By Neil Squillante | Monday, March 24, 2008
Blawg Review #152, TechnoLawyer Style
Blawg Review is not just a blog, it's a clever social networking concept. Every week, a different blawg hosts Blawg Review, pointing out what it deems the most interesting blawg Posts from the previous week. Sometimes, the hosting blog will develop a theme around Blawg Review.
As you can see, 151 Blawg Reviews have preceded this one. Today, at last, it's our turn. Don't worry. You're in good hands. Blawg Review is similar to our BlawgWorld eBook.
The former contains links to Posts whereas the latter reprints entire Posts. Both have the same goal — expose people to blawgs and the excellent content they publish free of charge.
Given our BlawgWorld legacy, we thought we would canvas the 77 blawgs that comprise the latest edition of our eBook to see what they've published lately.
And then we realized that 77 is quite a large number. Fine for an eBook, but maybe not for a blog post. Time for Plan B.
This being TechnoLawyer, we decided to canvas the law practice management and legal technology blawgs within BlawgWorld. A few of these blawgs have fallen off the radar, but most of them (29) continue to crank out great content as evidenced by our selections below. (My commentary appears in parentheses.)
Because many other bloggers were kind enough to send us submissions for Blawg Review, we have also showcased our favorite submissions.
Our Picks from the Practice Management and Technology Blawgs in BlawgWorld ...
Above the Law reports on the most shocking court transcript of the year. (Are you sure this isn't the latest Quentin Tarantino script?)
Adam Smith, Esq. debates whether a blog can benefit a large law firm. (No comment from Kevin O'Keefe yet. Three, two, one ...)
Anonymous Lawyer explains why there's not much Anonymous Lawyer lately. (We suggest Jeremy work as a contract lawyer for a month on one of the inevitable Bear Stearns lawsuits. That'll provide some inspiration.)
Between Lawyers announces a new book by Dennis Kennedy and Tom Mighell, The Lawyer's Guide to Collaboration Tools and Technologies: Smart Ways to Work Together. (We're awaiting our review copy.)
DennisKennedy.blog dishes out some advice to lawyers who want to start a solo practice. (Trail Carolyn Elefant for a week.)
Futurelawyer's Rick Georges further criticizes PaperPort 11, this time by proxy. (The joys of activation.)
Golden Practices provides some tips on responding to RFPs, including when not to respond. (How about wearing a swimsuit to your next beauty contest?)
In Search of Perfect Client Service reports on the "lost generation" of large firm associates. (I'm a proud member.)
JD Bliss Blog reports on a group of Stanford Law School students who have started a movement — 1,000 strong on Facebook — to improve associate life at large law firms. (Until they become partners, that is.)
Jim Calloway's Law Practice Tips Blog discusses the most important button on your mobile phone. (Try guessing before you click.)
LawBiz Blog finds a law firm profitability lesson in a college hoops game. (Go Bruins!)
Leadership for Lawyers comments on the ABA's "Blawg 100," a list of the top 100 legal blogs. (For the record, we was robbed!)
Legal Business Development explains why ignoring "good ideas" for growing your practice might actually help you achieve that goal. (Okay then, no swimsuit at your next beauty contest.)
Legal Ease Blog explores the risks associated with evaluating lawyers on the number of hours they bill. (Attach this Post when submitting your time.)
Legal Marketing Blog provides six tips on effective marketing in a weakening economy. (Tip Number 7: Stop reading this blog post and get back to work.)
Legal Sanity applies the broken windows theory to law practice, particularly keeping clients happy. (It's the little things ... like returning phone calls.)
Life at the Bar explains what it's like when a lawyer becomes a party to a lawsuit and needs to hire a lawyer. (If you really want to blow your mind, think about a lawyer hiring a lawyer to sue a lawyer for malpractice.)
Want an extra $100,000 on your W-2 this year? More Partner Income explains how. (No, you won't have to send a check or money order for $59.95 for a set of videotapes.)
Nerino Petro's Compujurist.com recently published an in-depth review of Microsoft OneNote 2007. (Shame on us for not doing so.)
Passion, People and Principles has assembled the 20 worst Beatles songs as proof that "no-one ever achieves a consistently high standard." (Someone doesn't like the White Album.)
Ross Ipsa Loquitur tells you how to email Steve Ballmer. (Because of the volume of messages he receives, his reply may come from a retirement community 40 years from now.)
Slaw unveils the Slaw Timeline, a PDF file that summarizes each blog Post published during the past week using a timeline. (Did they use TimeMap? TimelineXpress? Timeline Maker Professional? Do tell.)
