Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Today's Riddle
Q: What's the difference between Dewey LeBoeuf and RIM, maker of Blackberry?
A: About six months to a year.
Monday, May 28, 2012
IF YOU HAVE AN OLD IPAD, IT'S GOOD ENOUGH
Yes,
the iPad is an amazing device. If you
bought the original, it is two years old.
Only two years old! The marketing
machine at Cupertino works in overdrive to create planned obsolescence. But do you really need to upgrade every
time? No. The new iPad 3 has two very cool
features: 4G/LTE and the so-called
"retina display", which is a marketer's term for very high resolution. I've seen the new retina display, and yes, it
is very impressive. But, if you have an
iPad 1 or iPad 2, the display looks good enough unless you compare it alongside
the new iPad 3. I suggest you
don't. Besides, if you are over a
certain age, the improved resolution is probably lost on you.
But
what about 4G? Yes, 4G is very
nice. But guess what? I have an iPad 1 and I have 4G. In fact, I've had 4G on my iPad almost since
the day I bought my iPad in July 2010.
How? I have a Samsung 4G
"Mifi" card sold by Verizon, called a "jetpack". See picture below. It gives me 4G on my iPad, and has the added
benefit of allowing me to share my 4G wifi with other devices. For example, I can share the 4G with my
wife's Kindle Fire when we are traveling.
The one disadvantage to the Mifi card is you have to be careful not to
lose it. I have put a a velcro strip on
it, along with a velcro strip on my iPad's Cruxcase (see my May 19 review of
Cruxcase at http://thehightechlawyer.blogspot.com/2012/05/must-have-in-every-lawyers-toolkit_19.html) so I don't
have to lug it around separately.
Alternatively, I stick it in my pocket.
Notably,
the iPad 3 did not come with Siri. A
cynic would conclude that Apple is saving Siri for its next iPad release, in
2013. Others speculate that Apple might
release Siri as a software update to the iPad operating system IOS sometime
later this year. Apple is more secretive
than the CIA, so who knows. If Apple
releases Siri as a midstream software release, it might be worthwhile to
upgrade, but otherwise, I'd be inclined to wait for the iPad 4 before
upgrading.
Reviews of Android Versions of Siri
As my friend Soli pointed out in a recent post, Android phones also have virtual assistants that employ voice recognition. Perhaps Apple just does a better job in marketing this feature. Here is an article that reviews the Android apps that are Siri-like. http://allthingsd.com/20120524/for-hire-good-virtual-assistant-for-android/?mod=mailchimp. The article favors Speaktoit as the better app. So if you have an Android smartphone, this article is for you.
Saturday, May 19, 2012
The "Must Have" in Every Lawyer's Toolkit: Cruxcase for iPad
When I go to seminars and glance
around the room these days, it is pretty common to see a large sprinkling of
iPads. When I see these iPads, I scratch
my head in amazement. Don't get me wrong. I love the iPad. It is an amazing device. But it has three limitations: 1. No
keyboard. 2. No USB port. and 3. No ability to print except for a limited
number of "Air Play" printers.
I believe there are workarounds for all three limitations, but this
article is focused on the first limitation, "no keyboard". The answer to that limitation is the Crux360
from Cruxcase www.cruxcase.com.
The Crux360 turns your iPad from an
interesting device for the consumption of media (i.e. paying Apple and Netflix
money to watch movies and television shows) to a really useful workplace tool
for generating content, i.e,. taking notes, writing memos, answering emails,
and anything else that involves typing.
I went through a fair amount of trial and error in the form of about a
half dozen bluetooth keyboards and cases with built-in keyboards, before coming
across Cruxcase.
The Crux360 is perfect. With it, I can sit in a meeting or a
seminar, and take notes fairly inconspicuously with the iPad on my lap. If I use one of the word processing programs,
that are tied to Dropbox, after the file is saved it shows up miraculously on
my PC at the office. A quick digression
on word processing software for the iPad:
I use Documents to Go, because I
am familiar with it. However, you might
also consider OfficeHD and Quickoffice. Two
other packages that are intriguing are CloudOn and OnLive Desktop. These two
programs connect you over the internet to a Windows desktop where you operate
true Microsoft Office software remotely on your iPad. The advantage that brings is that you have all
the native formatting of Microsoft Word.
