Justia, quickly becoming the new FindLaw (except much more powerful and tech savvy), has
its Blawg Search, a law blog directory and legal blog search as well as its most popular law blog listings.
This includes the popular
Blawg Search and its aggregator.
According to the ABA Blawg Directory, Florida is second only to California in number of law blogs (Justia's
Blawg Search concurs)... which is again interesting when you consider that according to ABA market research, Illinois, Texas, and New York all have more active lawyers than Florida.
Not exact matches
Okay, Halloweenies, whether «You're Going As Someone Who Is Not Going To Be A Supreme Court Justice» or «If You're Going As Some Other Member Of The Bush White House» or «If You're Going As An Author, Librarian, Or Allegedly Infringing
Search Engine» or «If You're Going As A Blogger Or A Blawger» or «If You're Going As One About To Explode From The Pressures Of Modern Life In General» or any number of other costumes Denise Howell invented and tucked into her exhaustive wrap - up of last week's legal blogging, you should read
Blawg Review # 30 first.
Dan was thoughtful to include a link to the
Blawg Review Awards 2005 where In
Search of Perfect Client Service was (based on one person's... Continue Reading
Wondering this, I turned to the
blawgs in
search of answers.
Well, one is metrics, and the folks at Justia are using metrics derived from their
blawg and podcast
search tools to rank the most popular law blogs currently and historically.
Departing from previous
Blawg Review formulas, which offer a sampling of law - related blog posts from around the blawgosphere, O'Keefe instead rounds up posts, past and present, on blogging — such as understanding blogspeak; picking the blogging tool that's right for you; building relationships or finding clients through blogging and using blog
searching for competitive intelligence.
For
Blawg Review # 148, Brett J. Trout, the Iowa patent attorney who writes BlawgIT, says that his
search for a theme led him to Internet memes.
Not sure when it was launched, but I have just discovered
Blawg Republic, a self - described legal news and commentary
search engine.
Beyond the
blawg, Giacalone offers a collection of his essays and articles and links to ethics resources elsewhere on the Web (including, thank you very much, to my article, Top Sites: In
Search of Ethics on the Internet).
She wanted
Blawg Review to remove its post because it is ranking higher than her own site in a Google
search for «LA's Dopest Attorney.»
This week's scheduled
blawg reviewer, Marty Schwimmer of The Trademark Blog, used the opportunity to conduct a
search for truth regarding the lawfulness of U.S. actions here and abroad.
Having accepted the task of writing
Blawg Review # 55, and in
search of the requisite theme, Ben Cowgill embarked on the following creative journey:
There are answers to questions we will never find in
blawg posts because of (current)
search limitations, comprehensiveness, trustworthiness, or simply data persistence.
Moving on to privacy rights of a Constitutional nature, Jotwell (the Journal of Things We Like (Lots), a relatively new publication which is to law review articles what
Blawg Review is to blawg posts, takes a look at group searches and Fourth Amendment ri
Blawg Review is to
blawg posts, takes a look at group searches and Fourth Amendment ri
blawg posts, takes a look at group
searches and Fourth Amendment rights.