Strategic Legal Technology discusses two new social networks for lawyers, JD Supra and Legal Onramp, describing them as "conceptually similar to Counsel Connect." (Let's not forget LawCommerce.com.)
The Common Scold's Monica Bay becomes the last person on the planet to buy an iPod. (Her Walkman bypassed eBay and went straight to the Smithsonian.)
The Mac Lawyer summarizes a recent seminar on using a Mac for trial presentations. (Tip: Hire Steve Jobs to give your closing argument.)
The Marcus Perspective delves into the world of surveys, and provides some tips on how to use and not misuse them. (Take that Richard Dawson.)
The [Non]Billable Hour concludes that the only real difference between a large law firm and a venture-backed startup company is the $5,000 espresso machine. (Does anyone sell cost recovery software for macchiatos?)
What About Clients? reports that cost cutting at large companies may benefit small law firms. (Or perhaps law firms in India.)
Wired GC explores the problems general counsel face when they cut legal costs. (Like having to pay in Rupees.)
Our Picks from This Week's Blawg Review Submissions ...
Slate's new legal blog, Convictions, argues that the Supreme Court has a pro-business bias. (Well, the Framers were wealthy businessmen.)
Death and Taxes has an excellent cross-selling suggestion for family law practitioners. (Ka-ching!)
Small Business Trends echoes our sentiments about the foolishness of not listing executive bios on your Web site. (We told you so.)
Sharp Brains suggests you try to relax a little. (Maybe we should have linked to just one blog post in this Blawg Review.)
Professor Marc John Randazza of the Legal Satyricon took Sharp Brains' advice and makes two important announcements as a result. (Congratulations.)
And that's all for Blawg Review 152! Next week, 153 at Declarations and Exclusions.
Blawg Review has information about next week's host, and instructions how to get your blawg posts reviewed in upcoming issues.
About TechnoEditorials
A TechnoEditorial is the vehicle through which we opine and provide tips of interest to managing partners, law firm administrators, and others in the legal profession. TechnoEditorials appear first in TechnoGuide, and later here in TechnoLawyer Blog. TechnoGuide, which is free, also contains exclusive content. You can subscribe here.
By Neil Squillante | Tuesday, December 11, 2007
In October we held our first ever sweepstakes, TechnoLawyer Linkathon.
We would like to thank all those who participated! Their links to our blog resulted in 821 downloads of our eBook, BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide.
At this point, our eBook has been downloaded 22,436 times. If you don't have a copy yet, download it now (PDF file).
On November 21st we held the official drawing and chose the first and second prize winners.
Susan McClellan, Director of Marketing and Operations of Esquire Innovations, won the $500 first prize.
Charlotte Quiroz, founder of IntelliWord, won the $200 second prize.
Congratulations to Susan and Charlotte!
About TechnoEditorials
A TechnoEditorial is the vehicle through which we opine and provide tips of interest to managing partners, law firm administrators, and others in the legal profession. TechnoEditorials appear first in TechnoGuide, and later here in TechnoLawyer Blog. TechnoGuide, which is free, also contains exclusive content. You can subscribe here.
By Neil Squillante | Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Just 8 days remain to enter TechnoLawyer Linkathon, our sweepstakes with a top prize of $500. Simply link to us using a URL that we provide, and then email us your entry.
Although I can't make any promises about your odds when the sweepstakes ends, your odds of winning today are an incredible 12%. By contrast, your odds of winning a typical lottery are about .0000007%.
I don't have any statistics, but I suspect winning this $500 might be easier than shooting fish in a barrel.
That's because very few legal professionals have Web sites — or at least Web sites on which they can get permission to add a link. If you're lucky enough to have such access, learn how to enter TechnoLawyer Linkathon now.
Update: TechnoLawyer Linkathon has ended. Read about the wnners.
About TechnoEditorials
A TechnoEditorial is the vehicle through which we opine and provide tips of interest to managing partners, law firm administrators, and others in the legal profession. TechnoEditorials appear first in TechnoGuide, and later here in TechnoLawyer Blog. TechnoGuide, which is free, also contains exclusive content. You can subscribe here.
By Neil Squillante | Monday, October 1, 2007
Please Note: TechnoLawyer Linkathon has ended. Read about the winners.
We recently published a free eBook — BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide. It continues to garner favorable reviews, most recently from LLRX. If you don't yet have a copy, please download it now (PDF file).
