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Fourteen
make it into Law Society Guide
A total of 14 legal accounts and practice management systems suppliers
made it into the 2004 edition of the English Law Society's annual Software
Solutions Guide, which was formally launched at last week's Legal IT exhibition
in London. The initial response has been positive. Some firms are saying
it is the best edition to-date, while further afield the Law Society of
Scotland is planning a similar initiative for its members and the Kuala
Lumpur Bar has launched its own guide for Malaysian lawyers.
The guide, which will be mailed out free of charge to all solicitors'
practices in England & Wales over the next week, retains broadly the
same format as last year's edition, including a useful - and frequently
revealing - customer satisfaction feedback panel based on market research
among current users of each supplier's software. To ease navigation through
the guide, one innovation this year has been a simplification of the 'banding'
to make it clearer for users to see which suppliers have systems suitable
for their size of firm.
The fourteen suppliers in this year's guide, in alphabetical order, are:
AIM Professional, Axxia Systems, DPS Software, Eclipse Legal Systems,
Edgebyte Computers, JCS Computing Solutions, Laserform International,
Mountain Software, MSS, Opsis, Pericom, Quill Computer Systems, Solicitors
Own Software (SOS) and TFB. The market research gave Quill's PinPoint
bureau service the highest overall customer satisfaction rating. Among
the software suppliers, the five most highly rated were Edgebyte, SOS,
JCS, Pericom and Opsis.
The only changes to the supplier listing in 2004 are: the return of TFB,
after a two year gap taken voluntarily to complete the acquisition of
two other suppliers, and the departure of Gavel & Gown and Videss,
who both cited changes in marketing strategy as their reason for not reapplying
for inclusion in the guide. Mountain is now the only supplier to have
had a full listing in every edition of the guide since its launch in 1999.
The guide can also be downloaded from www.it.lawsociety.org.uk
Legal
IT - the show was buzzing
After the disappointing events we witnessed in 2003, last week's Legal
IT Exhibition in London clearly demonstrated that there is still life
in the trade show format, with exhibitors as diverse as Thomson Elite
and Gavel & Gown expressing satisfaction with the quality and numbers
of people seen. One supplier went so far as to say it was the best show
he had attended for years. The organisers' decision to introduce a series
of product shoot-outs also proved popular and will be back next year -
Legal IT 2005 is set to take place on 9 & 10 February 2005.
This year's visitor numbers (2261) were down by about 300 on 2003 but
then again last year's show did attract a lot of the 'we're only here
for the CPD points' brigade. Or as one vendor put it "last year there
were too many people wandering around with nothing on their mind".
True, there were some Groundhog Day moments, with some suppliers still
showing the same old products on the same old stands however we leave
the final verdict to Osman Ismail of DPS Software: "Our visitor traffic
was up 20% on last year. This show was buzzing whereas others were dying."
Move
on and double your money
Recruitment consultants Graham Gill (020 7430 1711) have published their
Winter 2003/2004 survey of salaries for legal IT staff within the UK's
top 100 firms - and the results reveal some surprisingly big variations
in a pay rates. For example, 2nd line support staff can earn from as little
as £22k, to as much as £50k a year, while rates for database
administrators range from £30k to £60k - figures suggesting
that if you shop around, you can easily double your money just by moving
from one firm to another. Helpdesk analysts are the most poorly paid -
as little as £16k at some firms - while salaries for heads of IT/IT
directors range from £43k to £165k. It is also interesting
to note that in many areas, top 10 firms do not pay the highest salaries.
Copies of the report are available free of charge from Graham Gill.
Coxall
returns to DDS market with e-Dict service
Mike Coxall, for many years the face of digital dictation at Berrys of
Holborn, has returned to the DDS market as sales & marketing director
of a new company, called e-Dict Transcription Services (0870 744 6206),
that is now offering a range of digital dictation products and services
to law firms and others. Paul Lockyer, also previously with Berrys, has
joined e-Dict as technical director.
Although e-Dict can supply WinScribe DDS software for firms to run inhouse,
Coxall says the company’s main focus is on providing solutions.
