Sentences with phrase «of blawg»

This month, in honor of the Olympic games in Beijing, the presentations of Blawg Review have possessed Olympic themes (or, in one case, an Olympic length).
of Blawg Review for offering me this opportunity, and to both him and Colin Samuels for many great suggestions for links.)
You can still catch last week's presentation of Blawg Review, when West Virginia Business Litigation served as host.
This will not be our typical post where we discuss and analyze pain and suffering verdicts in personal injury cases; instead, in the long line of blawg review hosts before us, we have been asked by the good folks at Blawg Review, to review what some of the best law... Continue Reading
Since hosting the 102nd Edition of Blawg Review here last April, I have generated a mere 21 new posts of my own, barely enough for any weblog worthy of the name.
A peer - reviewed blog carnival, the host of each Blawg Review decides which of the submissions and recommended posts are suitable for inclusion in the presentation.
Hanna Hasl - Kelchner, author of the blog Legal Literacy, salutes International Literacy Day in the latest edition of Blawg Review, the weekly review of the best in legal blogging.
Since 2005 I've been a devoted supporter of Blawg Review, the weekly review of the best in legal blogging.
We don't make a habit out of pointing out when the most recent edition of the Blawg Review has been posted.
Nothing taints the practice of law quite like the Business of Law, and the inherent value of a blawg to both its author and its audience suffers, says I, to the degree that it is driven by — or, heaven forfend, is actually about — the Business of Law.
Highlights of Blawg Review # 177 include a tutorial on Twitter, a popular social networking tool; a new slant on web site bio pages; and a one - stop resource for tax information for small business owners.
I personally tell people I write a legal blog and reserve the use of BLAWG for within the legal blogging community.
Next Monday, March 31, it will be my pleasure for the third time to host an edition of Blawg Review, the 153rd.
The anonymous Editor of Blawg Review marks the centennapostary with a ramble back through the 99 preceding Editions, and an update on the status of all those earlier hosts, including a link back to this weblog's hosting of Blawg Review # 51 last April.
Just imagine a disgruntled junior associate, having ghostwritten all of the blawg content for a recognized «specialist» in a particular area of law.
«Why you can blame only yourself if you don't have a motherlode of blawg traffic Monday Main BlackBerry battle is (a) a soap opera or (b) a train wreck?»
Ed looks at the controversy from a 40,000 - foot perspective — here's a snippet: «The 51 essays in BlawgWorld 2006 were selected for publication by each respective blogger as most representative of their blawg.
Preparing for this edition of Blawg Review, I struggled to come up with a theme.
So we take nominations for the Web 100 and before that the Blawg 100, we do it in the form of Amici, we call it Blawg Amici and now Web 100 Amici, where we do Friend of the Blawg or Friend of the Web 100 briefs.
They suggested that I get a tattoo of the state of New Jersey with the number 310 inside of it to commemorate this 310th Edition of Blawg Review.
As the Anonymous Editor of Blawg Review has explained in the Official Rules, this year's winner will be selected by the votes of all those weblogs that have hosted, or are scheduled to host, one or more editions of Blawg Review.
Also in 2007: Mark the calendar now for Monday, April 2, when Decs & Excs will again host an edition of Blawg Review.
It is well settled that a Blawg Review, and even the ominous foreshadowing of a Blawg Review, must have a Theme, even if that Theme is Themelessness.
And indeed there will be, albeit without the pirates, because tomorrow is April 1, which can only mean the appearance of a differently - themed Bonus Edition of Blawg Review at my other bloggy establishment, the freely associating and culture - oriented a fool in the forest.
Superb edition of Blawg Review.
And thank you, Anonymous Editor of Blawg Review, wherever you are, for overseeing another terrific year of Blawg Review.
Ted contributes a portion of this Blawg Review which is indented below.
Have you written anything about the election worthy of the Blawg Review?
I wanted, as a Chronic Fatigue Syndrome patient, to point out one very important reason why I rejected Ed's request that I switch to the April 3rd edition of Blawg Review, from my scheduled April 10th gig: We lose an hour of sleep on Sunday night.
In my guise of fool, for this weekend I embrace the wily wine god, before my metamorphosis on Monday morning to the cool, Apollonian advocate of Deeply Serious Law with the posting of Blawg Review # 51.
It is that nuclear element that provides our theme today for the 304th edition of Blawg Review, because March 28 is a date of some significance in relation of Our Friend, the Atom, and to both the military and civilian uses of the power of nuclear fission.
If nothing else, Blawg Review has continued to happen week after week and, it being what we in the trade often refer to as the End of Another Year, the Anonymous Editor of Blawg Review has taken the occasion of Blawg Review # 192 to solicit the votes of Blawg Review hosts past, present, and future, for the 2008 Blawg Review of the Year.
The return, to these pages, of Blawg Review, the blog carnival for lawyers and everyone interested in the law.
In the meantime, the current week's edition — Blawg Review # 303 — is being hosted at the Blawg Review main site, under the auspices of the Anonymous Editor of Blawg Review.
April Fool's Day has come upon us and, as is traditional, an extra edition of Blawg Review — the April Fool's Blawg Review Appendix 2009 — is posted to my more personal blog, a fool in the forest.
The editor of Blawg Review strongly recommends the professional services of LexBlog, which can be incorporated into your firm's existing web infrastructure if need be.
Thanks to the editor of Blawg Review and all the loyal ATL readers for chipping in to get me my very own Hooked - on - Phonics master reader set.
Houston criminal defense lawyer Mark Bennett writes today's edition of Blawg Review.
Labour relations are highly relevant for this edition of Blawg Review, since law professors at the University of California are considering a walk - out despite having the «best public education in the world.»
Monday's Bill of Rights Day edition of Blawg Review is being hosted by the often - irreverent civil libertarian Marc Randazza at his blog The Legal Satyricon.
In the tradition of Blawg Review, Wallace offers up blog links and short commentaries on many of the hot issues now being discussed in the blogosphere, including links to Mark Bennett on the shooting of Trayvon Martin, Tom Goldstein on the U.S. Supreme Court's recent arguments over the Affordable Care Act, the latest April Fools prank by «hoaxing mastermind» (and stellar disclaimer writer) Eric Turkewitz, and much more.
Compiling this kind of Blawg Review likely involved nearly as much effort as building a nation, so be sure to visit Blawg Review # 167 and salute Jonathan for his heroic effort.
If Gratsch's directory helped us make sense of this blogging phenomenon, today he continues to help us make sense of it all, by hosting the 111th installment of Blawg Review.
'' Blawg Review # 177 from Small Business Trends Welcome to edition # 177 of Blawg Review.
Back to business is the theme for this edition of Blawg Review.
The guest editor of Blawg Review # 43, Diane Levin of MediationNewsOnline.com, has thoroughly investigated the possibility of writing a Super Bowl Blawg, rejected it (with a hat - tip to our own Common Scold), and embarked on a tempest of linking.
After all, the past 90 editions of Blawg Review have drawn hundreds of new readers to new blogs, many which would have otherwise gone unnoticed but for serving as hosts.
Calling all capitalists, blawggers and readers of both: Bruce MacEwen writes that he is the author - to - be of Blawg Review # 39.
Perhaps it was LegalTech's proximity to Groundhog Day that lured the anonymous editor of Blawg Review to step into the sunlight last week.
'' BLAWG REVIEW # 32 from JAG CENTRAL And Lisa Stone from the Law.Com BLOG Network says simply of Blawg Review # 32: «I'm looking forward to [it].»
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