Today we're launching TechnoLawyer Linkathon — a sweepstakes in which you could win a first prize of $500 or a second prize of $200! The beauty of cold hard cash is spending it however you see fit. Buy the latest must-have gadget or 150 ice cream cones. Indulge yourself!
How to Enter Technolawyer Linkathon ...
Anyone with a blog or Web site that caters to the legal community can participate. TechnoLawyer membership is not required so please tell your friends.
If your blog or site qualifies, just do the following:
1. Link to Our eBook
Simply use this URL to send people to our site where they can download a copy of our eBook (no registration required): http://www.technolawyer.com/r.asp?L12085&M1
You can link to us in one of two ways:
- Place an image of the eBook that we provide along the side of your home page and simply link the image.
- Write about the eBook in a blog post or in an article on or accessible from your home page. Your post/article should contain the eBook's title and the link plus whatever else you want to say (review, description, etc.). Or you can simply use a blurb that we provide.The title of the eBook is: BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide. You can download some blurbs about the eBook as well as some graphics here (.zip file).
Here again is the URL to use in your link: http://www.technolawyer.com/r.asp?L12085&M1
2. Enter the Drawing
Once you have linked to us as outlined above, please email the corresponding Web address of that page on your blog or site along with your contact information (including city and state) to us at: linkathon1007@peerviews.com
After you enter, you'll receive a confirmation message. If you don't, please contact our customer service department (use the email address listed on the bottom of this page).
We will hold a drawing on November 21, 2007. There will be two prizes. The first prize winner will receive $500, and the second prize winner will receive $200.
Just one entry per blog or Web site. United States residents and blogs/sites only. You must send us your entry by October 31, 2007.
3. The Fine Print
There's no step 3! But we do have official rules. Please review them below. Good luck!
TECHNOLAWYER LINKATHON OFFICIAL RULES
1. ELIGIBILITY: NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. TechnoLawyer Linkathon is open to legal residents of the fifty (50) United States and the District of Columbia who have reached the age of majority in their state of residence as of the date of entry and who operate a blog or Internet Web site that caters to the U.S. legal community. Employees and directors of PeerViews Inc., as well as immediate family members (spouses, children, parents, siblings) and those living in the same household as employees and directors, are not eligible to participate. Eligibility will be determined in the sole discretion of Sponsor. By entering, you agree to these Official Rules and to all decisions of the Sponsor, which are final and binding. Linkathon is sponsored by PeerViews Inc., 825 Third Avenue, Second Floor, New York, NY 10022 ("Sponsor").
2. TO ENTER: To enter, add the link provided below to your Web site or blog post to send people to our site where they can download our eBook "BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide." The link must be added to your Web site or blog between October 1, 2007 and October 31, 2007. Links added before or after those dates are not eligible for the drawing. Link to our site in one of two ways: (1) place an image of the eBook that we provide along the side of your home page and link the image; or (2) write about the eBook in a blog post or in an article on or accessible from your home page that includes the title of the eBook, the link to it, and whatever else you want to say (review, description, etc.) or use a blurb that we provide on our Web site. The link to our Web site that you must use is: http://www.technolawyer.com/r.asp?L12085&M1. No other link will be eligible even if it goes to the same Web page. Download information, blurbs, graphics and more related to the eBook. Once you have linked to us as described above, send an email message to linkathon1007@peerviews.com with the Web address of your blog or Web site containing the link to the eBook, along with your full name, city, state, and email address. Email entries must be received by Sponsor's server no later than 11:59:59 p.m. ET on October 31, 2007. Limit of one (1) entry per Web site or blog. Incomplete or garbled entries and entries with nonfunctioning links will be disqualified. Entries generated by a script, macro or other automated means are not eligible.
3. DRAWING and PRIZES: One (1) First Prize winner and one (1) Second Prize winner will be selected in a random drawing from among all eligible entries held on or about November 21, 2007. First Prize winner will receive $500. Second Prize winner will receive $200. Odds of winning a prize depend on the number of eligible entries received. Potential winners will be notified by email within five (5) business days after the drawing and must claim the prize by signing and returning a declaration of eligibility and liability/publicity release within five (5) business days of notification. If a potential winner cannot be reached within five (5) business days after the first attempt to contact such potential winner, or if potential winner does not timely return the signed claim forms, that potential winner will be disqualified and an alternate entrant will be selected in at random from among all remaining eligible entries. Any applicable taxes or fees on prizes are the sole responsibility of winners. Limit one prize per person. Prizes will be mailed in the form of a check to each winner within four to six weeks after the drawing date. No substitution of prize. Prizes are non-transferable prior to award. Sponsor is not responsible for actions after delivery.