These include support for mobile and telephone based dictation and the
provision of a global network of transcriptionists, who can handle work
on a 24/7 basis. e-Dict can work with most DDS file formats, as well as
WinScribe, and offer a variety of service delivery options, including
hosting a firm’s digital dictation facilities on an ASP basis and
renting facilities by secretary or author. The company is currently offering
a 28 day free trial of its services at www.e-dict.co.uk
Four
new challengers vie for the Bar IT crown
Despite the market for chambers administration and barristers' fee notes
systems having always been tiny, there has never been a shortage of contenders
hoping to win some of this business. Although Meridian Law managed to
do this spectacularly well, so much so that in 2002 they bought out the
one time market leader ACE, other challengers, such as Wildings and Pimcroft,
soon faded from the scene or were taken over by competitors.
Undaunted by these risks, the competition is currently once more hotting
up, this time with four new entrants - Libra, Chamber Pot, Matrix Legal
and, what looks like the strongest contender, InQuisita Law from Leicester-based
e-business specialist Formation Software (www.formsoft.com),
all hoping to take on Meridian. However Steve Kendrick, a director of
Mountain Software (the parent company of Meridian Law) said he welcomed
the competition "as it would keep us on our toes and provide an added
incentive to ensure we continue to provide the Bar with the best systems
and services".
IT
director goes in restructuring
As a result of a recent restructuring exercise, Morgan Cole has combined
its IT, e-business and knowledge management teams under one manager. The
new combined team is called Information & Technology and Jeff Wright,
a solicitor and previously head of e-business, has been appointed Information
& Technology Director. Richard Martin, the firm's erstwhile IT director,
has stepped down with immediate effect.
Thinking
of moving? Then you'd better call your IT supplier
With more and more firms moving to new offices as they merge and expand,
IT services company Ramesys (0800 052 4224) has developed a new 'Office
Moves' managed service that looks after all aspects of dismantling, packaging,
moving, reinstalling and reconfiguring IT systems and their related infrastructure.
Ed Hodgson of Ramesys says that as well as handling the logistics and
project management of moving, the company can also offer temporary equipment
installation, to ensure continued uptime between sites, and compliance
with manufacturers' contractual small print to ensure that any equipment
warranties are not inadvertently voided. One of Ramesys' most recent Office
Moves projects was for Watson Burton in Newcastle.
InterAlia
enhanced to include Meticulist DMS support
Integrated Office Solutions (020 8249 6530), who began life in 1997 as
developers of macros and VBA scripts for law firm wordprocessing departments,
have recently enhanced their InterAlia for Lawyers document creation and
file management application. It now includes support for the Meticulist
document management system, integration with client/matter and departmental
address books, and a ‘compliance folder’ that can hold scanned
copies of passports and other client identification materials stored for
the purposes of compliance with the latest anti-money laundering regulations.
Although InterAlia is currently being implemented in a 500 user firm in
the west of England, the system is highly scaleable, with a 3 user firm
the smallest IOS installation.
www.iosl.co.uk
MindServer
aiming for 3rd generation KM slot
One of the more interesting debuts at this month's LegalTech New York
event was the global launch of the MindServer Legal knowledge management
system from Recommind Inc. In terms of positioning the product, if you
take the view that the 1st generation of KM systems were the 'big software'
search engines, then the 2nd generation approach was to focus on 'grey
matter' by using people to create the taxonomies and organise the KM information.
On this basis, MindServer is a 3rd generation KM system in that it can
index and categorise information and metadata - without the assistance
of a team of support staff - and allows lawyers to conduct their own 'smart'
searches based on contextual rather than keyword searches.
