Articles

Nick visits two important new sites

A Page on the Web, published in the Solicitors Journal, March 1997. March has seen the launch of two significant new content-rich UK legal websites: significant because they have been put together with a lot of planning, effort and investment by lawyers and for lawyers and not simply by opportunistic Web entrepreneurs with an optimistic […]

Read More

A virtual conference companion

A Page on the Web, published in the Solicitors Journal, February 1997. As I am not a professional journo, the monthly muse sometimes takes a while to reach me. This has been one of those months, and I was in danger of irretrievably missing my deadline before the following wheeze struck me. The Society for […]

Read More

The Web is illegal – provisional

A Page on the Web, published in the Solicitors Journal, January 1997. The intervention of Christmas in the Solicitors’ Journal schedules denied a more timely comment on one of the most interesting Web law cases yet: The Shetland Times v Wills and Zetnews Ltd. The Shetland Times was successful in obtaining an interim interdict (injunction) […]

Read More

Law Publishing without Boundaries

First published [somewhere] , December 1996 When we think of law publishing we probably first think of Butterworths, Sweet & Maxwell and FT Law & Tax, Tolleys if we are tax practitioners, and perhaps other smaller names. Turning to new media we are not on very sure ground. We may know of Context, pioneers in […]

Read More

Why are we here?

First published in the Solicitors Journal, November 1996. Not so long ago the culture of the Internet was such that commercial advertising on the Net was frowned on, and those who transgressed were liable to incur the wrath of the Net establishment. However, it is as a marketing medium that the Web has shown the […]

Read More

The Queen’s printer

A First published in the Solicitors Journal, October 1996. End bytes in last month’s column noted the sale of HMSO’s business to the National Publishing Group. The sale completed on 30 September and the new business now trades as The Stationery Office Limited. As always, things are not quite that straightforward. The bulk of the […]

Read More

The future of law publishing

First published in the Solicitors Journal, September 1996. These days a month is a long time in publishing, and two months even more so. This summer (still referred to as ‘the silly season’ by those who are writing about those who have nothing better to write about) was no exception. Two notable events occurred while […]

Read More

Web page design

First published in the Solicitors Journal, July 1996. Time was when most Web sites looked pretty boring. It was exciting enough just being on the Web as a newbie using a basic Mosaic browser, and the lack of design evident in most Websites was… well …just the way it was. Then came the phenomenally successful […]

Read More

The state of law publishing

First published in the Solicitors Journal, June 1996. It may not have been spring fever, nor is it likely to be midsummer madness, but things are certainly hotting up on the UK legal internet. Several new firms are joining the Web each month; sites covering specific aspects of legal practice are popping up all over; […]

Read More

Suppliers on the web

First published in the Solicitors Journal, May 1996. In the run up to June’s Solicitors and Legal Office Exhibition, the event of the UK lawtech calendar, it is worth looking at how well the suppliers to the sgal profession are represented on the Web. In short the answer is … not very well. Lawtech suppliers […]

Read More

Anything legal?

First published in the Solicitors Journal, April 1996. Once the initial excitement and/or frustrations of being on the Web wear off, your view of what’s out there which is of use to you may well be either ‘It’s all a load of garbage; there’s nothing out there for me’ or (I hope) ‘There’s loads of […]

Read More

Electronic reproduction of Crown copyright material

First published in the Solicitors Journal, March 1996. On 9 February, Roger Freeman, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, made a policy statement in the form of a written answer in the House of Commons, on the future administration of Crown copyright. In this statement he confirmed that the government will extend to electronic formats […]

Read More

What does Corel’s purchase of Novell’s applications business mean for Web users?

First published in the Solicitors Journal, February 1996. News of the month in the desktop applications market has been the purchase at the end of January of Novell’s applications business by the Ottawa corporation Corel in a $180 million deal. Corel, best known for its market-.eading drawing package, Corel Draw, and the Ventura desktop publishing […]

Read More

Information overload

First published in the Solicitors Journal, January 1996. Net ‘surfing’ is no longer an appropriate analogy. Was it ever? If your view of surfing is effortlessly gliding down the face of a wave on one uninterrupted ride to the shore, then I bet you don’t do it on the Web. Not now. Maybe never before. […]

Read More

How to spend £100 this Christmas

First published in the Solicitors Journal, December 1995. Back in October Delia Venables and Charles Christian published their Guide to the Internet for Lawyers. This has attracted favourable reviews from Laurence Eastham in Computers and Law (somewhat guarded it has to be said) and Nigel Armitage in the Legal Times (unreserved), though understandably the ‘substantial […]

Read More