4. OTHER CONSIDERATIONS: By accepting a prize, winners agree that the Sponsor, and those acting under its authority, may use winners' names, cities, likenesses, and Web site or blog titles for advertising and promotional purposes in any media without limitation or obligation, and without further consideration, unless prohibited by law. By entering, you agree that the Sponsor, its parents, subsidiaries, affiliates, and all of their respective officers, directors, employees, representatives and agents, will have no liability whatsoever for, and will be held harmless by you for any liability for any injury, loss or damages of any kind to persons, including death, and property, due in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, from participation in the Linkathon, downloading any materials, or from the acceptance, possession, use or misuse of any prize or prize-related activity. Void where prohibited.
5. MISCELLANEOUS: All entries become the sole property of the Sponsor. In the event of a dispute, entries will be deemed made by the authorized account holder of the email address used to submit the entry. The "authorized account holder" is deemed as the natural person who is assigned to an email address by an Internet access provider, service provider or other online organization that is responsible for assigning e- mail addresses for the domain associated with the submitted email address. A potential winner may be requested to provide Sponsor with proof that the potential winner is the authorized account holder of the email address associated with the winning entry. If for any reason the Linkathon is not capable of running as planned, including due to infection by computer virus, bugs, tampering, unauthorized intervention, fraud, technical failures, human error or any other causes beyond the control of the Sponsor that corrupt or affect the administration, security, fairness, integrity, or proper conduct of the promotion, Sponsor reserves the right in its sole discretion, to disqualify any individual who tampers with the entry process, and to cancel, terminate, modify or suspend the promotion and to select winners from among the email entries received prior to such failure. The Sponsor is not responsible for late, lost, illegible, incomplete, stolen or misdirected mail or email. Sponsor is not responsible for any computer, telephone, satellite, cable, network, electronic or Internet hardware or software malfunctions, failures, connections, or availability, or garbled, corrupt or jumbled transmissions, traffic congestion, or any technical error, or for injury or damage to participants' or to any other person's computer related to or resulting from downloading the eBook, links or otherwise participating in the Linkathon or using the TechnoLawyer/PeerViews Web site.
6. WINNERS' LIST: For a list of the prize winners, send a self-addressed stamped envelope to TechnoLawyer Linkathon Winners, PeerViews Inc., 825 Third Avenue, Second Floor, New York, NY 10022, between October 31 and November 30, 2007. Requests received outside this period will not be processed. Allow 4-6 weeks for delivery of Winners' List.
By Neil Squillante | Monday, October 1, 2007
BlawgWorld 2007-08 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide is a free eBook in PDF format. Actually, it's two eBooks in one.
BlawgWorld enables you to explore and discover legal blogs (blawgs) without spinning your wheels. It features the best essays of the year from 77 of the most influential blawgs.
TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide uses a question/answer format to help you find solutions to problems commonly encountered by law firms. It contains 185 solutions organized into 58 topics.
Thanks to the eBook's inspired design, you're never more than three clicks away from what you want to read. BlawgWorld 2007-08 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide has received glowing reviews from many publications. For example, LLRX writes:
"The substance of both books is exceptional, while the eBook format is innovative and inviting.... [The eBook] was designed to open in just about any PDF viewer and it worked very well in my various tests.... The best part of the entire eBook is that it is free."
Download Your Free Copy Now
BlawgWorld 2007-08 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide is truly free — no registration hassles.
So please download your copy now (PDF file).
And then enter our sweepstakes.
By Neil Squillante | Tuesday, August 14, 2007
It can be soooo difficult deciding which four star restaurant to dine at every day when you're a summer associate. Decisions, decisions.
Of course, I wouldn't know as I was a summer associate during the lean years so I typically received only one lunch offer per day ("Spago at 1:00? Never heard of it, but I'm game.") We had it so tough back then.
Today's summers don't know how good they've got it, but David Lat of Above the Law does. Recently, ABC News interviewed David about today's summer associate programs. Watch the video.
Above the Law is one of 77 influential legal blogs (blawgs) featured BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide, a popular PDF eBook. Download your free copy.
By Neil Squillante | Monday, August 13, 2007
Now that BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide (our free PDF eBook) resides on thousands of hard drives, we would like to pass along a hot tip for those of you accessing this eBook with Adobe Acrobat or Adobe Reader. The eBook contains hundreds of Web links so you may find yourself staring at this dialog box:
Fortunately, you can easily turn off this annoying "feature" and save your hand from all those extra clicks. Below you'll find instructions for Adobe Acrobat and Reader versions 7 and 8.
