Wednesday, August 8, 2018
Tuesday, August 7, 2018
Industry Summit, September 17-18, 2018, in St. Petersburg, Florida
We received the following conference announcement today.
The annual Industry Summit is an opportunity for industry technology leaders to engage in free-flowing discussion with leaders of COSCA, NACM, and CITOC, and representatives from the IJIS Institute, NCSC, and the Administrative Office of the United States Courts. The objective of this two-day event is to provide the industry with insights into the current and emerging technology needs of the courts over the next two to six years. Working side by side, court and industry technology leaders will identify business problems, brainstorm opportunities, and chart a course for future court technology.
Details below...
Tuesday, July 31, 2018
COSCA/NACM Joint Technology Committee Sets Priorities
In the recent committee meeting held in Atlanta, Georgia on July 22-23, 2018 the following priorities for 2018/2019 were set by the COSCA/NACM Joint Technology Committee. The subjects are:
Thursday, July 26, 2018
This and That in Court Tech – July 2018
Animal rescue at Rancho Del Sueno |
We share news from California, a private court records access company, a huge report of technology projects from the Ohio state courts, and a commentary regarding a court in Michigan losing 3.6 million paper documents.
Monday, July 16, 2018
E-Filing Used for Theft and Some Remediation Ideas
Thanks to a message via ImageSoft, we learned of a Florida Bar News article describing how a law office manager used the system to “file papers in a foreclosure case” and then took $130,000 that was “left over after the foreclosure sale”. We discuss the actions taken by the E-Filing Authority and more below…
Thursday, July 12, 2018
Changing Frameworks – The Court Component Model and Agile Approaches
Graphic courtesy of Oriental Journal of Computer Science and Technology article "Component
Based Software Development Life Cycle Models: A Comparative Review" published 30-Jun-2017.
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NCSC's very own Barb Holmes shares the following on her experiences working in the Pennsylvania Courts and how they combined a component-based approach with agile methods to tackle complex business problems and ever-changing requirements.
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Friday, July 6, 2018
Lessons on Court Public Access
Margaret Hagan, Director of the Legal Design Lab at Stanford University, posted a terrific article that summarizes the results of their policy lab course this spring on “Community-Led System Design Practice”. The entire article is enlightening. I will highlight some findings I found particularly interesting below.
Friday, June 29, 2018
Court Component Model - A Modular Approach to Court Applications
You've likely already heard about the Court Component Model (CCM). If not, please take a look at this JTC Resource Bulletin. It provides a great introduction to the model.
The Court Component Model has garnered much attention in recent months from courts and solution providers alike. It provides a relatively simple way of looking at logical groupings of functional capabilities specific to a court business function. Each grouping of capabilities can be implemented as a component that operates independently of other components but integrates with them via well-defined, standards-based interfaces.
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
Thursday, June 21, 2018
This and That in Court Technology – June 2018
https://www.lawhelp.org/DC/ |
News about a national list of self-help court and public websites, lots of news about the upcoming E-Courts Conference, and tips for dealing with your email inbox.
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