The various office-like apps on the iPad do not have all the formatting
capability of Microsoft Word. Most
conspicuously for attorneys, they all seem to lack the redline feature. With CloudOn and OnLive Desktop you can
create and see redlining on your documents.
I was one of the first customers of
Cruxcase. The first unit I received was
defective, and when I contacted them, they had me return the case and promptly
sent me a new unit. The new unit worked
fine, but after about nine months one of the keys stopped responding. When I contacted Cruxcase, they again had me
return the defective case and sent me a new one. So my take on them is that they are a startup
going through growing pains, but they have the sense to take care of their
customers and make things right.
So I look around the hotel room, and
I see all these iPads propped up, and I ask myself, "how do these folks
take notes with it?". As I sit
there and type 80 words per minute capturing what is being said, I watch
lawyers laboriously peck away on the iPad virtual keyboard.
I don't get it. To me, Cruxcase is the missing link. Every lawyer with an iPad should have one.
If You Already Have an iPhone, Here is How to Get 4G
If you already have an iPhone, a
startup plans to sell a 4G "sled" or carrying case that will address
the biggest deficiency of the iPhone, that it is not a 4G device. http://tinyurl.com/7p4dqtu
This is News? Verizon Pushing Customers Towards Android Phones
If
you go to a Verizon store, CNN Money reported last week that the salespeople will
encourage you to buy an Android phone over an iPhone. http://tinyurl.com/7aktarv
This should not come as a surprise -
Verizon makes more money on Android phones than they do on the Apple iPhone. A year ago I went in to the local Verizon
store to buy an iPhone for my wife. The
salesperson talked my wife into an Android phone, on the basis that the Android
phone had 4G capability,which the iPhone lacked and still lacks. Merchants steering customers in one direction
or another is an old story. This is often
the case, whether you are buying a smartphone or a dishwasher or a car. Just be aware that it is happening, and make
your purchasing decision cognizant of the fact that the salesperson likely has a
financial incentive to sell you one product over another.
Sunday, May 13, 2012
BEING A HIGH VELOCITY LAWYER: IT'S ALL ABOUT THE TOOLS
Recently
I wrote an article, "The High Velocity Law Office" that was published
in an ABA newsletter (http://tinyurl.com/7xntx3s),
and a Texas Bar newsletter (http://tinyurl.com/7aarykf). One of the constraints of publishing in those
environments is you cannot endorse a specific product. Of course there are no such constraints here
in blog-land, so what follows is a product endorsement. I have received no remuneration for the
following product endorsement.
If
I had to pick one piece of technology that most lawyers (and mobile
professionals) don't use but should adopt, it is voice mail-to-email. I started using a service called Phonetag
about 4 or 5 years ago. I figured that
by now everyone would have adopted it.
It is baffling to me that this service has not had greater market
penetration than it has. The way it
works is you pay about $10/month (for forty transcribed messages, extra if you go over 40) and have your unanswered phone calls forwarded
to a number assigned to you by PhoneTag.
When the call is routed to that number, your caller hears your
customized message, similar to regular voice mail. and typically you inform callers
that their message will be transcribed, and ask them to speak clearly Phonetag does a very good job of transcribing
messages, and sends you that transcription in the body of an email
message. In that email Phonetag also attaches
what is called a ".WAV" file of the message so that you can listen to
it if you need to. Occasionally I have
to listen to the attached file, but most of the time the transcript is good
enough.
Sometimes,
in time sensitive situations, or during a lull in a business meeting (when attendees are known
to furtively peek at their smartphones for messages), or when you are on the go
and it is not convenient to dial in for your voice mail, it is extremely helpful
to get a transcript of a voice mail message.
