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Category Archives: Online Resources

Guest Post :: Top 10 Resources for Mac Junkies

Posted on May 24, 2010 by Ben Stevens Posted in Guest Posts, Online Resources Leave a comment
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Today’s Mac-using professionals are getting mighty fond of the convenient tech solutions Apple, Inc. keeps pumping out year after year, and they want to be kept in the loop on the latest developments. To help toward this end, Alvina Lopez has compiled a top 10 go-to list of online resources that she visits on a regular basis to stay abreast of all things Mac. I expect that many of the Mac enthusiasts that visit this blog will be familiar with many of these sites, but I also suppose some will find it useful to see them all in one place for easy reference, and perhaps add a few to their queue.

  1. Apple.com :: In a world of tech rumors, sometimes it’s just more helpful to get the information you need straight from the horse’s mouth. They have a tab titled "Hot News" where you can skim headlines for topics you might be interested in. Hot News will re-route you to updates about their products and provides links to mainstream news articles about their successes (as you might expect, they don’t typically link to articles criticizing their products, so you’ll need to set up Google Alerts with keywords "Mac" and "Apple" if you want to access positive and negative news articles about Apple products.)
  2. MacWorld.com :: This is the website that accompanies the niche magazine. The website closely follows trends, applications, and capabilities of Mac desktops and laptops, as well as the iPad, iPod and iPhone. What I find most useful are the reviews of products and applications. The Mac tips, tricks and how-tos are useful as well.
  3. MacRumors.com :: If you’re interested in the rumors, scuttlebutt and leaks of new Apple products (like I am), than this site is for you. There’s also a forum, where you can connect with like-minded folks who are on the edge of their seats waiting for the next product, version or update.
  4. Wired.com :: This site accompanies the popular tech magazine, which I skim for Mac-related articles. The great thing about this site is the number of bloggers involved, which provides a good deal of less newsy, anecdotal information pertaining to Macs and other Apple products. The How-To tab is also occasionally useful for snags you run into with your Macs.
  5. BusinessWeek’s Apple blog :: This blog is titled "Byte of the Apple" and is co-written by a senior tech writer and senior writer at BusinessWeek who have followed Apple for a long time. They have interesting, mature perspectives on the company and its products.
  6. AppleInsider.com :: This is a simple site which compiles a great deal of Apple-related news (and rumors) in one place. These sites are helpful for picking up tidbits you may have missed in a mass Mac news search.
  7. MacLife.com :: This is the website for the magazine tailored specifically for "today’s passionate Mac users." Aside from the hard tech news I can’t get enough of, the site has reviews, how-tos, blogs and forums.
  8. CultofMac.com :: As the name suggests, this site is suitable for the ultra Mac-obsessed. Today I shook my head when I saw a piece on a "rare MacBook Pro with THREE command keys." Even so, it does have useful Mac news and rumors. The site is run by the guy who wrote a book called Inside Steve’s Brain, a biography of Steve Jobs.
  9. Mac.AppStorm.net :: AppStorm is a blog that reviews and discusses Mac applications. You never really know what you’re going to get on this site, and that’s part of its draw.
  10. Mac-Forums.com :: Last but not least is a discussion forum that you can join to talk to people who speak Mac. They might not go by their real names, but they can help you with your Mac questions in a snap.

This guest post is contributed by Alvina Lopez, who writes on the topics of accredited online colleges. She welcomes your comments at her email alvina.lopez@gmail.com.

Free Federal Rules of Evidence 2010

Posted on March 5, 2010 by Ben Stevens Posted in Online Resources 1 Comment
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Did you know that you can download a free pdf version of the Federal Rules of Evidence 2010 from the Federal Evidence Review website? This pdf gives you a number of benefits including:

  • Fully searchable text using the Acrobat Reader Search tool;
  • Hyperlink (jump links) on the Index page to take you directly to a specific rule;
  • Links to online versions of the FRE; and
  • Link to the FRE Advisory Committee Notes online.

You can download your free copy by clicking here.  Of course, if you save the link you should be able to get updates as they are made to the document. 

Source:  "Get your FREE PDF of the Federal Rules of Evidence 2010" by Nerino Petro, published at his Compujurist blog.