US firms to have already ordered MindServer include Wilson Sonsini and
Cleary Gottlieb - the latter will roll it out to over 800 lawyers across
10 offices in nine countries. To support the system outside North America,
Recommind has already opened a European office.
www.recommind.com
Interest
reviving speech recognition technology
It may not be the greatest comeback we have seen but after several years
of being overshadowed by digital dictation, there seems to be a revival
of interest in speech recognition among lawyers. Henry Gallagher of G2
Speech (020 8989 7330) says G2’s own experiences suggest that 20%
of fee earners currently using digital dictation would actually prefer
to have a full blown speech recognition capability. However Gallagher
believes speech recognition still suffers from people's experiences in
the early 1990s "when the technology was poor but over-hyped, whereas
today the technology is good but poorly promoted".
G2's own LegalSpeech system learns to recognise a user's voice patterns
in the background from digital dictation files and can then be switched
over to speech recognition when required.
In a related development, Civica (01709 786786) has recently integrated
speech recognition with its Galaxy Legal case management software at Denison
Till in York, where fee earners are using it as a way to produce non-standard
documentation.
TFB
goes downunder
Following in the footsteps of Solicitec and Axxia, Technology for Business
has become the latest UK legal IT vendor to focus on the Asia Pacific
law firms market. TFB has formed a subsidiary company in New Zealand that
will initially target the North and South Islands, from is Auckland offices.
The operation is headed by Nicole Birsdall, a New Zealander who until
recently worked for TFB in its Leeds office. Commenting on the move, Birdsall
said "Our product required only minimal modification to meet New
Zealand Law Society regulations and those who have seen it have been impressed
by the fact that it incorporates accounts and case management within a
single system."
www.tfbnz.co.nz
Visualfiles
on track for another record year
Visualfiles, the parent company of case management systems market leader
Solicitec, is reporting a 19% increase in turnover to £4.17 million
(£3.5m - 2002) for the half year to 31 December 2003. The same period
also saw Solicitec Scotland double its turnover to £667k and make
a £145k net profit.
Visualfiles' management accountant Steven Dobson says this growth has
enabled the company to fund substantial investment in both R&D and
new business ventures, including Visualfiles Australia, ASP services and
the Synapse e-conveyancing portal. With January 2004 alone seeing over
£1.5m in new orders - including £300k for ASP services - Dobson
predicts that Visualfiles "can confidently look forward to another
year of 20% plus growth, with our turnover target of £9.5m well
within reach." Visualfiles say the strongest area of growth "is
the core Solicitec business as more firms invest in process based technology".
BCCI
trial latest to put IT into courts
Courtroom 73, at the Royal Courts of Justice in London, may be better
known as the home of last summer's Hutton Inquiry but it is currently
earning another place in the legal history books as the venue for the
first high tech civil trial to take place in the Commercial Court. The
case is being brought by the liquidators of BCCI against the Bank of England
and with 150 lever arch files of evidence (about 250,000 pages) to manage,
Lovells - the solicitors for the claimants - were keen from the outset
to use court presentation technology during the trial.
The Bank of England opposed this move but in a pre-trial hearing last
July, Mr Justice Tomlinson allowed the use of IT, ruling that it would
be wrong "to deny to a party the opportunity to use modern information
technology if that party asserts that (the technology) will enable its
case to be presented in a more effective manner, and moreover, if it is
suggested that the use of IT will lead to a significant saving in time
and, therefore, cost in what is bound to be a very expensive action."
One immediate consequence of this ruling was that the contents of the
150 lever arch files were scanned and distilled onto just 5 CD-Roms.
The court presentation system being deployed in the BCCI trial uses the
same technology installed by the Court Service for Hutton, combining access
(via 18 monitors plus 4 larger screens for the public) to the documents
stored on CD with real time transcription, via LiveNote, of the testimony
given by the witnesses during the course of the proceedings.
In terms of cost justifying the exercise, although the system costs approximately
£500 a day to run, it has been estimated that in speeding up search
procedures and access to documents, it will save up to half-an-hour in
time each day. This may not sound very much until you realise there are
20 lawyers in court and that the trial is expected run for at least a
year.
Expenses
- saving money by improving processing
The normal approach to managing expenses may be to cut back on the size
of claims partners and other staff submit but CMS Cameron McKenna has
taken a different tack by introducing automation to improve the way claims
are processed.
