Just a quick post to note that Legal Dockets Online is now known as Courtport. It looks like they have the same great info on electronic filing. It’s just at a different location now.
Bryan Sims
A Welcome to My Wife
by
My wife has finally joined the blogging world. Feel free to visit her site and if you are looking at real estate in the far west suburbs, give her a call. She will be glad to help you.
Google Chrome: My Initial Thoughts
by
I downloaded Google Chrome today just to play with it and see what it was like. My initial thought is that, had it been introduce three years ago, it would be really cool. Right now, however, it ranks a shoulder shrug from me. Maybe it has some hidden jewels that I haven’t found yet. Unless someone points them out to me, I will not be switching my default browser from Firefox.
Despite my ambivilence at this point and given Google’s other successes, I would not be surprised to see myself using a Google browser 18-24 months in the future.
The Current Real Estate Market
by
The wasserblawg has a humerous look at today’s real estate market. Unfortuantely, I think it hits a little too close to the truth.
You Send It Got Better
by
One of my favorite online services is You Send It. It allows you to send large attachments via email. I have written about this service before. I have used the service to send discovery documents, pictures, and powerpoint presentations without having to worry about exceeding the limits on someone’s mailbox.
One of the great feautres is that the service has a plug-in that integrates with Outlook. This means that if I send an attachment that is above a certain size (I can set this size), then You Send It automatically kicks in and handles the file.
Another great feature is that there are many options available. They provide a free service that has size and number limitations (on both the individual message and over a period of time). They also provide pay services that include additional features.
Now You Send It has added an additional feature. In addition to the Outlook plug-in, they have a desktop application called You Send It Express that allows you to send and receive files directly from your desktop. They also have several other plug-ins that allow you to send large files directly from a variety of applications, including Adobe Acrobat, iPhoto, and Corel Draw X3.
If you have a large file to send to someone, you might want to check out You Send It.
Mistborn: The Final Empire by Brandon Sanderson
by
I know that I am late coming to this party, but I just finished Mistborn: The Final Empire by Brandon Sanderson, and it is great. My reading tastes are quite varied, however, when given the choice, I usually read thrillers or science fiction. For the most part, I do not read fantasy. However, in anticipation of the launch of Tor.com, Tor gave away electronic editions of several of its books. Some of the books I had already read. In other cases, the giveaway introduced me to books that I would not have read otherwise. One of those books was Mistborn.
Once I started Mistborn, I was hooked. The characters are well done and intersting. The story is interesting, plus it contains enough twists to keep you interested and provide surprises. In short, the story is, at its most base level, a heist story with the biggest goal possible, the overthrow of the government.
In addition to the interesting story, the book also contains a logical, well-developed magic system. Sanderson clearly put a lot of thought into the magic system and that shows. On top of this, Sanderson does an excellant job detailing the fight scenes in the book. As I was reading the fights, I could picture the action clearly in my mind.
As an additional bonus, on his website, Sanderson includes annotations for each of the chapters in the book. These provide a great behind-the-scenes look at the creation of the book.
If you are looking for a good book to read, I cannot recommend Mistborn more highly.
The Faith of Barack Obama by Stephen Mansfield
by
At the begining of August Michael Hyatt, the President and CEO of Thomas Nelson Publishers, announced on his Twitter feed that in conjunction with their publicataion of the book The Faith of Barack Obama, Thomas Nelson would send the first 200 bloggers a copy of the book as long as they agreed to post a 200 word review of the book. In the letter accompanying the book, the company stated “Remember we don’t care if your review is positive, negative, or somewhere in between, as long as you finish the book and write a 200-word review.”
I have enjoyed following Hyatt’s blog for more than a year. He appears to be quite forward thinking and what he does. Plus, his blog provides a nice behind-the-scenes look at the job of a President/CEO. If you are interested in other reviews, Hyatt has started collecting them on his blog.
