Features – Knowledge Management : Can it Exist in a Law Office? Part 1
Knowledge Management : Can it Exist in a Law Office? Part I By Nina Platt
Nina Platt is a Librarian
Knowledge Management : Can it Exist in a Law Office? Part I By Nina Platt
Nina Platt is a Librarian
Using the Internet as a Selection Tool – Amazon.com and Beyond By Gloria Miccioli
Gloria Miccioli is the International Librarian for the D.C. office of Jones, Day, Reavis, & Pogue and provides research services for attorneys in 10 overseas offices.
Return to Library Staying Current with Push Technology By Gary Teal (Posted November 1, 1997; Archived December 1, 1997)
Gary Teal is a Technology Strategy Consultant with the LEXIS-NEXIS National Center for Law and Technology. Gary has a degree in Computer Science and has worked in law firm automation since 1985. He was Manager of Information Systems for the Washington Office of Morgan, Lewis & Bockius for six years. Gary joined LEXIS-NEXIS last December, and is based in Washington, D.C.
Return to Library Law Librarians and their Evolving Role as Information Technology Managers By Sabrina I. Pacifici
Sabrina I. Pacifici is the Editor, Web Master and Publisher of LLRX.com. For the past decade, she has been a legal newsletter editor and publisher, as well as a frequent writer and speaker on issues relating to law firm technology. Sabrina has been a law firm librarian in Washington, D.C. for 18 years.
Return to Library Electronic Court Filing By Bradley J. Hillis
Bradley J. Hillis holds MA and JD degrees from the University of Washington. He is the editor of the forthcoming, “Internet Experiments in Electronic Court Filing,” and is a representative of the courts to the Washington Digital Signature Implementation Task Force. His previous Internet law articles have appeared on the Web at Villanova Institute for Information Law and Policy.
Online Personal Information: Access vs. Excess By Lynn Peterson
Lynn Peterson is president of PFC Information Services, Inc., a public records research firm located in Oakland, California. Lynn has been quoted on public records research in a variety of sources including The Wall Street Journal, Kiplinger’s Personal Finance Magazine, and The Information Broker’s Handbook. PFC Information Services provides public records research for law firms, corporations, lenders, venture capitalists, employers, the media, and other information research firms.
Return to Library A Bridge Too Long? A New Appraisal of the View of CD-ROM as a Bridge Technology By Stephen P. Weiter (Posted September 1, 1997; Archived October 1, 1997)
Stephen P. Weiter earned his MLS from the School of Information Studies at Syracuse University in 1995. He is currently the Senior Law Librarian for Automation at the New York State Appellate Division Law Library, Fourth Department, in Rochester, NY. He has experience working in public, academic, and library automation vendors. Stephen has written for Computers in Libraries, and teaches a graduate level course in government documents at Syracuse University.
Finding Information on the Federal Communications Commission Web Site By Diana Botluk
Diana Botluk is a reference librarian at the Judge Kathryn J. DuFour Law Library at the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., and is the author of the 1996 edition of The Legal List: Research on the Internet. She is a regular columnist for the Internet Law Researcher, where she writes about finding information on the World Wide Web. She also teaches basic, advanced and online legal research at the University of Maryland, and co-chairs the Internet Focus Group for the Law Librarians’ Society of Washington, D.C.
Ethical Concerns in Doing Legal Research By Barbara Folensbee-Moore (Posted July 22, 1997; Archived September 1, 1997)