Friday, December 11, 2015
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Friday, November 27, 2015
Watson Law
An article about a talk by Ms. Kyla Moran, IBM senior consultant with the Watson Industry Leadership group at a Legal Futures Annual Conference in London, England has me thinking…
Friday, November 20, 2015
An Interview with ProBono.net’s Claudia Johnson
Left to Right: Xander Karsten, Claudia Johnson, and Liz Keith of Probono.net |
One of our good friends in the court/justice technology business, Ms. Claudia Johnson of ProBono.net was recently interviewed.
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The interview was conducted by Mr. Stanley Ramdhany, a senior at Columbia University majoring in Sociology with a particular interest in the field of law and society.
He writes:
“In the field of public interest work, Claudia Johnson is renowned as one of the first law professionals to address the union between technology and legal aid. On the topic of how she first entered the field, Claudia stated, “I decided to go to law school at U Penn, and there I fell in love with public interest work, by working with DV victims in Northern Philadelphia. At this point, I was very interested in national origin discrimination and LEP advocacy, so I did my Skadden Fellowship on language access for Medicaid/disabled communities with focus on LEP groups.” It was there that Claudia first focused on the union of legal services and technology: “I wanted to have a way to track patterns by health care plan, zip code, and client demographics. So I was looking for a relatable multidimensional database—in 1997. That did not exist in legal services, so we had to build our own.”
Click here for the full in-depth interview (and in my opinion it is a good read to learn about this amazing lady)
Tuesday, November 17, 2015
An Interview with TestNotice’s John Coggeshall
From time to time we here at the CTB want to make our readers aware of new products and services. In this post we talk with John Coggeshall, Co-Founder of TestNotice that provides notification services for drug and problem solving courts. The service also has other potential uses.
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Tennessee Issues Appellate Court E-Filing RFP
The Tennessee State Courts issued an RFP 15-1001 on November 9, 2015 for an Appellate E-Filing System.
Proposals are due on December 14, 2015 and there are additional deadlines in the request as well.
Tennessee's RFP web page is: https://www.tncourts.gov/programs/rfpsgrants
The full RFP document in Microsoft Word format is available on that web page along with other associated documents.
The web page states:
Proposals are due on December 14, 2015 and there are additional deadlines in the request as well.
Tennessee's RFP web page is: https://www.tncourts.gov/programs/rfpsgrants
The full RFP document in Microsoft Word format is available on that web page along with other associated documents.
The web page states:
"The objective of this RFP is to acquire and implement an electronic court filing (e-filing) software solution that satisfies the Tennessee appellate courts’ requirements for a commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) software package or licensed service. The electronic filing system will permit court case participants to use the Internet to file permitted documents in appellate cases. The system will provide the ability for appellate staff review and approval. For approved filings, the information and documentation contained in the electronic filing will be populated to the court case management system. E-mail integration is critical. The initial scope of the e-filing system will include initial and subsequent filings in appellate cases. In the future, the e-filing system may be expanded to include trial court case filings. The electronic filing system should have proven capability in appellate and trial courts."
Thursday, November 5, 2015
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Friday, October 23, 2015
This and That in Court Technology – October, 2015
News about CourtHack, a new judge research tool for lawyers, the FBI’s NextGen identification system, online digital record preservation classes, a new high-speed departmental scanner, and just what everyone needs: a “Flux Capacitor” for your car.
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