This prior experience gives him a strong foundation and knowledge of
common law firm technology solutions.
Not exact matches
Monica Bay, editor - in - chief of
Law Technology News and editorial director of
Law Firm Inc. and Small
Firm Business, launches her blog today, The
Common Scold.
Pennsylvania Bar Institute «Drafting Fundamental Estate Planning Documents» (October 1996; May 1999; April 2001; May 2002) «How to Draft for the Marital Deduction» (July 1998) «Using the Web for Research» (Transact 1999:
Technology Transforms Transactions; September 1999) «The Internet for Pennsylvania Lawyers» (4th Annual Solo and Small
Firm Practice Conference, March 1997) «Internet Resources for Estate Practitioners» (Estate
Law Institute; November 2003, November 2004, January 2006) «Abrogating
Common Law Marriage» (Estate
Law Institute, November 2004) «How2 Practice Estate and Trust
Law» (March 2008)
They do this by organizing core competencies into workflows that are continuously updated using
common technologies used by
law firms.
Among them were Bebe Chueh, cofounding partner of the innovative
technology - based
law firm Atrium LLP; Chrissie Lightfoot, cofounder and CEO of Robot Lawyer LISA; Dorna Moini, the lawyer who founded HelpSelf Legal to help low - income people handle
common legal problems; Emily Montgomery, the Las Vegas attorney who launched the legal keyboard product Citepad; Melinda Sungenis Black, the veteran legal tech executive who is preparing to launch The Expert Witness Exchange; and Amy Wan, the lawyer who started Bootstrap Legal to help real estate investors get legal paperwork done more easily.
«The
Common Scold» will cover a host of topics, from why
law firms must list top administrators on
firm Web sites; to why we need to eradicate the word «solution» from legal
technology vocabularies; to why it's time to shift from «eat what you kill» to collaborative, corporate - modeled cultures; to why George Steinbrenner should void Kevin Brown's contract and keep Esteban Loaiza after all... more
Author: Lawyer2Lawyer is hosted by J. Craig Williams a lawyer with the Williams
Law Firm in Newport Beach, Calif. who also authors May it Please the Court, and Robert Ambrogi, a solo practitioner in Rockport, Mass., who also authors Robert Ambrogi's Lawsites, Media
Law and BullsEye - Expert Witnesses & Litigation, contributes to Catalyst E-Discovery Blog; The ESI Report is hosted by Michele C.S. Lange, a staff attorney in the electronic evidence services group at Eden Prairie, Minn. - based Kroll Ontrack Inc.; Workers» Comp Matters is hosted by Alan S. Pierce, who practices at Alan S. Pierce & Associates in Salem, Mass.; and Ringler Radio is co-hosted by Ringler Associates» Larry Cohen (North Andover, Mass.) and Donald J. Engels (Chicago);
Law Technology Now is hosted by Monica Bay, who is editor - in - chief of
Law Technology News and also authors The
Common Scold; In - House Legal is hosted by Paul D. Boynton of MCB Communications in Needham, Mass.; The Kennedy - Mighell Report is hosted by Dennis Kennedy, who also authors DennisKennedy.com and is a columnist for the ABA Journal, and Tom Mighell.
At The
Common Scold, Monica Bay has the hot - off - the - presses scoop on the winners of the 2007
Law Technology News
Law Firm &
Law Department Awards announced today.
Bay, editor - in - chief of
Law Technology News and author of the blog The Common Scold, suggested that firms» failure to list their executives was attributable to the not - so - secret fact that law firms are caste systems with two status ranks — lawyers and everybody el
Law Technology News and author of the blog The
Common Scold, suggested that
firms» failure to list their executives was attributable to the not - so - secret fact that
law firms are caste systems with two status ranks — lawyers and everybody el
law firms are caste systems with two status ranks — lawyers and everybody else.
«You could easily envisage getting to a stage where the only
law firms you really want to deal with, as in - house counsel or general counsel, are those who share a platform with you, or are prepared to use your platform so that your collaboration is supported by
technology that is
common between you and the
law firm.»
Technology Dan Pinnington Two Simple Rules for Avoiding the Dangers of Email Attachments * While email attachments are frequently used to share documents between lawyers,
law firm staff, and clients, they are also one of the most
common delivery mechanisms for malware.
Lex Projex ™ will even help corporate
law departments or
law firms train their existing legal professional staff to become legal project managers and to use
common, affordable LPM
technologies to efficiently, effectively and economically manage their legal matters — we're not afraid to «build in our own obsolescence» as part of our LPM services.
One of the most
common mistakes made by
law firms is to assume that the only way to minimize the damage from cybersecurity attacks is to put in place perimeter security
technologies — firewalls, antivirus software, etc. — that «wall - off» the
firm from outside attacks.
• Understanding
Law Firm Accounting •
Common Accounting Challenges
Law Firms Face • Know Your Year - End Legal Accounting Checklist • See How Legal - Specific
Technology Can Help
As such, we've observed
law firms often re-visit and dispel
common myths in the process of assessing
technology options.
A core group of lawyers, legal educators, allied professionals and corporate legal leaders (Shell, Cisco, Archer Daniels Midland)-- many of whom I know well via
common beliefs on innovation and tech — believe that the best way forward is to create an independent organization that can coordinate the interests of
law students,
law schools,
law firms, corporate legal departments, NewLaw service providers, and legal
technology companies.
However, there are also commentaries (e.g. by Ron Friedmann) explaining that so - called innovation at many / most
law firms might be best described as the uptake of
technology or methodologies that have been
common in other industries for years.
The most
common argument for not adopting cloud - based
technology is that the
law firm is too entrenched in their longstanding method of practicing to switch to an innovative approach.