Happy Third Anniversary to MILO

Posted on February 17, 2010 by Ben Stevens Posted in Online Resources 2 Comments
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It seems like just yesterday that Grant Griffiths and I were discussing the fact that there should be a "better" group for attorneys to discuss how to best use Macs in their practices.  From that discussion, the Macs In Law Offices (MILO) forum was born and it was founded on February 17, 2007.  Today, a mere three years later, MILO has 2,112 members and is widely regarded as the premier online forum for attorneys who want to maximize the use of Macs in their law practices.  If you are not yet a member, you can take advantage of this free resource by clicking HERE.

Guest Post :: Life in “The Cloud” (Conclusion)

Posted on January 15, 2010 by Ben Stevens Posted in Guest Posts, Online Resources, Software Leave a comment
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Ultimately, you, the user, will have to determine if this “working in the cloud” is for you. Legitimate and less-legitimate concerns about the safety of your data and the security of your confidential information will be a topic for debate in another article. Consider, though, how much of your confidential life is already online—banks, insurance information, credit cards—and realize that security is generally as good as your passwords are. The tools for breaking free of the desktop–safely, securely, inexpensively, and collaboratively—are all there. The question is, do we want to use them.

Paul Meyerson has been a Macintosh consultant in the NYC area for more years than he wants to admit. His new company, www.macsupport.com, aims to take care of any and all Macintosh issues for the home or small business users. Using a combination of telephone support and remote control software, Macsupport.com is able to deal with a variety of home users’ issues quickly, efficiently, and inexpensively.

Guest Post :: Life in “The Cloud” (Evernote)

Posted on January 13, 2010 by Ben Stevens Posted in Guest Posts, Online Resources, Software 8 Comments
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Finally, for all the data flotsam and jetsam we accumulate, there’s an application to make your online life searchable. Evernote gives you a central database to keep accounts, passwords, bookmarks, notes, recipes or whatever you want. It stores them securely and keeps it all easily accessible in numerous ways. Evernote is an application you install on whatever platform you’re on (Mac, PC, iPhone, or access it via the web) and, using a free account, synchronize it all together.

Of the three Cloud applications I’ve discussed here, this is the one I use all day, every day. Although there is a free version (ad sponsored), the inexpensive pay account ($45/year) is a must if you intend to use this to its fullest extent. Evernote wants to consider itself your searchable filing cabinet, and its tools do exactly that. Tag notes with tags that you make up on the fly and then sort the whole system via those tags, or search for any text you might have in a note.

Many online applications have the ability to store notes and search them, there are two things that set Evernote apart: Integration into a browser and the ability to take pictures of anything and OCR it automatically. The picture part, although it’s very cool, I don’t use much. You use your iSight or iPhone camera to photograph nearly anything and save it to Evernote. When the item gets to Evernote’s servers they perform some impressive OCR voodoo to make those photos searchable. If there’s text, a general search of all your normal text documents will also find the photos with the text somewhere in them. For example, a picture of a map that had the words “New York” on it would show if you chose to search for the term “New York.”

The second exceptional feature of Evernote puts a small Elephant-shaped button right into your browser bar. Come across a page you want to have available to you later? Click this button and the entire page—pictures, text, whatever (not flash or other embedded things) as well as most of the formatting will pop right into a new Evernote note, along with the Title of the page and the link to the original. Unlike simply bookmarking a page in a browser, doing it this way makes that page completely searchable. Bookmarks are one thing, but this is far beyond.

Paul Meyerson has been a Macintosh consultant in the NYC area for more years than he wants to admit. His new company, www.macsupport.com, aims to take care of any and all Macintosh issues for the home or small business users. Using a combination of telephone support and remote control software, Macsupport.com is able to deal with a variety of home users’ issues quickly, efficiently, and inexpensively.

Guest Post :: Life in “The Cloud” (Google Documents)

Posted on January 11, 2010 by Ben Stevens Posted in Guest Posts, Online Resources, Software 2 Comments
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If viewing the changes after a document is saved is not fast enough for you, how about an application where people can share a document and see the changes AS THEY HAPPEN? This, among many other things, is a killer feature of Google Documents. Some of the features of this indispensible tool are:

  • Totally free.
  • Work on the same document at the same time in real-time collaboration.
  • Replicate all of the expensive Microsoft Office applications for free with Google versions of Word, Excel and Powerpoint. Save the documents locally if you need to (as either Word, HTML, PDF, or many other formats with no conversion necessary), or leave them in the cloud.
  • Give access to any document to anyone you choose, and decide whether they can read/write or delete each document.
  • Use a built-in revision history to keep track of multiple versions of the same documents.

