Blogs continue to make way into judicial opinions
From Erica Tunic at First Movers, this morning's Minnesota Public Radio featured a segment on the extent to which legal blogs are making their way into judicial opinions. Here's a link to listen in.
From Erica Tunic at First Movers, this morning's Minnesota Public Radio featured a segment on the extent to which legal blogs are making their way into judicial opinions. Here's a link to listen in.
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This from CNN's Rick Sanchez. Anyone know a cheap cable TV channel for sale?
Labor Day, end of summer, and start of the football season from Austin's Jamie Spencer.
We may have found found answer to closing news bureaus and news agencies. Twitter.
You could do a lot worse.
Agree with Neville Hobson and his commenters that Technorati as a blog search tool isn’t reliable any longer. Any surprise with VC's just babysitting site?
Whether by Twitter or social networking websites people are using social media to track Hurricane Gustav and prepare to react to needs generated around the storm.
No wonder LexBlog clients want us to get our recorded webinars on podcasts.
Most law firm associates, summer associates and law students are on Facebook so currying favor with their own associates and prospective hires makes sense for large law.
LUF plane has more ports than my MacBook Air.
If there is a concerned group of folks worried about dangerous chemicals leaking into the drinking water, it could put that story up, and if enough people contribute to the investigation, a reporter can get paid and do the investigation.
Tribune may be seeing its business deteriorating and its debt slipping further into junk territory. But it may also be gaining leverage in its negotiations to sell perhaps its most prized possession: the Chicago Cubs.
I define myself by who I follow, I follow smart people who teach me things and put interesting stuff in my view.
The newspaper industry has a devastating history of letting the future of media slip from its grasp.
They have a Flickr stream. And a Twitter feed..Â
Quite a mapping of social media.
$10,000 a day per reporter while bloggers spend about $200 to $300 a day. No wonder newspapers are losing their ass.
Ironic that GetLegal started spamming my blog comments this week.
McGlinchey Stafford post titles a little ahead of those from other large law firm blogs.
Could we have guessed this when attending Gnomedex '06?
Stock car races in 2012 Olympics in Chicago.
Getting out of hardware business would be nice for LexBlog.
And I thought everyone just posted notes to their blog or Twitter.
Of all the things you can possibly run out of, time is the one you cannot replace.
Save the country. Save the children. Get a chip on your shoulder. Get angry and happy about something. Stretch big. Talk hard. And do something.
As a traditional reporter, why not learn how to use Twitter? It's here to stay.