Archive for the ‘litigation’Category

Did you hear? Apple released a new product!

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This is where I would normally shoot down the product identified in the title of this post, but I have a confession to make: when it comes to the iPad 2 I’m one of the pod people .. so to speak. Yeah, I’m a rabid fanboy. So while there has been plenty of noise this past week – both pro and con – about the iPad 2, I am most convinced by articles like this one on Techcrunch written by people who were already fans of the first iPad. Why? Because they were the ones most likely to be disappointed if the product fell short of the hype. So what was the author’s take in this case? Let’s put it this way: I’m getting one in white and one in traditional silver/black. They should be here at the end of next week. Then I’ll write my own review.

Posted via email from practice (redux)

TrialPad (the first of many, many, many ..)

Now that various tablets have jumped on the iPad-led bandwagon,  you can count on 2 things:
  1. A flood of lawyer-directed iPad and table applications, just as we did with the iPhone.
  2. Most apps will be crap or, worse still, mere aggregators (“crapregators” you might say).

Then consider that the very fact that TrialPad and similar apps exist means that developers and retailers expect lawyers to adopt tablets in large numbers, bringing us a step closer to the Jetsons-style future I’ve been waiting for since 1977 (still waiting by the way).

Hat Tip: Donna Seyle of Law Practice Strategy Blog via Martindale Hubbell Connected.

Posted via email from practice (redux)

Topicmarks reads and summarizes

Unemployed Editor-in-Chief of Chicago-Kent Law Review Blames Book Author (ABA Journal)

Via abajournal.com

It seems the editor-in-chief of the Chicago-Kent Law Review, one David Freedman, was unable to find work. According to a piece in Above the Law sourced by the ABA Journal, interviewing, volunteering, applying for clerkships, and surfing the Internet had all failed to land him an entry-level legal job. So Mr. Freedman wrote to the author of The Curmudgeon’s Guide to Practicing Law, Attorney Mark Herrmann, who sent him a copy of his book. Freedman wrote back to complain that the book had gotten him excited about working, making him even more bummed out about being unemployed. Apparently Mr. Herrmann agreed to meet Mr. Freedman, gave him some job-search advice, and they all lived happily ever after. [Read the full piece].

Having interviewed law-school grads for the past few years (including just yesterday), I’ve found nearly all of them to be wildly unrealistic about what they are worth. I can only wonder who is more responsible for the current market cluster-fu@$: gullible students, arrogant practitioners, ambitious law school deans, or lying placement office personnel. It’s got to be some kind of toss up; but any way you look at it graduating law students have been screwed for decades.

All I can say to Mr. Freedman and the other graduating law students is “Welcome to the party, pal.” It’s a rough, tough profession and nobody will pay you for your charming company. If you cnanot produce, consider yourself a liability (hint: recent law grads are almost pathalogically incapable of producing anything but hot air). If you are a recent law school graduate in need of work feel free to call my office and prove me wrong.

eSignature – free, secure online signatures

https://esign.adob.com

E-signatures? Yep – Adobe’s got ‘em. How does this work? Just like you think it works. Sign up for free, sign a document digitally. Enjoy.

What could this technology change for lawyers? Only everything. I plan to start using it immediately for client agreements, contracts, receipts, license agreements, status reports, letters, etc., etc., etc.

I have to admit – just when you think that Adobe has it all wrong … they go and do something intensely right. I stand corrected.

Posted via web from practice (redux)

ABA Tech Show 2010 in Pictures