Research suggests the average paper based expenses claim takes 14 days
to process, from submission to reimbursement, compared with three days
with an automated system. Even more frightening is the statistic that
the average manual expenses report takes 35 minutes to complete, compared
with 18 minutes with automation. Spurred on by this Cameron McKenna has
recently deployed Concur Expense, a browser-based expense management system
from Concur Technologies (01494 582025).
As the firm’s financial controller Nick Lakhani points out: "If
we have 600 lawyers each taking 30 minutes to file an expense report,
when they could be spending some of that time on billable client work,
this translates to a serious loss of revenue."
Along with speeding up and improving the accuracy (by automatically linking
nominal ledger codes to expenses) of expense claim processing, McKennas
are also finding that the data Concur generates makes it easier to analyse
expenditure and identify where savings could be made by negotiating better
rates with frequently used hotels and airlines.
www.concur.com
Time
for the Swiss Army phone
The
Blackberry may have been making all the running in mobile communications
in recent months but there are competitors out there, including a growing
number of 'smart phones'. Among the latest is the Sony Ericsson P900 phone,
which has been described as the 'Swiss Army Knife of mobile devices' because
there so many things you can do with it.
These include running the OpenHand system as a way to access email messages,
contacts and task lists. It uses GPRS wireless communications but unlike
the Blackberry, OpenHand is not restricted to one device but will also
run on PDA platforms such as Pocket PC and Palm. More importantly, it
works in a thin client mode, so all information resides on a central server
and is only pulled down to the PDA or phone as and when required. The
net result is an ultra-secure system, for not only are communications
protected by 128 bit encryption but in a worst case scenario, even if
you lose the device, it contains no data that can fall into the wrong
hands.
www.openhand-mobile.com
PKI
not cheap - but not that expensive
Following our piece in the last Insider about the Scottish Law Society's
Lawseal PKI project, the Society'’s director of IT Gordon Brewster
has been in touch to say that although PKI based encryption is not cheap,
particularly for firms administering their own schemes, it is not that
expensive.
According to Brewster, the experience of those firms involved with the
Society's now abandoned PKI project was that far from an annual cost of
around £600 per user "it was anticipated that Lawseal certificates
would cost no more than £100 per user annually" - and that
if the service had become more widely used, costs would have fallen. Brewster
adds that "Whilst Lawseal would demand some administrative time,"
- he suggests about the same time as setting up a new email contact -
"the product was designed to be compatible with standard desktop
email applications, both to be effective and to minimise administration."
Bailiffs
get online court link
County Durham Magistrates' Courts Committee has become one of only a handful
of JP courts groups in the UK to have an online link to its bailiffs service.
The new system - which provides an encrypted link across a virtual private
network - means that when a bailiff calls on a defendant to collect fine
arrears, their handheld computer displays the latest information on the
debt taken directly from the records held centrally in the courts office.
The Durham courts' IT manager Ian Heslop said that before the system was
introduced "a lot of time was wasted because bailiffs had to call
back to the office to get an update, whereas now they have access to the
information 24 hours a day". The courts group expects the new system
to generate a 5% overall increase in the monies being recouped. The IT
side of the Durham project was handled by e-business and networking specialists
Knowledge IT (0191 417 0099).
www.knowledgeit.co.uk
Bailiffs
get online court link
As part of a major IT infrastructure overhaul, Manches is to deploy the
Workshare 3 document productivity system on a practice wide basis. According
to the firm's IT director Derek Brookes, Workshare 3 will help staff manage
"large volumes of document amendments from multiple authors, in multiple
Microsoft Word formats, via email". Brookes says in an average week
Manches edits and reviews 10,000 documents, as well as creates another
5000 from scratch. Some of these documents can contain between 600 and
800 pages and may be worked on by as many as 20 people, both internally
and from outside the firm.
Along with managing
the collaborative side of document creation and amendment, Workshare 3
can prevent documents from crashing during the review cycle, due to the
different file formats in use, and will also protect against the inadvertent
disclosure of any sensitive information hidden as metadata. Workshare
(020 7426 0000) say they will be integrating their software with other
systems being rolled out at Manches, including the Interwoven DMS and
Microsoft Office 2003.
