Archive for the ‘bookmarks’Category

getting found online

search engine optimization

From Guy Kawasaki’s Alltop – some good advice about how to get found online:

  • Don’t Be Ordinary. Unique ideas will take you further than throwing money at marketing
  • Create Good Content. Blogs, videos, podcasts, social networks, and tweets get noticed
  • Optimize It. Optimize posts to be found on Google, Facebook, Twitter, Bing, Yahoo, etc.
  • Promote It. Post your content as many ways as you can and email it to interested parties
  • Measure Results. Act once, measure twice and keep measuring for continued success

Can being online increase productivity?

Who knew? It turns out that free tools online can help you achieve your personal, financial, and practice goals. Below you’ll find the 10-step plan to do it.

1.  Get the big-picture of what you want do to using software like mindjet.

2. Develop task lists via Remember the Milk, Google Tasks, etc.

3.  Use services like Bing and Hunch that give suggestions.

4.  Record your progress via Springpad and like services.

5.  Use tools like Diigo, Zotero, and Laterloop, to save work.

6. Searchpad can help integrate the results of your research.

7. Calendar and organize using services like Ning and Meetup.

8. Build or participate in communities of goal-oriented people.

9. Review content-sharing sites like WordPress, YouTube, etc.

10. Refine, reconfigure, repeat.

Sites to Checkout

Geezeo tracks personal finances in a community of like-minded people. The site just launched a Facebook application.

Mint: the more famous and earlier financial website recently purchased by Intuit, the makers of Quicken. Imagine the possibilities.

Goalmigo is an online community that helps you set, track and find supporters to reach your goals.

112 Apps that help you Get Things Done (GTD) is a great list, but of course who has time when you’re getting things done?

From 5 Steps to Getting Unstuck and Pursuing Your Goals

Will Recap finally make PACER user friendly?

Recap: Making Pacer User Friendly

Making Pacer User Friendly

Friday I stumbled on Recap and was impressed.  How impressed? I downloaded it immediately and signed the online petition to make federal case-law available for free. Yeah – that impressed. Recap seems to have impressed some others as well; it has even enlisted top-shelf talent like the lawyer-activist-millionaires over at Justia (you might be more familiar with their last project, Findlaw).

How it works: Recap saves every document you view on PACER, adds meta-tags and other features, makes the item easier to find, and posts it to a central locale.  The next time a user goes to PACER and wants that document, if it’s already been “liberated” then the user can download it free of charge.

Granted, you end up paying the 8 cents per page, which means that someone else gets a free ride, but the idea is that someone else could be doing the same and so on.  Of course the fact that Recap exists begs the question of why we Americans must pay to view the fruits of our own justice system. Westlaw and Lexis figured out that answer a long time ago.

To use Recap you must use Firefox, the open-source alternative to Internet Explorer. But I suggest you download Firefox even if you don’t download Recap. It’s just a better browser.

Feedback:  If you’ve used Recap or have an opinion sound off in our comment section or contact me, Hacker in Chief, at mhedayat@mha-law.com

Friendfeed RIP

Facefeed

Yesterday Facebook, the application that convinced a generation of soccer moms it was okay to post semi-candid pictures of themselves no matter how disturbing, bought Friendfeed, the best social application you’ve never heard of.  When I read the news I wept. No, seriously. I wept at the end of an era.

Freiendfeed makes me feel smart. Facebook makes me feel like I need a shower. Friendfeed brings out the best in users. It promotes discussions about cutting-edge topics and insights. Facebook brings out the worst in users  – many of them highly placed people who should know better – by soliciting the mundane and celebrating the average. See the difference?

I hope Facebook leaves Friendfeed alone, but I have no illusions. As it stands I’m positive that hordes of Facebook users will thunder into Friendfeed, choke it with pointless chatter, and leave it a disaster area when they move on a few weeks later.

If you find something online that’s worth keeping I hope you feel a little sad when it gets “discovered” and you know it’s about to lose its special character. That’s how you know it was worthwhile in the first place.

ABA TechShow: The Video

Thought I’d share some choice video from TechShow 2009 featuring all 4 of the Best of Show winners that I wrote up in TechnoLawyer, plus interviews with some of my heroes such as Bob Ambrogi, Jay Funeberg, and Kevin O’Keefe, as well as sightings of legal blogging all-stars like Dennis Kennedy and Tom Mighelle. I’m still excited.

<a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=XOC2Pf5P2P0&amp;hl">http://youtube.com/watch?v=XOC2Pf5P2P0&amp;hl</a>

See related videos here and find me on YouTube as practicehacker.

ABA TechShow 2009 – Short and SaaSy

Were the ABA Damnit!

We're the ABA Damnit! We own you!