Adobe Acrobat 8 | Adobe Reader 8
1. Under the Edit menu, select Preferences. (Mac users can find Preferences under the Acrobat menu.)
2. Select Trust Manager in the left column.
3. Click the Change Settings button.
4. Where it says "PDF files may connect to web sites to share or get information," select "Allow all web sites."
5. Click OK.
Adobe Acrobat 7 | Adobe Reader 7
1. Under the Edit menu, select Preferences. (Mac users can find Preferences under the Acrobat menu.)
2. Select Trust Manager in the left column.
3. Click the Change Site Settings button.
4. Where it says "Default behavior for URL access," select "Always Allow."
5. Click OK.
About BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide
The best way to discover legal blogs (blawgs), BlawgWorld 2007 features 77 thought-provoking essays from 77 of the most influential blawgs. The product guide reinvented, TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide uses a unique question/answer format to guide law firms to solutions for problems they experience. Both eBooks are free and reside in the same PDF file. Download your free copy. Learn how to become distributor or place a copy on your intranet.
By Neil Squillante | Monday, August 6, 2007
As you may have heard, one week ago we released two eBooks in one PDF file: BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide. Currently available for free download from about 65 Web sites, you can download a copy here.
A compendium of 77 outstanding blawg posts, the BlawgWorld 2007 section of our eBook follows a well-proven model — repurposed content reaches new audiences.
For example, some people watch movies in theaters, but even more people watch them on DVD, HBO, network television, iPods, airplanes, etc.
Also, popular newspaper columnists and comic strip artists often collect their work in books. And those who write books often publish a chapter in a magazine.
Why should blogs be any different?
That's what we think, and that's also what the folks at SharedBook think. Talk about timing — the same week that we released our eBook, SharedBook released Blog2Print.
On-demand vanity publishing for blogs, Blog2Print enables bloggers and their readers to order a blog as a book (you get both a PDF eBook and a printed version). You can select the entire blog or posts within a date range, and add cover art, a dedication, and other material. At this point in time, you cannot cherry pick blog posts. Also, Blog2Print currently supports only Blogger.
Blog2Print joins Blurb in an increasingly crowded space.
Now, I personally think it's more interesting to read a collection of essays from different blogs than from one blog, but I think Blog2Print and Blurb have many potential uses.
For example, law firms that publish a blawg could use Blog2Print to send a book of their blawg posts to their clients every year.
Also, a number of blogs exist that have a beginning, middle, and end just like a book. For example, my personal favorite, The Darth Side, is a diary of Darth Vader written during Episodes V and VI, the last two Star Wars movies (sequence-wise). It's hilarious and a perfect candidate for printing in book form. In fact, the author has already made a PDF file of the blog available for download — and it's certainly easier to read the PDF file than to read the blog.
So, how well does Blog2Print work? My printer industry blogger friend Jim Lyons has already given it a spin using his own blog as the proverbial guinea pig. Read his post, Enhanced SharedBook Blogger Widget.
Also announced last week, Wikitravel introduced Wikitravel Press, a new service that enables you to print your own travel books using information from Wikitravel, a user-generated online travel guide.
(Blurb and Wikitravel Press links provided by Bob Ambrogi of Lawsites.)
About TechnoEditorials
A TechnoEditorial is the vehicle through which we opine and provide tips of interest to managing partners, law firm administrators, and others in the legal profession. TechnoEditorials appear first in TechnoGuide, and later here in TechnoLawyer Blog. TechnoGuide, which is free, also contains exclusive content. You can subscribe here.
By Neil Squillante | Monday, July 30, 2007
Welcome to our press kit for BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide. We've designed this press kit for two audiences — bar associations, bloggers, publishers, and others who would like to distribute a copy of this eBook via their blog, listserver, newsletter, Web site, etc., and lawyers, law librarians, paralegals, and other law firm personnel who would like to place a copy of the eBook on their law firm's intranet.
Email this press kit to a colleague or friend.
How to Distribute the eBook
1. Online Publishing: Feel free to copy either of the download links below (depending on which cover you prefer), and make it available anywhere online. You can also email these links to friends. Even better, contact us
so that we can give you your own unique trackable download link. This
way, you can track the number of downloads. Everyone loves statistics after all. Also, feel free to use any of the
graphics available below in conjunction with your distribution of the
eBook. There is no charge for this service.
