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Lars Bauer

headshift > Projects > Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP - 0 views

  • Headshift designed a collaboration and knowledge-sharing application for the international law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP. We integrated social media tools such as blogs, wikis, social bookmarking and RSS feeds to improve the general flow of information within the organisation - letting employees collaborate better and share their insights more easily.
  • The main issue: Individual actions should benefit the community
  • What constitutes a social media platform?
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  • Group blogs facilitate discussion
  • Wikis organise information
  • RSS feeds constitutes the backbone
  • Consumption of information: personalising according to need
  • Aggregated bookmarks works as a recommendations engine
  • Personal and aggregated tagging make connections visible
  • Social network profiles adds a human touch and transparency
  • Better communication = A more profitable organisation
Lars Bauer

Electronic Resource Review - 0 views

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    News about new and existing electronic resources worth knowing about, blog by Nina Platt, owner and principal at Nina Platt Consulting, Inc.
Lars Bauer

Strategic Librarian - 0 views

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    Using strategy to develop the law firm library, blog by Nina Platt, owner and principal at Nina Platt Consulting, Inc.
Lars Bauer

Amazing Firms, Amazing Practices - 0 views

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    blog by Gerry Riskin
Lars Bauer

Andrew McAfee: Enterprise 2.0, version 2.0 - 0 views

  • I'm not satisfied with my earlier definition of Enterprise 2.0, so let's propose a refinement (I'm sorry if this feels a bit pedantic, but clear constructs are important to academics): Enterprise 2.0 is the use of emergent social software platforms within companies, or between companies and their partners or customers.
  • Social software enables people to rendezvous, connect or collaborate through computer-mediated communication and to form online communities. (Wikipedia's definition).
  • Platforms are digital environments in which contributions and interactions are globally visible and persistent over time.
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  • Emergent means that the software is freeform, and that it contains mechanisms to let the patterns and structure inherent in people's interactions become visible over time.
  • Freeform means that the software is most or all of the following: Optional Free of up-front workflow Egalitarian, or indifferent to formal organizational identities Accepting of many types of data
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    May 27, 2006
Lars Bauer

Web 2.0 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • The term "Web 2.0" describes the changing trends in the use of World Wide Web technology and web design that aim to enhance creativity, communications, secure information sharing, collaboration and functionality of the web. Web 2.0 concepts have led to the development and evolution of web culture communities and hosted services, such as social-networking sites, video sharing sites, wikis, blogs, and folksonomies.
Lars Bauer

The Law Firm Intranet - 0 views

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    Creating law firm intranets with vision, strategy, planning, and other big thinking, blog by Nina Platt, owner and principal at Nina Platt Consulting, Inc.
Lars Bauer

Lextek - Chicago Lawyer's Tek Talk - 0 views

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    "LexTek is the technology blog for the Chicago Lawyer magazine. You can find the Chicago Lawyer online at http://www.chicagolawyermagazine.com. The Chicago Lawyer is a publication of Law Bulletin Publishing Company. Paul Zelewsky is the Editor, New Media responsible for LexTekReport. David Glynn, Director of Research & Product Development at the Law Bulletin Publishing Company is responsible for its creation and adding bytes of information regarding legal technology with a focus on Chicago lawyers. Hilary Fosdal is the associate new media editor at the Law Bulletin Publishing Company."
Lars Bauer

Susskind predicts the end of lawyers (The New Lawyer, Apr 8, 2009) - 0 views

  • Susskind, the man who brought us 'The Future of Law', has kept his readers frothing at the mouth with the release of a new book 'The End of Lawyer? Rethinking the Nature of Legal Services'.
  • "What we're seeing courtesy of this dreadful economy is an acceleration of what many of us have anticipated in legal services. And that is the introduction of all manner of efficiencies, largely due to the impact of information technology."
  • And his take on social networking has appealed to his legal blogging elite. "I believe that some version of social networking will come to dominate the way professional services are delivered and will transform legal services," he said.
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  • much of the work that used to be distributed to law firms in a conventional way will be displaces by a community-based sharing of legal experience. This will be disruptive to the legal profession beyond our imagination."
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    Chicago lawyers have been rigorously twittering and blogging about the recent keynote address delivered by Richard Susskind, the legal technology consultant, adviser and author, at last week's American Bar Association Techshow. There will be an "unimaginable, explosive growth and development in the power of technology", Susskind said, warning of a renewed zeitgeist around social networking."
Lars Bauer