Trust me, you haven’t worked on a spreadsheet until you’ve seen the cursor moving around on its own as you’re editing other cells and colleagues are editing their own info at the same time. It’s almost creepy (but in a good way!)

Paul Meyerson has been a Macintosh consultant in the NYC area for more years than he wants to admit. His new company, www.macsupport.com, aims to take care of any and all Macintosh issues for the home or small business users. Using a combination of telephone support and remote control software, Macsupport.com is able to deal with a variety of home users’ issues quickly, efficiently, and inexpensively.

Guest Post :: Life in “The Cloud” (DropBox)

Posted on January 7, 2010 by Ben Stevens Posted in Guest Posts, Online Resources, Software 1 Comment
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Dropbox, completely free for 2 GB of space, a pay service if you need more space ($10/month for 50 GB), appears just like any other folder on your local computer. However, the folder is actually a live, shared folder on the dropbox servers. With the help of an integrated menu bar application, you can give read only or read/write access to anything that’s in the box, be it folders or individual files. You can access your own dropbox through the web, iPhone, desktop or laptop, via Mac or PC. Others can access it in the same way if you’ve given them access.

Think of it as file sharing without having to set up the server. Working on a collaborative project? Share out that folder with people and give granular access to files and folders in the project. The folder automatically checks to see what’s been updated locally and updates the folder accordingly. Need to get someone changes to a document or a series of documents? Don’t email them—just work out of the drop box and everyone will see your changes immediately after you save the file.

Paul Meyerson has been a Macintosh consultant in the NYC area for more years than he wants to admit. His new company, www.macsupport.com, aims to take care of any and all Macintosh issues for the home or small business users. Using a combination of telephone support and remote control software, Macsupport.com is able to deal with a variety of home users’ issues quickly, efficiently, and inexpensively.

Guest Post :: Life in “The Cloud” (Introduction)

Posted on January 5, 2010 by Ben Stevens Posted in Guest Posts, Online Resources, Software 2 Comments
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The typical model of how people store and access documents is changing as “cloud computing” makes its way to the Mac environment. Basically, cloud computing means that software is stored not on the user’s desktop, but on a server or many servers somewhere on the Internet (hence, “cloud.”)

Alternately referred to as SaaS (“Software as a Service”), the basic concept is the same—you don’t buy your software, you subscribe to it. In many cases, this is a paid service. In some cases, most notably through Google, it’s free. In all cases of Cloud Computing, though, it’s using the tools we’ve taken for granted on the desktop and moved them onto the Internet.

Economically, this makes good sense. Why spend big chunks of money on databases or word processors when the same software is available online for a nominal monthly fee (or, for free!)? Perhaps more importantly, why deal with the headaches that come with locally stored applications, including installation and upgrades when you could just open your browser and do about 98% of what you normally do?

However, with all of these good reasons for using cloud computing, I’d like to discuss a different one: Functionality that is ONLY available in a “cloud.” Three applications specifically exemplify this: Dropbox, Evernote and Google Docs, and each will be addressed in a series of posts over the next week. Stay tuned…

Paul Meyerson has been a Macintosh consultant in the NYC area for more years than he wants to admit. His new company, www.macsupport.com, aims to take care of any and all Macintosh issues for the home or small business users. Using a combination of telephone support and remote control software, Macsupport.com is able to deal with a variety of home users’ issues quickly, efficiently, and inexpensively.

MILO Continues to Grow

Posted on December 21, 2009 by Ben Stevens Posted in Online Resources 1 Comment
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The Macs In Law Offices (MILO) forum had now surpassed 1,900 members and is closing in on two thousand.  MILO is the premier online forum for attorneys who want to maximize the use of Macs in their law practices, and you can take advantage of this free resource by clicking HERE.

 

 

 

Blogs for Paralegals and Legal Assistants

Posted on November 30, 2009 by Ben Stevens Posted in Online Resources 7 Comments
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Blogs are not just for lawyers – there are several excellent blogs aimed at paralegals and legal assistants.  I have listed several below, and I invite you to let me know of others that I can add to this list:

  • The Paralegal, published by Ana Pierro
  • Paralegal How To
  • Practical Paralegalism, published by Lynne DeVenny
  • Paralegalese
  • Paralegal Pie, published by Kim Walker
  • Paralegal Gateway
  • The Estrin Report, published by Chere B. Estrin
  • ICC Law blog
  • The Empowered Paralegal, published Robert E. Mongue
  • Patti’s Paralegal Page
  • The Paralegal Mentor, published by Vicki Voisin

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