This was my 10th year at ABA Technology Show in Chicago. This year was particularly cool.  Here’s why:

Meeting The Heavies: To me, seeing people like Dennis Kennedy, Tom Mighelle, Bob Ambrogi, Jim Calloway, Kevin O’Keefe, Brett Burney, Andy Atkins, Jay Foonberg (!) and the rest of my pretend blog friends … I mean pretend LinkedIn friends … is like reconnecting with long lost relatives. Exciting and a little intimidating. But all of them were really great and down to earth. Except that Kennedy. Such a prima donna. I kid, I kid.

Meeting Canadians: Who can forget meeting the Great Librarian of Upper Canada! Beat that. Then there was Phil of the Future (my name for him), Steve Matthews (nice guy), Brett Burney (I think he’s Canadian), Dominic Jaar (vive la Quebec libre!), the boys from Clio (or as I called them, the Booth Babes), and a host of other talent from the Great White North. It was great to meet you all: now go back where the ice doesn’t melt until July.

Technology Becoming Accepted: This year for the first time in memory I noticed a preponderance of grey hairs and the careful gait of partners scoping out potential buys for their offices.  This was not the brash, flash-in-the-pan TechShow of the late-90’s in which the Internet was decried as a fad.

SaaS, Saas, and more Saas: Software as a service was all over the place, and by next year it will be pervasive. This year I was knocked out by the number and variety of kick-ass SaaS providers at the show including Clio, RocketMatter, and VLO Tech. Clio was my hands-down favorite for a number of reasons – I intend to use it in my own practice. Whatever your cup of tea, the idea of throwing away the IT department in favor of the Cloud is gaining traction fast.

Less is … Less: One lamentable fact about this  year’s show – there was less of it than I’ve seen in a long time. Another casualty of the economy I’d say, but we shouldn’t overlook the fact that many legal technology vendors have been slaves to profit instead of boosters for innovation and the slow economy is making it painfully apparent what a royal screw job they’ve been giving lawyers all these years. Many players couldn’t make it ? Good riddance to bad company.

Other than that however, it was a great experience as always and one that I heartily recommend to one and all. If you haven’t been to TechShow, go there. If you have, come back. A splendid time is guaranteed for all.

For more coverage see my SmallLaw Column in TechnoLawyer.

Check out Twitter coverage of TechShow.

As always, I’d love your thoughts. E-mail me at mhedayat[at]mha-law.com or tweet me @practichacker.

ttyl :-)

07

04 2009

Legal Feeds on Twitter

So you’re pretty hip, right? You’ve got the connections. The blog. The Facebook account. You’re even on Twitter (whatever that is …). Whether you know how to use it or not, Twitter is the direction in which the Internet is taking communication (or is communication going there anyway?) so here is a handy list of legal news feeds that you can currently subscribe to on Twitter, courtesy of the brain trust over at JD Supra (the best damn legal form site you can build for $10,000,000!)

  • ABAJournal – continuous news updates from the ABA’s “leading legal affairs magazine and website”…
  • LexMonitor – from LexBlog, a daily review of law blogs and journals, highlighting prominent legal discussion on all subjects…
  • PhilaCourts – streaming Philadelphia court news…
  • lawtweets – U.K. law news and tweets (one of the first legal news feeds via Twitter, from Nick Holmes and infolaw)…
  • tradelawnews – news and information on export controls, customs law, the FCPA, antidumping law, and other international trade issues…
  • ImmAdvocates – from Immigration Advocates Network, a free online network that supports legal advocates working on behalf of immigrants’ rights nationwide…
  • overlawyered – feed of posts from “the oldest law blog” skewering everything litigious…
  • pointoflaw – feed from the web magazine sponsored by the Manhattan Institute; information and opinion on the U.S. litigation system…
  • Farmworker Justice – from Harvesting Justice, advocates for farmworkers’ and immigrants’ rights…
  • technola – from the eponymous technology blog for legal aid and public interest advocates…
  • lawiscool – feeds from a Canadian law school blog and podcast…
  • Copyright Law – relevant links from multiple news sources, culled by prof. Michael Scott, Southwestern Law School…
  • juristnews – real-time legal news from Jurist at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law…
  • SEC Investor Ed. – links to updates from the Securities and Exchange Commission…
  • Technology & Media Alerts – feed of alerts and news covering legislation and developments in Technology, Media, and Communications law (fr. JD Supra)…
  • Commercial Law Alerts – alerts and news covering developments in commercial law: securities, taxation, banking, antitrust, etc (JD Supra)…
  • Law Practice News – articles and newsletters covering issues, products, and services in Legal Practice (JD Supra)…
  • Legal Alerts – newsletters, articles, and alerts covering all subjects & published by lawyers, firms, & legal professionals on JD Supra.


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