In terms of my review of the book, the first thing that struck me was that it was short. The entire text is 144 pages. Maybe I am just used to reading longer texts, but this seemed short to me. On the other hand, it reads very easily. The book is a fast read and is easily accessible. This is likely important in that, because Obama is running for President, there may be people picking this book up to read it that would not normally read books such as this.
In fact, this book reads like a series of magazine features. I think the book could easily be divided by chapter into a series of magazine articles.
With respect to the substance of the book, I think it does a good job of conveying two important points. The first is that dispelling the ridiculous notion that Obama is Muslim. The author addresses this issue directly and soundly rejects the idea.
The second point that the book conveys is that Obama’s faith is different from that of his controversial pastor Jeremiah Wright. The author goes to great lengths to explain how Obama came to his faith and how similar it is to many others of his generation.
Much of the book appears to be drawn from Obama’s books, prior articles, and interviews with people other than Obama. Noticeably absent from the book is information from an interview between the author and Obama. This is something that I would like to have seen. On the other hand, however, given the amount of coverage that Obama has seen over the years, it makes sense that this book could be written without that interview.
My favorite part of the book was the background portion that dealt with Obama’s childhood. Strangely enough, this was the portion of the book that had the least to do with Obama’s faith, the purported subject of the book.
On the whole, the book was a nice easy read. On the whole, however, I felt like the book could have been more; that it could have had a little more meat. In particular, I would like to have seen more examination of his college years and his time spent in community work before he attended law school. The book deals with this period of time with just a few sentences. I think that this time period would be significant in his spiritual development. Thus, I found the failure to address this time period in more depth quite strange.
If you are looking for a quick read that gives a nice overview of Obama’s faith, this book will meet your needs. Don’t expect it to deliver more than that, however.
Another Great Firefox Extension
by
I love the various extensions that you can add to Firefox to make it work the way that works best for me. Tom Mighell at Inter Alia has identified another great Firefox extension Picknik.
Picknik allows you to easily capture graphics and webpages right from within Firefox. Picknic is easy to use. Simply right click on a photo or web page and the graphic is opened in a new tab with editing functions such as rotate, crop, resize, etc.
Also you can easily save the graphic or post it to a variety of websites such as MySpace, Facebook, and Flickr. I recommend you add this extension to your Firefox browser.
Extending Your Laptop’s Battery Life
by
PC Magazine has a great article on extending your laptop’s battery life. The article contains suggestions that we are all familiar with such as dimming your screen and not using the DVD drive. However the article also contains more substantive tips.
Some of these include:
- Turn off ports. Disabling unused ports and components, such as VGA, Ethernet, PCMCIA, USB, and yes, your wireless, too. You can do this through the Device Manager or by configuring a separate hardware profile (see next step).
- Create Power-Saving Hardware Profiles. Configure your laptop for the various scenarios in which you use it (on a plane, at the coffee shop, at the office, and so on). You can do this through the Hardware Profiles menu by right-clicking on My Computer and selecting Preferences or by using a freeware utility such as SparkleXP (for Windows XP users).
- Configure your display to turn off when not in use. This is different from just using a screensaver, because in many cases a screensaver still requires the display’s backlight to be on. You can set the interval to turn the display off in Windows’ Power Options—found in the Control Panel.
The article contains several more tips, all of which will help you extend your laptop’s battery life. i urge you to check it out.
More Backup Suggestions
by
I cannot suggest often enough that you need to have a good backup plan in place. I know Ross Kodner has written on this topic, which he calls the most boring topic in legal technology, multiple times.
Certainly, this is not the most exciting topic around. However, WHEN you have a hard drive fail, you will either be very happy that you had a backup or you will curse yourself for not having one. Trust me, the first emotion is much better.
PC Magazine has a good summary article on the best backup tools available. The article provides great information of the various backup methods available, as well as the pros and cons of each. Plus, the article discusses specific products, both hardware and software that will allow you to accomplish your backup goals.
This is another great article from PC Magazine. If you have not yet implimented a backup solution for both your home and work computers, you need to change that right now. The PC Magazine article gives you to the tools to do that.
A tip of the hat to the Affinity Law Office Technology Blog for pointing out this article.