If
you don't have Phonetag, and you are looking at ways to increase your
productivity, this one is at the top of my list. www.Phonetag.com
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Innovative Use by Law Department of Company-wide "Wiki"
A "Wiki" is not a Hawaiian phrase from the
movie The Descendants. Rather, "it
is is a website whose users can add, modify, or delete its content via a web
browser using a simplified markup language or a rich-text editor." I got this definition from the most famous
wiki of all, Wikipedia. How is that
relevant to lawyers and mobile professionals?
When you think about this definition, a Wiki is basically a way for
geographically dispersed individuals to work together in a group.
My colleague John Rentz is General Counsel for Boxer
Property here in Houston. Boxer Property
is a very large and successful developer and manager of commercial real estate
properties. Their buildings (and brand)
are best known for their yellow signage, which always lists their phone number
as: 877-777-RENT. I find it an amusing coincidence that the
last name of their GC is "Rentz".
At a recent General Counsel Forum event, John
discussed how Boxer uses a "Wiki" on its intranet, as follows:
Boxer
has 46 leasing agents in 15 different markets in 11 states. To try and streamline the leasing process,
all the states share the same basic form of commercial lease agreement (in an
office form and retail form), with slight modifications from state to state to
adapt to local rules on things like default remedies. The problem was that the agents out in the
field and in different states were isolated from each other in the sense that
it was difficult to see and share what type of common changes were requested by
tenants and approved by senior leasing managers and/or the legal
department. To remedy that, and reduce
the amount of requests coming up the chain, and thereby speed up the process
and put more authority in the agent’s hands, I put together a “wiki” page on
the internal Boxer website of approved lease language samples. It shows a number of common changes that any
agent can make, up to more complex or specialty changes for particular types of
tenants and situations, that they can use with simple approval from a senior
manager, but they have the language in hand ready to mark up. It is a “wiki” in the sense that employees
can post suggested changes to it, subject to an internal approval process.
I was feeling pretty
good about the fact that we had developed an online library on our company's
intranet of all our key documents. But
Boxer has taken it to the next logical step, using a Wiki as a forum for its
employees to conduct work as a group.
Does your company or law firm have a Wiki?
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Useful Article: How to Protect Your Browsing Privacy
The
core recommendation is: "Regardless
of which search engine you use, security experts recommend that you turn on
your browser’s “private mode,” usually found under Preferences, Tools or
Settings." http://tinyurl.com/bseurk4
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
I'll Bet You Don't Know what a MOOC Is
A
MOOC is a "massively open online course". Is this the next Big Thing? Harvard and MIT are joining together to offer
free online courses. Other top
universities are piling in as well. One
course offered by MIT called "Circuits and Electronics" enrolled
120,000 students. That is definitely
massive! The article link reviews the
major players in this quickly emerging area.
This is great for learning. Venture
capital is pouring money into it as well. How these universities and venture capitalists
intend to make money off of free online learning is a mystery to me, but if the
universities are willing to provide MOOCs, who are we to look a gift MOOC in
the mouth? http://tinyurl.com/86j64gb
Off-Topic: Dewey LeBoeuf and the Supply/Demand Imbalance
The
imminent and tragic demise of Dewey & LeBoeuf compels me to post something off topic today. The referenced
article interviews a prominent attorney who is about to publish a book aptly
titled, "Declining Prospects."
http://tinyurl.com/7m4etyp
Fundamentally,
there is a supply-demand imbalance in the market for lawyers. In real estate, when there is an oversupply,
developers stop developing, and lenders stop lending. In the legal profession, the oversupply is
created and fed by an excess of law schools.
The law schools have no incentive to cut back on enrollment, as
apparently the schools are money makers.
And apparently there is no shortage of applicants to law school. If you are thinking of law school, you have
to understand the grim odds. If you get
into a top tier school and are in the top 10% of your class, you will probably
do fine. Our winner-take-all society
creates a steep cliff, with a small group of elites clustered at the top of the
cliff. After that, everyone else is at
the bottom, struggling.
Caveat
emptor.
We'll get back to tech issues shortly....
We'll get back to tech issues shortly....
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)