2. Law Firm Intranets: If your intranet consists of private Web pages, please contact us for a trackable download link so that you can evaluate its popularity. If you would prefer not to use a trackable link or if your "intranet" consists of a file server, that's fine. In that case, please send us the name of your firm and the number of lawyers and staff so that we have an idea of how many people might access the eBook. Either way, there is no charge.
Though free and freely distributed, the eBook does not
reside in the public domain. Therefore, you may only distribute the
eBook as outlined above. The download links we provide
directly download the eBook. No registration hassles. Plus we take care
of all the bandwidth.
Please contact Sara Skiff at or at (646) 530-8500 x102. When you contact Sara, please tell her which cover you prefer—Grid or Overlap (see below).
Watch Our Press Conference Video
As you've probably noticed, at the top of the press kit you'll find a
video of our July 25, 2007 press conference, which runs for 17 minutes.
It consists of three parts: (1) a behind the scenes look at what makes
this eBook noteworthy, (2) a guided tour of the eBook and its features,
and (3) a Q&A session with those who attended the press conference.
Download The eBook
Below you'll find two download links for the eBook — one for the
version with the Grid cover, and one for the version with the Overlap cover. Other than the different covers, they are identical. Click a cover to download that version. If you would like to distribute the eBook, we've also provided the corresponding URLs below in a format easy to copy and paste.

The Grid cover displays screenshots of many of the blawgs featured in BlawgWorld 2007 in an orderly grid.
Grid URL: http://www.technolawyer.com/r.asp?L11594&M1

The Overlap cover displays screenshots of many of the blawgs featured in BlawgWorld 2007 in an overlapping manner.
Overlap URL: http://www.technolawyer.com/r.asp?L11595&M1
TechnoLawyer eBook Press Release
July 30, 2007: TechnoLawyer eBook Makes Legal Publishing History with Smart Navigation System and Online Distribution Via Seventy-Eight Legal Blogs
August 1, 2007: TechnoLawyer eBook Downloaded 5,000 Times in First 36 Hours of Release
TechnoLawyer eBook Logo
Please click the logo to download it in EPS, PSD, and TIF formats.

TechnoLawyer eBook Photos
Below you'll find three photos from the TechnoLawyer eBook Pre/Launch Party at PS 450 in New York City. Click a photo to download a high resolution copy.
Editor Sara Skiff and Publisher Neil J. Squillante pose with the cover of the eBook.
Fourteen of the 77 bloggers featured in BlawgWorld 2007 pose for a group photo.
Bloggers Adriana Linares and Allison C. Shields debate which eBook cover they prefer while publisher Neil J. Squillante listens to their feedback.
Graphics For Distributors: Grid Cover
Below you'll find thumbnails of three graphics for the Grid cover — Tilt, Flat, and Book — each of which comes in two versions. Tilt and Flat are designed to sit above a blog post like the video at the top of this press kit. Book is designed for inline use in a blog post or newsletter, and also for use along the side of any Web site. For your convenience, we've provided each graphic at several sizes ready to go. We've also included the original Photoshop files if you need a different size. Click any thumbnail to download the entire set.




Graphics For Distributors: Overlap Cover
Below you'll find thumbnails of three graphics for the Overlap cover — Tilt, Flat, and Book — each of which comes in two versions. Tilt and Flat are designed to sit above a blog post like the video at the top of this press kit. Book
is designed for inline use in a blog post or newsletter, and also for
use along the side of any Web site. For your convenience, we've
provided each graphic at several sizes ready to go. We've also included
the original Photoshop files if you need a different size. Click any thumbnail to download the entire set




By Neil Squillante | Monday, July 30, 2007
BlawgWorld 2007 with TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide is a free eBook. Actually, it's two eBooks in one PDF file.
BlawgWorld 2007 is the best way to explore and discover legal blogs (blawgs). It features 77 remarkable essays from 77 of the most influential blawgs. Each blogger handpicked their best essay of the year for inclusion in the eBook.
The 2007 TechnoLawyer Problem/Solution Guide is a revolutionary new way to find Solutions to Problems your law firm is experiencing. Specifically, it contains 185 Problems and corresponding Solutions.
Each Problem is written in the form of a question from the point of view of a law firm and organized by topic. Topics include case management, depositions, discovery, document management, legal research, time-billing, and many more — 58 topics in all.
Download Our eBook Now
Our eBook is truly free. You click the link and it downloads. No registration hassles.
Download your copy of the eBook now.
And then watch our press conference.