Archive for March, 2009

I wish I'd written that!

Don't Stop Swimming ...

Don't Stop Swimming ..

 

Hilarious and true: All the Depressing Info We Could Find on Your Future … In One PlaceThe Shark, a blog by Cal Law (California’s legal source according to its ads), posted an excellent and truly useful chart summarizing the layoffs, summer non-hires, and other good news flooding out of the legal industry and right into the brains of law students.  And the comments are as worthwhile as the post itself. I would subsribe to this blog just for the humor value; their motto is “Don’t stop swimming, it’s law school.” Ain’t that the truth!

Recent Twitter posts from The Shark

more law schools join the conversation

more law schools are Twittering

more law schools are Twittering

More law schools on Twitter, bringing the total to 36 (including my alma mater – the Blue Demons of DePaul)

American University Washington College of Law
Appalachian School of Law Library
Baylor Law School
Case Western Reserve University School of Law

DePaul Law School
Duke Law Publications
Hamline Law School

Harvard Law School
Lewis & Clark Law School Library
Marquette University Law School

New York University Law School

Oklahoma City University School of Law

Pace Law Library

Pace Law School
Pierce Law School

Stanford Law School

The John Marshall Law School

University at Buffalo Law Library

University at Buffalo Law School
University of Chicago Law School

University of Hawaii School of Law

University of Iowa
College of Law Director of External Relations
University of Iowa College of Law News
University of Nebraska College of Law Library

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill School of Law

University of San Diego School of Law

University of Texas at Austin

University of Toronto Faculty of Law

University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law

University of Virginia School of Law

Valparaiso University School of Law
Wake Forest University Law School

Washburn Law School

Washington and Lee University School of Law

Widener Law

Yale Law Library

13

03 2009

mikz got mobility

Coneneer turns your phone into a server

mikz makes your phone a server

Conveneer, a Swedish mobile startup is building a mobile platform called Mikz that would assign a unique URL to your mobile phone, making content on your phone accessible on the Web. In essence, it turns each mobile phone into a Web server. Once your phone has a URL, Web applications and services can incorporate the data locked in there and, conversely, your phone can take advantage of common Web applications and information on the Web. Mikz can pull information such as contacts, GPS coordinates, and files from your phone. It then creates a Web interface for your phone so that you access that information anywhere. The result will be, among other things that you would never lose any telephone data again or need to back up or synchronize. You would simply have access to the information because it is all on a central location. Looking a step further ahead, that same information should be available to incorporate into office applications, documents, pleadings, letters, etc., etc., etc.

finally … a firefox plugin that creates bluebook citations

Firefox

Firefox

Today’s nugget of GTD goodness is a Firefox extension that creates pinpoint BlueBook citations. I’ve been talking about that for 10 years (no joke). Glad somebody finally put one together. 

Ed. Note: this nugget of legal-technology gold came from the Affinity Law Office Technology Blog care of eLawNYC, which twittered about the piece; it’s tweet ended up on its FriendFeed page. In other words, the lawyer stampede to social media platforms such as Twitter and FriendFeed is on.

See some potential law office uses for FriendFeed and Twitter

See a short survey about lawyers using Twitter and FriendFeed

10 things that Twitter should do but doesn't (yet)

Twitter

Twitter

From Six Revisions comes 10 Features That Will Make Twitter Better and in no particular order here they are

Enable grouping of friends and followers

Twitter’s increasing popularity has gotten many people on board and using the web application. With the growing number of active users comes the need for following more people. The ability to create groups (or categories) of Twitter users that you follow can reduce the noise in your Twitter feed and can help you immediately see updates from particular groups of users. For example, having a group for “co-workers” or “local tweeters” can help you quickly see what your co-workers are saying or find up-to-the-minute information on local events such as traffic accidents.

Auto Complete in Tweets

Figure 2 shows an auto complete dialog box appears when you type the @ symbol. Auto complete is an interaction design pattern that involves displaying a list of suggestions as the user types in text. Auto complete can speed up the process of sending a tweet directed to a particular user using the @username format. It will also help in times where you’re having trouble spelling someone’s username. Another application of the auto complete feature is for suggesting #hashtags (keywords associated with a tweet) to make keyword-tagging of tweets easier.

Text links in tweets

With a 140 character limit, it’s often difficult to have links in a tweet without robbing yourself out of precious characters. By allowing users to tweet hyperlinked text, not only will it give them a little bit more room for including additional characters, but will also make Twitter feeds look cleaner.

Tweets-threading

Twitter is a great source of information and is a wonderful forum for discussing various topics. Unfortunately, the current user interface doesn’t allow you to easily view a conversation between two or more people.Coupled with the “reply to” feature in the current user interface, threaded tweets can give users the chance to participate in (or follow along with) conversations taking place in several Twitter feeds. Threaded tweets can also serve as a means for people to find other Twitter users that are interested in similar subjects of conversation.

Allow Tweets directed to a group of people (“group tweet”)

Figure 4 shows a possible syntax for tweets directed to a group of users using a double @ synax. With companies and communities joining in on the fun, the ability to tweet to a group of Twitter users offers a convenient way of specifically targeting a set of people. For example, if you wanted to tweet to your co-workers, the syntax could be: @@friends I’ll be a little late for our lunch date, start ordering without me. The double @ serves to differentiate a tweet directed to a single user from one that’s directed to a group of users.

Display meta data through hover tooltips

A tooltip is an effective graphical user interface element that allows users to view more information when they hover or click on a text or object of interest without having to leave the current web page. They enable information-gathering with fewer clicks and fewer pages to visit. One way tooltips can be helpful is in seeing the bio information of a Twitter user when you hover over their username on your Twitter feed. If you see a username mentioned in an interesting Twitter update, simply hover over the name to see more information about the user that was mentioned.

Use the sidebar more effectively to display information

Twitter can utilize the right sidebar more effectively by showing relevant information and statistics. For example, a “Most Recent Replies” section or a “Most Used #hashtags” section can be very helpful in showcasing the latest activities and the hottest topics.

Add a page that displays tweets mentioning your username

Twitter users (me included) like seeing their names mentioned. Currently, only @replies (tweets that begin with @username) can be seen in the @Replies page. A nice optional feature would be to have a page that lists tweets where your username is mentioned or where a particular tweet of yours is re-tweeted (example: “RT @username”). A less self-centered benefit for this feature is the opportunity to find people who are interested in what you have to say, enough that they update their own Twitter feed with a tweet of yours, or to see what types of your tweets are popular amongst people who follow you.

Highlight specific users, de-emphasize others in feed

Figure 6 shows the first tweet as being highlighted, and the second tweet being deemphasized. The third tweet is how tweets normally look like in the current interface. Users who follow many people run into the trouble of Twitter feed overload where there’s just too much going on and too many tweets to read. The ability to mark favorite Twitter users, as well as de-emphasize users that you don’t care much about (but still want to follow for some reason), can give users better visual queues on what to pay attention to first when perusing one’s Twitter feed.

Add a Built-in URL shortener

With Twitter’s current user interface, hyperlinks are counted towards your 140 character count limit even if it gets reduced in length by a URL-shortening service like TinyURL.com after you hit the “Update” button. One way to allow users to enter more text – without having to go to another website just to shorten URL’s – is to have a built-in URL-shortening feature. This would not only save user’s some time, but also eliminates the need to rely on other websites to perform an action that should really be handled within the system.

05

03 2009

The Interactive Intranet

With thanks to R. Todd Stephens of Atlanta, Georgia for tweeting about this presentation. Mr. Stephens is a perennial source of information and can be found on Twitter under the handle @rtodd.