Archive for the ‘GTD’Category

Saw this in NYC – Agent Anything

AgentAnything.com is the latest iteration of the trend that started with Kozmo.com in 1998 on the cusp of the first dot.com bubble. Such virtual assistant startups combined the economics of crowdsourcing, the virtually frictionless business environment of the Web, and the fact that we’re too busy for our own good.

Contenders in the space also include FancyHands. Of course this kind of service has existed for years without fanfare or the promise of Internet fame, and are now cropping up all over – not just to provide general services but in some cases to serve vertical markets. Could a legal-industry version of AgentAnything be far behind?

Posted via email from practice (redux)

Email Oracle

Every day seems to bring GMail and Outlook closer together; merging our desktop and web-based e-mail experiences one feature at a time.Take the simple act of following up on outgoing messages and circling back with contacts. Easy enough in Outlook. But what if you are using Gmail or Google Apps? Glad you asked … Email Oracle is a free plugin that works with all popular browsers (IE8, Safari, Firefox, and Chrome) and lets you track the receipt of e-mails and give yourself follow up reminders using check boxes and drop-downs built right into Gmail and Google Apps.

Want to know more? Here’s a video that explains all this better than I could. Enjoy!

Posted via email from practice (redux)

Enhanced by Zemanta

GMail’s Priority Inbox

So … did Google just buy GTriage or what?

Because it’s too much of a coincidence to just be a “coincidence.” Y’know?

Posted via email from practice (redux)

Gtriage – Your Inbox Can be Tamed

The Problem: E-mail Overload

The Solution: That depends …

Finding too many new messages in our in-boxes is a stubborn, universal problem for lawyers: an occupational hazard if you will. I’ve examined various solutions to this problem, including as Outlook plug-ins ClearContext and Xobni, but was never satisfied with their performance.

Take ClearContext for example. It produces excellent coordination between contacts, attachments, tasks, and appointments, but requires way too much work. Basically for CC to work well, the user must do all the classification and draw the connections. By the time I’m done advising the program of what’s important, I’m already exhausted.

Xobni on the other hand, magically organizes e-mail and attachments by contact without the need for any input at all. It really is impressive at showing you who is who, and the history of your communication with them; but it cannot help me make sense of the 100+ new messages I get every day. And without visual clues as to what is worth reading I can’t even find the important messages, much less put them in context.

Finally, these applications and others like them are designed exclusively for use with Outlook; a notorious memory hog that can single-handedly slow down and crash my system. No thank you.

Then I read about Gtriage in a FriendFeed post a few months ago. Gtriage works with Gmail or Google Apps to identify important messages and give you visual cues with which to find them. Just sign up and within minutes Gtriage learns your e-mail habits, applies its machine-learning algorithms, then identifies and labels messages so you know which ones to attack first. Amount of work required on the user’s end: none. That’s more like it.

Gtriage takes less than 3 minutes to set up. Since it learns automatically there is nothing to do or worry about once you have signed up; but if you are the creative type you might want to see how it can be combined with Gmail plug-ins like Multiple Inboxes for spectacular results (see this example).

Special Offer for Practicehackers: At the moment Gtriage remains in invitation-only beta, but Unblab was good enough to provide the invite code for 10 new accounts. Simply go to http://gtriage.com and be one fo the first 10 readers to sign up using practicehacker as your invite code.

Let me know what you think of Gtriage by posting your feedback, compliments, or hacks right here on Practicehacker.com, send your thoughts by e-mail to mhedayat@mha-law.com, join our Friendfeed Group, or sound off on Twitter.

Posted via email from practice (redux)

list.it – easy notes anywhere

I’m a real fan of apps, applets, add-ons, and other bite-sized web-enabled tools that make life easier. List.it is a perfect example. It’s super-simple and enables you to do one thing easily: take notes in any browser, organize them fast, take them anywhere via mobile device, or just check them out on any computer. Notes are securely stored remotely, and accessible through any browser. Sure, there are already a lot of free bookmarking services, note-taking services, and list services such as

But list.it goes the extra mile to be simpler, easier to use, and a cinch to manage. So what’s not to like?

Posted via email from practice (redux)

Quick Review: Collaboration Tools and Technologies

quick-review-logo1

“The practice of law is, has been, and will continue to be a collaborative process” according to Dennis Kennedy and Tom Mighell, authors of The Lawyer’s Guide to Collaboration Tools and Technologies: Smart Ways to Work Together. True enough. And collaboration in the Internet Age is not what it used to be. In their book, Dennis and Tom have compiled a guide for lawyers who want to keep up with current tools and methods of collaboration that take advantage of the technology. For example the book discusses

  • Document collaboration in a lawsuit
  • Internet meetings and file-sharing
  • E-mail productivity including GTD
  • An overview of the Web 2.0 phenomenon
  • Strategic planning using technology

With an-easy-to read-format, short chapters, and full glossary and index, in addition to a complete list of tools and resources, The Lawyer’s Guide to Collaboration Tools and Technologies is exactly what it claims to be.