the link to it, and whatever else you want to say (review, description, etc.) or use a blurb that we provide on our Web site. The link to our Web site that you must use is: http://www.toplaw.news/r.asp?L12085&M1. No other link will be eligible even if it goes to the same Web page. Download information, blurbs, graphics and more related to the eBook. Once you have linked to us as described above, send an email message to linkathon1007@peerviews.com with the Web address of your blog or Web site containing the link to the eBook, along with your full name, city, state, and email address. Email entries must be received by Sponsor's server no later than 11:59:59 p.m. ET on October 31, 2007. Limit of one (1) entry per Web site or blog. Incomplete or garbled entries and entries with nonfunctioning links will be disqualified. Entries generated by a script, macro or other automated means are not eligible.

3. DRAWING and PRIZES: One (1) First Prize winner and one (1) Second Prize winner will be selected in a random drawing from among all eligible entries held on or about November 21, 2007. First Prize winner will receive $500. Second Prize winner will receive $200. Odds of winning a prize depend on the number of eligible entries received. Potential winners will be notified by email within five (5) business days after the drawing and must claim the prize by signing and returning a declaration of eligibility and liability/publicity release within five (5) business days of notification. If a potential winner cannot be reached within five (5) business days after the first attempt to contact such potential winner, or if potential winner does not timely return the signed claim forms, that potential winner will be disqualified and an alternate entrant will be selected in at random from among all remaining eligible entries. Any applicable taxes or fees on prizes are the sole responsibility of winners. Limit one prize per person. Prizes will be mailed in the form of a check to each winner within four to six weeks after the drawing date. No substitution of prize. Prizes are non-transferable prior to award. Sponsor is not responsible for actions after delivery.

4. OTHER CONSIDERATIONS:  By accepting a prize, winners agree that the Sponsor, and those acting under its authority, may use winners' names, cities, likenesses, and Web site or blog titles for advertising and promotional purposes in any media without limitation or obligation, and without further consideration, unless prohibited by law. By entering, you agree that the Sponsor, its parents, subsidiaries, affiliates, and all of their respective officers, directors, employees, representatives and agents, will have no liability whatsoever for, and will be held harmless by you for any liability for any injury, loss or damages of any kind to persons, including death, and property, due in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, from participation in the Linkathon, downloading any materials, or from the acceptance, possession, use or misuse of any prize or prize-related activity. Void where prohibited.

5. MISCELLANEOUS: All entries become the sole property of the Sponsor. In the event of a dispute, entries will be deemed made by the authorized account holder of the email address used to submit the entry. The "authorized account holder" is deemed as the natural person who is assigned to an email address by an Internet access provider, service provider or other online organization that is responsible for assigning e- mail addresses for the domain associated with the submitted email address. A potential winner may be requested to provide Sponsor with proof that the potential winner is the authorized account holder of the email address associated with the winning entry. If for any reason the Linkathon is not capable of running as planned, including due to infection by computer virus, bugs, tampering, unauthorized intervention, fraud, technical failures, human error or any other causes beyond the control of the Sponsor that corrupt or affect the administration, security, fairness, integrity, or proper conduct of the promotion, Sponsor reserves the right in its sole discretion, to disqualify any individual who tampers with the entry process, and to cancel, terminate, modify or suspend the promotion and to select winners from among the email entries received prior to such failure. The Sponsor is not responsible for late, lost, illegible, incomplete, stolen or misdirected mail or email. Sponsor is not responsible for any computer, telephone, satellite, cable, network, electronic or Internet hardware or software malfunctions, failures, connections, or availability, or garbled, corrupt or jumbled transmissions, traffic congestion, or any technical error, or for injury or damage to participants' or to any other person's computer related to or resulting from downloading the eBook, links or otherwise participating in the Linkathon or using the TechnoLawyer/PeerViews Web site.

6. WINNERS' LIST: For a list of the prize winners, send a self-addressed stamped envelope to TechnoLawyer Linkathon Winners, PeerViews Inc., 825 Third Avenue, Second Floor, New York, NY 10022, between October 31 and November 30, 2007. Requests received outside this period will not be processed. Allow 4-6 weeks for delivery of Winners' List.

Topics: BlawgWorld eBook | TechnoLawyer | TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide
 
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