Best in Law Blogs : LexBlog Network : October 4, 2010
October 4, 2010
As an iPad owner, I can say with authority that no device has ever made me feel the way Apple’s tablet does. All ‘magic’ aside, what emotion does the iPad trigger most often for me? Guilt. Every time I catch myself checking Twitter, browsing the web or exchanging email on my MacBook while the iPad sits on my coffee table, I feel guilty. I’ve yet to fully integrate it into my day-to-day life. Today, Scott Key examines how he too is still working to seamlessly bring the device into his life as an appellate lawyer in Georgia. Total posts on the LexBlog Network today: 136.
- Corruption in Legal Systems Persist Around the World. And Will Continue. – Florida attorney Santiago Cueto of Cueto Law Group on his blog International Business Law Advisor
- Juicy Jurisprudence: FTC and POM Wonderful File Suits – Portland corporate lawyer Tyler Anderson of Stoel Rives on the Food Liability Law Blog
- Robo-Signers Exposed Only the Tip of the Iceberg – LA attorney Christine Wilton on her blog, Los Angeles Bankruptcy Law Monitor
- Verizon Caught Skimming From its Own Customers to the Tune of $90 Million. Consumers Need to Take Extra Effort to Check Their Bills – Washington, DC lawyer Steven Berk on his blog, A Voice For Main Street
- Usability comes first – especially when death rays are involved – Aaron Hausman of Wechsler on their blog, Bagel Tuesday
- The iPad and Appellate Practice in Georgia – McDonough attorney Scott Key on his Georgia Criminal Appellate Law Blog
- Columbus Day is Coming. And Most Employers are Open. – Hartford lawyer Daniel Schwartz of Pullman & Comley in his Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- Do Not Take Pre-Trial Discovery for Granted in Corporate Dissolution Proceedings – New York attorney Peter A. Mahler of Farrell Fritz in his New York Business Divorce Blog
- Tripartite Branding Trouble: The Name is Suk? – Minneapolis lawyer Steve Baird of Winthrop & Weinstine on the firm’s Duets Blog
- Saying your sorry and then doing nothing about it – If you sicken 1,608 people, what should you do? – Seattle attorney Bill Marler of Marler Clark on his MarlerBlog
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