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News
in brief
Visualfiles
to supply Valid records
Visualfiles (Solicitec's parent company) and Valid Information Systems
(now part of the Hummingbird group) have formed a strategic alliance that
will see the companies collaborating on projects where there is the need
for a combined case and EDRMS (document & records) management solution.
Visualfiles and Valid are already working together on the Treasury Solicitors
PRACAMS case management project - the Valid R/KYV system is one of the
few EDRMS products to have National Archives (formerly the Public Records
Office) approval - and the two companies are now planning some joint marketing
initiatives in the government computing sector.
Legal
software resellers wanted
The UK authors of a new software package for law firms are looking for
re-sellers in England and Wales. The package, which is already being used
by a number of smaller firms, features accounting, time recording, billing,
marketing, document and case management. The company is looking for re-sellers
working on a commission only basis, with additional revenue coming from
installation and training. Requests for further information should be
emailed to info@cloudnine.co.uk
SOS
swap out Opsis
Hatcher Rogerson in Shropshire has ordered a new case and practice management
system from Solicitors Own Software (01225 787700). The system will be
rolled out across the firm’s three offices and replace its current
Opsis software.
New
wins for TFB's P4W
Technology for Business (01489 609000) has announced six new orders for
its Partner for Windows (P4W) integrated case and practice management
software. The sites - all previously using non-TFB systems - are Rees
Wood Terry in Cardiff, Mustoe Shorter in Dorset, Adams & Remers in
East Sussex, Davey Son & Jones in Gloucestershire, Armstrong Foulkes
in Middlesborough and Cadmans in Yorkshire.
Rendezvous
with Wragge & Co
Wragge & Co has installed the Rendezvous meeting room bookings system
from NFS Hospitality (01920 485725) at its London and Birmingham offices.
Staff can make a request for a room via the firm's intranet and reception
desk staff then use the system to handle all aspects of booking any one
of the firm's 42 meeting rooms, from location and timings through to catering
and even flowers. Wragge's reception manager Caroline Kennedy says that
along with moving them out of the 'pencil and eraser' era, the installation
of Rendezvous has resulted in a "dramatic cut" in the number
of phone calls her staff need to make in connection with room bookings.
www.nfs-hospitality.com
QNIX
gives way to Galaxy
Civica (01709 786786) has announced four more upgrades from its legacy
Qnix system to its newer Galaxy Legal product. Fanshaw Porter, a large
criminal practice in Liverpool, is implementing a 40 user system that
includes a new criminal billing module. Gadsby Wicks in Chelmsford, which
has a specialist medical negligence practice, is also migrating to Galaxy,
as is Guy Williams Layton in Liverpool, and Redditch Borough Council,
which will be running Civica’s local authority applications to assist
its legal department in processing conveyancing, possession and debt recovery
matters.
Adeo
wins taxing order
The London office of Adeo Legal Technology (020 7744 7884) has been awarded
a contract to supply the Inland Revenue Solicitors Office with a new litigation
support system to support the department's prosecution work. Adeo will
be supplying a solution based around the Summation iBlaze software, which
has been widely used in the United States in a number of high profile
cases, including the Microsoft antitrust action.
www.adeolegaltech.com
Making
web sites more visible
Southampton web site developer WorksUnit (023 8023 6323) is final beta
testing two new applications designed to help partially sighted users
view web browser pages. The 'Bobby test' approved WorksView system is
a client-side application, while WorksEye is a server based product. Both
allow users to magnify both the text and graphics elements on a web site.
Free demo versions are available on the web.
www.worksunit.com
Clarks
move to upgrade to TFB
Reading-based Clarks is spending £100k on replacing its old Avenue
software with TFB's Partner for Windows integrated case and practice management
system. The 70 lawyer practice, which is a part of the international TAGlaw
law firms network, will also be installing an online case tracking facility
for its clients and TFB's PartnerAlert messaging system, with SMS texting,
to keep partners and managers in touch with key events and business information
as and when they occur.legal
services team.
