One year ago I looked back at the first year of
The Time Blawg — One Year On.
... Guest Post by Mark Gould in reply to Brian Inkster's latest blog post on
The Time Blawg I am generally nervous about technology evangelism because evangelists tend to assume that their preference should be the same for all, without considering that different people have different needs and perspectives.
... On 1 January 2011,
The Time Blawg materialised.
Last week I looked back at what went on during the second year of
The Time Blawg with specific reference to Social Media:
The Time Blawg — Two -LSB-...]
In January, Brian Inkster noted on
his The Time Blawg blog that many of the largest firms in the United Kingdom had never sent a single tweet.
So now, here's two -
time Blawg Review host George Wallace, the non-anonymous editor of Declarations & Exclusions — and of its sibling site, a fool in the forest, itself the home to two editions of the April Fool's Blawg Review Prequel — to announce his nominations for 2007's Blawg Review of the Year.
Three -
time Blawg Review of the Year winner Samuels takes to the high seas with the Rime of the Ancient Mariner.
Real Life Practice
The Time Blawg Geek Law Blog Law Times News Financial Post Wise Law Blog Dynamic Legal Forms New York Daily Record My Case Lexfuturus Slaw Conscious Solutions
LexisNexis compiled a number of predictions; the Future Lawyers Network made their predictions for the UK legal market; the Wall Street Journal legal blog made financial predictions; and
the Time Blawg compiled a range of predictions around legal IT and marketing.
Not exact matches
This is the fifth
time out of the
Blawg 100's six years that this blog has been included.
Hope this doesn't mean it's
time for me to hang up my cleats, but I am proud to say that this blog has been selected as one of the inaugural 10 members of the ABA Journal's
Blawg 100 Hall of Fame.
It's
time for
Blawg Review # 118, hosted by Blawgletter, the business trial law blog with a sense of humor.
''
Blawgs React to
Time Supermax Article from
Blawg's Blog by Bill Gratsch
Blawgs React to
Time Supermax Article [Read More]
Hosted by Corporate
Blawg UK this
time,
Blawg Review # 116 is all in rhyme.
A New York
Times article from Monday has been prompting some comment on the blogs and
blawgs.
«The next
time somebody asks me how to write a great
Blawg Review,» he writes, «I swear I'm just going to tell»em where to go.»
There are many adjectives I would use to describe the tenor of three -
time ABA
Blawg 100 nominee Above the Law — snarky, funny and even depressing come to mind — but happy isn't one of them.
Legal Blog Watch Comments: «I have less and less
time for
blawg - hopping, but I can count on LBW to consistently find the most interesting law - related postings and offer useful summaries and perspectives.
At that
time, I looked at the blogs listed on
Blawg.org, which then had 747 links (today up to 1,397), at the blogs listed by Denise Howell at Bag and Baggage, which numbered around 600, and at the blogs listed on
Blawg Ring, which had 597 blogs (today up to 699).
Third
time's the charm for Anita Campbell, who once again plays hostess at Small Business Trends, this
time to
Blawg Review # 177.
While Dicus represents a victory for defense attorneys who can cite the ruling as precedent for sentence reductions, law professors like Carissa Hessick at Prawfs
Blawg are rejoicing as well because Dicus shows that from
time to
time, courts still listen when law professors have something worthwhile to say.
This is the fourth
time the ABA Journal has selected the
Blawg 100 and the third
time LawSites has made the list.
And at this post at Prawfs Law
Blawg, Stewart Green writes that the Supreme Court's decision has gotten him thinking about whether to confer mercy not on defendants who make untimely filings but students who turn work in on
time.
Lest your associates think you're one of those workers Trout mentions who spends too much
time surfing the Web, you may want to check out this
Blawg Review from the safety of your home office.
When considering a theme for this week's
Blawg Review, one thing that struck me was that lawyers do not seem to spend nearly as much
time screwing around on the web as your average employee.
