Today’s Tech: How A Law Professor Uses YouTube In His Classroom
This law professor is using technology in the classroom in a unique and innovative way.
This law professor is using technology in the classroom in a unique and innovative way.
If this doesn't end the argument in favor of cameras in the courtroom, then nothing will.
As federal borrowing caps tighten financing options for law students, one organization is stepping in to negotiate the terms they can't secure alone.
Columnist Ed Sohn of alt.legal interviews Suzanne Natbony, co-founder and CEO of LawTake.
Although they didn't make the finals, these videos were worth watching.
Who are the finalists for this year's Law Revue Video Contest? Check them out -- and cast your vote!
It's the moment you've all been waiting for: we're now accepting submissions for ATL's sixth annual Law Revue Video Contest!
Legal and operational leaders are gathering May 6–7 in Fort Lauderdale to confront the questions the industry hasn't answered—with a keynote from Amanda Knox setting the tone.
* Professor Ann Althouse’s analysis of today’s Hobby Lobby and Conestoga Wood arguments before SCOTUS. [Althouse] * Professor Nelson Tebbe’s take on the proceedings. [Balkinization] * Finally, a very Jezebel assessment: “Supreme Court Prepares to F**k Up This Birth Control Thing.” [Jezebel] * “JUDGE TO PORN TROLLS: IP Addresses Aren’t People.” [Instapundit] * YouTube videos and text messages surface in the Oscar Pistorius murder trial. [IT-Lex] * “Her” was an excellent movie — and it might contain lessons for lawyers and the legal profession, as John Hellerman argues. [Hellerman Baretz]
The sign of a truly great artist is not the work of art itself, it's inspiring others... to make their own parodies.
* Elizabeth Wurtzel: “I am a lawyer. The first rule of law: All the promises will be broken. Attorneys could not be in business if people did not fail to do what they agreed to do all the time — and lawyers are very busy.” [Nerve.com] * Laura Ingraham clerked for SCOTUS, so presumably she knows that Puerto Ricans are American citizens. [Media Matters] * Chief Judge Alex Kozinski, known for zero tolerance of prosecutorial misconduct, has written the foreword to a new book on the subject. [Facebook] * In addition to the one we mentioned yesterday, here’s another petition for the Obama Administration that’s aimed at addressing the student debt crisis. [WhiteHouse.gov] * Thomson Reuters Concourse keeps getting bigger and better. [Thomson Reuters] * Appellate law? In California? What’s not to like? Check out these job openings in the California SG’s office. [California Department of Justice; California Department of Justice] * Want to know the backstory behind the awesome Jamie Casino Super Bowl ad? Keep reading…. Georgia personal injury lawyer Jamie Casino spoke with Mike Sacks of HuffPost Live about the lawyer ad heard around the world. What kind of reactions has Casino been getting to the ad? Is the kid in the video really his son? And does Jamie Casino harbor any Hollywood ambitions? Watch the video to find out.
How is technology shaping the world in which we live, affecting legal and illegal activities alike? Some thoughts from Jason Thomas of Thomson Reuters.
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Did you see this lawyer awesomeness during the Super Bowl?
You think it's just another lawyer commercial. And then something awkward and stunning happens.
Remember this guy? What's he up to now that he's out of law school?
When lawyers make intentionally goofy ads, everyone wins!
What were the 10 biggest stories about the legal profession in 2013, according to readers of Above the Law?