JP
court goes paperless
Southampton City Council has expanded its Civica (01709 786786) Galaxy
case management system with the addition of a magistrate’s court
module. Since upgrading to Galaxy for its debt recovery work, Southampton
has seen a 50% increase in collection rates and now processes the majority
of the authority's debts through the system on an entirely paperless basis.
Laserforms
next generation
Laserform (01925 750020) has begun introducing its next generation of
electronic forms software. Known as LForms, their new features include:
'intelligent expansion' so boxes and columns will automatically expand
where extra information needs to be included in a field, full calculating
capabilities, closer integration with Microsoft products, and the ability
to convert and email forms in a PDF file format. A free demo version of
the new forms software is available on CD-Rom.
www.laserform.co.uk
Linklaters
to save £1 million
As a result of implementing an IT asset management programme, which included
an audit of over 4000 laptops, desktop PCs and servers and the software
they were running, Linklaters estimates it will save £200,000 a
year, for the next five years, on software licensing by eliminating duplications.
The project was handled by FAST Consultancy Services (01628 760359), an
offshoot of the Federation Against Software Theft.
TSO
to handle LSC manuals
The Stationery Office has won the contract from the Legal Services Commission
to publish its official manuals and updates for the CLS and CDS schemes
in loose-leaf print, CD-Rom and online formats.
ResSoft
win CRM deal at Mills & Reeve
ResSoft (020 7421 4140) has won the contract to implement the Interaction
CRM at Mills & Reeve in East Anglia. Although Mills & Reeve use
ResSoft’s FirmWare practice management software, ResSoft say they
faced "stiff competition" for this deal.
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The Insider web site
For the latest legal IT news, jobs, events and information, visit the
Insider web site, described by The Times newspaper as "the definitive
online resource for legal technology news".
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People
& places
Pisces
appoints First D-G
PISCES, the commercial property information EDI standards organisation,
has appointed its first director-general - Roger de Boehmler - to “mark
a new era in the evolution of PISCES and help steer it towards becoming
a global standard for real estate transactions”. De Boehmler is
a chartered surveyor and founding director of GVA Software.
Brooke to take on White Book
Sweet & Maxwell has announced the appointment of Lord Justice Brooke,
the Vice President of the Court of Appeal and a long time champion of
the use of IT in the courts, as the new general editor of The White Book
guide to civil procedure. The 2004 edition of The White Book - the 150th
edition - will be published this April.
Battersby now at Law School
Karen Battersby, previously the head of commercial know-how at Eversheds,
is now the course director for Nottingham Law School’s postgraduate
diploma in knowledge management for legal practice.
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International
news
Dictate
via your Smartphone
DictaNet, the German digital dictation software developer, has launched
DictaNet Mobile, a new application that will convert any mobile phone
loaded with Microsoft's Smartphone system into a fully fledged dictation
device. Motorola is now shipping a freeware version of the software with
its new MPx 200 phone, with the central navigation button replicating
the functions of a slide switch on a conventional dictation device and
the phone's screen displaying all the relevant data. Up to four hours
of dictation can be stored on one memory card and then sent for transcription
via email, a USB link or a memory card reader.
www.dictanet.com
Norwegians select portal
Selmer Advokatfirma, one of the largest law firms in Norway, has selected
Hummingbird to deliver a new matter-centric intranet. The solution is
based around the firm's existing document management system, which is
being extended to include Hummingbird's portal, KM and collaboration suites.