So not surprisingly, with gas prices on the increase and the economy on the decline, this week's
Blawg Review aggregates the best advice from around the blogosphere on law firm survival in economic hard
times.
«If this is your first
time participating in
Blawg Review as a contributor, you can follow the easy Submission Guidelines, which explain how to submit your posts each week.»
On January 6th, the end of the mummering, the editor of
Blawg Review will post an addendum to this
Blawg Review # 89 discussing some of the more interesting questions and answers publicly for the first
time, and disclosing whether his true personal identity has been discovered.
In my free
time, I serve as the Managing Editor of InhouseBlog.com, a blog for in - house counsel with over 10,600 subscribers, which was selected as a Top 100
Blawg by the ABA Journal (2008), nominated as a Top Business Law Blog by LexisNexis (2010), selected as Runner Up for the Best Practice - Specific
Blawg in the 2011 and 2013 Blawggie Awards, and which won such awards in 2014 and 2015.
But after reading several
times through Adrian Dayton's
Blawg Review # 218, I found myself unsure whether his theme is Twitter or morality.
Blawg Review shows no sign of fizzling out any
time soon, either.
Lat collects many of the links while The New York
Times,
Blawg Review # 123 and my colleague Carolyn Elefant all provide summaries of the ensuing PR debacle.
Another factor to keep in mind is that the concept of what constitutes a «
blawg» has necessarily evolved over
time and will continue to do so.
Mike Fox takes
time out from a blogging hiatus to congratulate George's Employment
Blawg on its upgrade and to welcome professor «Rick Bales, professor at the University of Northern Kentucky Chase School of Law, who has taken over as editor of the LaborProf Blog and retitled it to fit more accurately the broader area that he intends to address, The Workplace Prof Blog.»
At this
time in history, in the midst of a global war on terrorism, when the usually disparate worlds of military and civilian justice seem to overlap in the application of the law, this promises to be a very interesting issue of
Blawg Review.»
The question Mr. Glater and the
Times could have asked and answered (and didn't) is why so many attorneys are carving out precious billable minutes to write and to read
blawgs.
Reading the
blawgs is
time - consuming, and commenting on them takes it up a couple of notches.
It takes
time for a
blawg to catch on and for readers to discover it.
Long
time blogger and New York Criminal Defense Lawyer, Scott Greenfield, continues the fourth wave of law blogging discussion in his announcement that there won't be a J - Dog Memorial Prize, awarded the last five years to the Best Criminal Law
Blawg Post.
Having come from the London
Times» BabyBarista blog, our carnival boomerangs back to the UK next week with
Blawg Review # 226, hosted by Bristol family law barrister Lucy Reed at Pink Tape.
[Turkewitz] is the source of the New York
Times story, and the absence of his name, and his
blawg, in the piece is a shoddy reflection of its journalistic integrity.
Decs & Excs will be hosting
Blawg Review for a fourth
time at the end of March, on a theme no doubt to be selected in a hasty frenzy at the last possible moment.
Adam Liptak's NY
Times piece on foreign countries» view of the American fondness for punitive damages — in a nutshell, it adds to the impression that we are a scary and unstable nation — drew links and comment from many
blawgs, including Dan Hull at What About Clients?
In short, when the
time comes for my tenure application, this
blawg will be in there, but it will not be at the front page.
Last year he released his
Blawg Review on Twitter... 140 characters at a
time!.
My feed reader let's me find «dinosaurs» — those
blawgs that haven't kept up with developments in whatever period of
time I choose.
They have a policy of putting up archived pages a year at a
time, and of using a fair amount of lag
time so as not to compete with the
blawg.
Next Monday, March 31, it will be my pleasure for the third
time to host an edition of
Blawg Review, the 153rd.
That last topic evokes strong memories, of course, at this
time of year; it certainly does so for your
blawg reviewer.
Meanwhile, I'm cringing over the fact that I just used the word «
blawg» three
times in a single paragraph.