Month: March 2013

Skype for lawyers

Launched in 2003, Skype was one of the first mass market freely available forms of internet video conferencing. It took advantage of early developments in Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) technology to allow users to communicate with each other using their microphones and webcams. Previously video conferencing had been prohibitively expensive for the general public […]

Read More

Responsive web design

(with Chloe Dennis) How many types of device might you view a website on during the course of your week? We are becoming used to accessing the internet anytime and anywhere on whatever device we have to hand. Our choice of device at any time depends on personal preferences, availability and the ability to use […]

Read More

What’s up GOV?

If you’ve recently used any government service online you will probably have been directed to GOV.UK. On 17 October 2012 it replaced Directgov and BusinessLink as the place to go for government services. And on 15 November the first government departmental and agency websites started their migration to the Inside Government section of GOV.UK. As […]

Read More

Don’t let the hype cloud your judgment

I can remember the days when computer storage meant a stack of punched cards and disk drives were measured in kilobytes rather than petabytes; when offsite storage meant the boot of the office manager’s car. I am not very old. Now, even the smallest law firm uses computers and it is possible to run a […]

Read More

LawSauce – a new legal app

Description (By Delia Venables) LawSauce is written by Ruth Bird (University of Oxford, Bodleian Law Librarian) and Natalie Wieland (Legal Research Skills Adviser, Melbourne Law School). It is an e-resource locator developed to quickly locate the right legal web resource for legal tasks, which can otherwise be a very complex task. LawSauce includes nearly 8,000 […]

Read More

Panopticon – a favoured information law blog

In the CPD course Developments in the Legal Web 2012 prepared by Nick Holmes and me, we asked participants which of the sites covered in our Chapter 4 – Keeping up with tech, media and IP law – they would find most useful. A clear winner in the participants’ preferences was Panopticon, from the 11KBW […]

Read More

Direct Access barristers – getting clients online

Direct access is currently having a powerful impact for Chambers and their Direct Access barristers and teams; it is creating opportunities for chambers to forge new initiatives and collaborate with other professional groups, businesses and individuals at a time of rapid change in the legal services environment. Indeed, for many chambers it is the largest […]

Read More

Legal IT Inside(r)

We’re pleased to welcome on board as a regular contributor Charles Christian of Legal IT Insider. Charles has been writing about legal IT since about the time it was invented and we’re sure his experience and insights will be welcomed and eagerly consumed. He will be contributing with each online issue – view his archive.

Read More

Disruptive technologies – you ain’t seen nothing yet!

Over the last couple of years there has been a lot of debate in the legal IT world about the “consumerisation” of technology and, in particular BYOD (Bring/Buy Your Own Device). Or, to put it another way, how to cope with equity partners who demand they be able to access all their files on an […]

Read More