The new system is being implemented by Norwegian systems house SaveIT
AS and will also allow clients and lawyers to work together in virtual
dealrooms, as well as access matter documents, emails, tasks, calendaring,
contact and billing information from either a client or matter view.
www.saveit.no
Cut price PDF in Australia
Avalanche Media in Melbourne has been appointed the new Australian distributor
for the pdf Factory range of products. These offer an inexpensive alternative
to Adobe Acrobat for anyone wanting to create PDF files. Avalanche director
Peter Cameron says the pricing (from A$75) is low enough to put PDF writing
software on every workstation. Trial versions of pdf Factory are available
for download at www.avalanche.com.au
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Digital
dictation news in brief
Turn
your PDA into a digital recorder
Digital
dictation software house Aprobrium (0870 777 3336) has launched version
2.0 of its Lexacom Mobile system. This will allow anyone with Pocket PC
PDA to use the device as a digital dictation recorder, with files either
emailed directly for transcription or stored on the PDA until next synchronised
with its parent network. Because the new system uses a standard WAV file
format, it is compatible with Lexacom's own Talk & Type DDS and can
also export work to other DDS systems for transcription. A free 28 day
trial version of Lexacom Mobile can be downloaded from www.lexacom.co.uk
Pinsents in 800 user BigHand roll out
Pinsents is to roll out the BigHand (020 7793 8200) TotalSpeech
DDS to 800 staff in six offices over the next three months. The order
follows a pilot which satisfied Pinsents that BigHand could provide the
smoothest transition from analogue to digital, so lawyers would not need
to change the way they dictated.
Winscribe exporter makes DDS open
WinScribe Europe (0118 984 2133) has added an Exporter facility
to its WinScribe digital dictation software. This will allow jobs recorded
in WinScribe to be emailed or FTP-ed as standard WAV files for transcription
on other DDS systems. WinScribe sales manager Ken Nolan says that when
combined with the Importer facility, which was introduced last year, the
combination makes WinScribe "a fully open system" that is compatible
with older digital dictation platforms.
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Legal
IT exhibition review
Since
the end of last year, it has been evident that law firms are once more
allocating serious budgets to IT and are in the market looking for new
systems. Which is a pity because last week's Legal IT Exhibition in London
was not a vintage year in terms of product launches. For example, although
there were a few suppliers showing Microsoft .NET modules, including Videss,
DPS and Solution 6, there was only one complete, integrated .NET case
and practice management system: Osprey.TM from Pracctice. Other new products
that did catch our eye included:
High on a hill stood a Lonelypixel
Glasgow based case management developer Lonelypixel (0870 241
8830) made its debut demonstrating its expertise in volume processing
systems. Earlier this month Lonelypixel's flagship site Golds, in Glasgow,
won the innovation & technology award at the Scottish Legal Awards
for its use of IT to support its bulk transaction business. Lonelypixel
director Alex Ogilvie says the company's market is law firms "who
hunger for growth" and are serious about automation and the use of
technologies such as integrated voice response (IVR).
www.lonelypixel.com
Virtual dealrooms become affordable
Back in 2000, when the first virtual dealrooms appeared, these
systems were notorious for the huge development costs incurred by the
firms that were running them. Or as one magic circle KM director gnomically
put it "we have not spent £6 million but it is measured in
millions". How times have changed as last week Enjudica Online (0117
962 6119) were showing their new hosted virtual dealroom system that has
an entry level price of under £10,000. It is due to be rolled out
by a Birmingham firm later this spring and uses PDF as its file format
for templates and RFT for editable documents. Enjudica has also launched
an online document assembly system. This costs from £4225 and is
due to go live as part of the new www.geniuscontract.com
service within the next few weeks.
www.enjudica.co.uk
Amicus Attorney generation X
Gavel & Gown (01780 480764) used Legal IT as a venue to launch
the latest version of the popular Amicus Attorney contact, case, communications
and just about everything else management system. The new version - Amicus
Attorney X - contains a mass of enhancements (including support for the
Blackberry, it will now run in a browser and can be opened up to clients
through an extranet link) but the most significant development is support
for Microsoft SQL Server, which should help make Amicus more attractive
to larger firms.
www.amicusattorney.co.uk
Digital dictation the star of the show
Compared with a few years ago, when the only people actively promoting
digital dictation technology at legal trade shows were BigHand and SRC,
last week's Legal IT Exhibition had a total of 15 suppliers demonstrating
dictation products and related services. Although these included many
now familiar digital dictation specialists, as well as the hardware suppliers
Dictaphone, Grundig and Philips - there were also two new launches from
established legal software vendors.