Nobody Puts Knowledge Management In The Corner | Ayelette Robinson, Guest Blogger on 3 ... - 0 views

  • Ayelette Robinson's comment to my post earlier this week on my disappointment with the direction Knowledge Management has taken in law firms. Ayelette took my challenge of calling me an ignorant **** and telling me why my argument doesn't hold water. There are others out there telling me I'm wrong – not as bluntly as Ayelette, of course – such as Mark Gould and Ken Adams.
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    Critical comment to Greg Lambert's post "You Can Call It Knowledge Management If That Makes You Feel Better About Yourself"
Lars Bauer

What's different about enterprise social software? (Socialtext Blog) - 0 views

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    Adina Levin, Feb 18, 2009
Lars Bauer

Strange Attractor » Blog Archive » Enterprise RSS must not die - 0 views

  • Yet I am also rather worried by the fact that Newsgator seems to be the only kid on the block these days. There are a number of different blogging platforms, with Wordpress and Movable Type being the main contenders.
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    Jan 14, 2009
Lars Bauer

SocialText Blog: Socialtext Wins Business Journal Award - 0 views

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    Dec 8, 2008
Lars Bauer

SocialText Blog: DMS and Collaboration Suite: Friends not Foes - 0 views

  • What's the relationship between a document management system (DMS) and an enterprise collaboration suite like Socialtext?
  • Would Socialtext replace the DMS? Would the two work together?
  • The first thing that companies should understand is that document management and collaboration are distinct activities.
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  • Document management is all about workflow, control, and risk mitigation. Its objective is summarized perfectly by the two words in its name: "documents" and "management". It got its start in the legal departments of pharmaceutical companies, who were concerned to make sure that their companies were producing documentation in full compliance with regulatory requirements. A DMS thrives where there are a) documents already being created as part of a business process; and b) those documents need to be closely checked in, checked out, supervised, edited, approved, and stored following a consistent and audit-proof process.
  • Collaboration, by contrast, is all about people working together to share ideas, notes, questions, comments, etc. Collaboration does not typically follow a standard process; it is much more free-form and free-flowing. Documents are not typically the format of choice. Asking a question or creating a meeting agenda or to-do list doesn't require a document; it just requires typing some words and putting them where other people can see and edit them. That's why so many people simply fire off an email when they collaborate; it spares them the unnecessary step of creating a document.
  • When asked about the relationship between DMS and collaboration tools, what I said was that some of the content in a typical DMS really belongs there. These are the documents associated with highly regulated processes. But most of the content in a typical DMS--to-do lists, meeting notes, press clippings, conversations, working papers, personal observations--doesn't really belong there. It's in the DMS because there was no good place to put it. That's where a collaboration suite can do a much better job. A good collaboration suite can liberate that content from the tyranny of documents and nested folders, and will encourage people to use it for actual working materials.
  • In many cases, you will want to integrate the two. Law firms, for example, are absolutely dependent on their document management systems to manage their filings and other legal documents. But we're increasingly seeing them set up collaboration suites to capture all the discussion around the documents, how to use them, what they mean, and so on. The two systems are integrated with links from the collaboration suite into the corresponding DMS records.
  • What I'm saying amounts to this: Use your document management system to manage documents, and use your collaboration suite to collaborate.
  • unfortunately SocialText is not very good at linking to the documents in the obvious place (attachments).
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    Sept. 8, 2008, by Michael Idinopulos of Socialtext
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