DPS Software (020 8804 1022) was showing its new TeamTalk digital dictation
system. This is based around .NET, offers some very smooth integration
with the DPS case management application and is currently being piloted
in two firms, including a 160 use practice that is scheduled to roll it
out next month.
The other new face in DDS was OfficeDictate from Peapod Solutions (0870
380 1122). This is based on the Australian PSL product and claimed to
be "the cheapest and simplest digital dictation system on the market
today" with prices starting at £185 for software and hardware.
PSL is also already in use in a number of, primarily small, firms.
Finally, cost recovery system specialists Copitrak deserve a special mention
for being the only exhibitor to do anything novel with their stand. In
a sea of dull grey boxes offering the same mundane freebies or champagne
prize draws, Copitrak’s “I’m a celebrity, get me out
of here” themed-stand, complete with a bush-tucker trial, really
stood out from the crowd.
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Legal Technology events diary
Summit
2004
22 - 25.02.04, Florida
Summit 2004 - the Hummingbird worldwide user conference at the Westin
Diplomat Resort & Spa at Hollywood in Florida. Complete conference
and registration is available at http://events.hummingbird.com/summit/hollywood.html
Digital
dictation & Workflow management seminar
25.02.04, London
S&G Training are holding free briefings on Digital Dictation, Document
Assembly & Management Software, Document Production Outsourcing Technology
with two sessions (12:30pm to 2:30pm & 3:00pm to 5:00pm) qualifying
for 2 hours CPD at their offices in Hatton Garden, London EC1. WinScribe
Digital Dictation, Legal Docs Assembly Management software and outsourced
document production will be demonstrated including free trials of software
available for all attendees. For more details contact Hayley Smith, S&G
Training (01322 661141) or visit www.sandgtraining.co.uk
LITF
Club
26.02.04, London
Informa launches the LITF (Legal IT Forum) Club to extend the networking
opportunities offered by the Gleneagles event throughout the year. The
inaugural meeting takes place at The Magic Circle's HQ - yes, the magicians'
organisation - near Euston Station. The event kicks off at 6:00pm and
admission is free to law firm IT professionals. For more details email
simon.dieppe@informa.com
or visit www.legalitforum.com
Making BPM work
27.02.04, London
Metastorm partner ResSoft is holding a business process management workshop
at its London offices (9:00 am - 11:00am) on the subject of making BPM
work. The session will also provide an opportunity to see Metastorm e-Work
in action. For details call 020 7421 4140 or visit www.ressoft.co.uk
Lex Connect 2004
01 & 02.03.04, Amsterdam
Lex Connect 2004 at the Amsterdam Hilton. Following
the success of LEX Connect 2003, the Ark Group is holding its the second
invitation-only strategy and solutions event for Managing Partners and
IT Directors from Europe's leading law firms. For details email Caroline
Searle via csearle@ark-group.com
or visit www.lexconnect.com
Momentum
2004
9 - 11.03.04, Las Vegas
Momentum 2004 - the Solution 6 annual user conference
at the Venetian in Las Vegas. For more details visit www.momentum.solution6.com
Professional digital dictation
12.03.05, Leeds
Specialist speech recognition and digital dictation company VoicePower
is holding a free seminar, including presentations on the latest Olympus
digital recorders at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, Wellington Street, Leeds.
There will be another seminar at VoicePower's head office near Otley on
Friday 16 March, For details, including timing, contact Sonja de Wit Brown
on 01943468 000 or visit www.voicepower.co.uk
Knowledge
management for the legal profession
24 & 25.03.04, London
The Ark Group's 5th annual KM conference at the Chesterfield Mayfair Hotel.
The programme, which will qualify for 18 CPD points, includes speakers
from Bevan Ashford, Osborne Clarke, Charles Russell, Olswang, Nottingham
La School, Wragge & Co plus the Continental European firms Vinge,
Loyens & Loeff and NautaDutilh. The event and is followed on Friday
26th by a one day seminar on the role of professional support lawyers.
The fee is from £1095 + VAT.
www.ark-group.com
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