About David Whelan

David Whelan is a lawyer and librarian who has spent his career dealing with technology and information. Since receiving his J.D. at the University of Arkansas-Little Rock and his library degree at the University of North Texas, David has worked in a variety of law-related organizations, assisting current and aspiring lawyers with their information needs. As director of the American Bar Association’s Legal Technology Resource Center, David worked with law firms and librarians, as well as consulting with organizations providing technology and information services to the legal profession. He was director at the Cincinnati Law Library Association, a membership library in Ohio, before assuming his current role as Manager of Legal Information at The Law Society of Upper Canada. He oversees The Law Society’s Great Library, Corporate Records and Archives, and supports Ontario’s county law library system. David is a frequent speaker at law and information conferences, including the ABA Techshow and annual meetings for national library associations like SLA and AALL. He has published more than 40 articles in publications like Law Technology News, AALL Spectrum, Law Office Computing, ABA Law Practice magazine, and Law Firm Inc. David has been on the adjunct faculty at the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library and Information Science, teaching Web development, legal research and networked information systems, the University of Northern Kentucky, teaching legal research, and the University of North Texas School of Library and Information Science, teaching Web design.

Toggle Google’s Personal Search Plus Your World

Posted in Google, Search | Tagged ,

Researchers should be concerned that their prior research is filtering out relevant information from their future research.  Google’s recent announcement about Search plus Your World is the next step in their personalized search. You can tweak your search – using the pws=0& text inserted in the search results URL – to turn off personalization.

If you have a Google account, you can also toggle personalization on and off with the new search results.  Compare the two pictures below.  The one on the left is personalized, the one on the right isn’t.  The results are slightly different, although it is mostly a matter of ranking.  On the right hand side, at the top of the search results, are two grey icons.  Click the globe to turn personalization OFF; click the body to turn it ON.

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Under Chrome’s Hood: Grouping Your Chrome Extensions

Posted in Add-on, Google Chrome | Tagged ,

Modern Web browsers are powerful tools but they all can be improved and enhanced with add-ons or extensions.  These small software applications live inside the Web browser to provide extra features that the browser itself may be missing.  One issue with adding many extensions to your browser is that it can slow down your browser’s operation.  Another is that they become unwieldy to keep track of what is running and what is disabled.  Ghacks has an interesting post on the Context extension for Google Chrome.  It enables you to create groups of extensions so that you can turn on and off a grouping all at once.  This can be useful if you have a number of extensions for one purpose – say multimedia extensions that manage sound and video files – and you are doing some other sort of research.  Turn off extensions you aren’t using to speed up your browser, and save yourself from having to uninstall and reinstall extensions.

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Deeper History for Frequent Firefox Finders

Posted in Add-on, Firefox | Tagged ,

CTRL-F is one of the most useful keyboard shortcuts when trying to find information in a document.  It works in your word processor, spreadsheets, and on Web pages and PDFs.  If you use Mozilla’s Firefox Web browser, you can grab the Findlist browser extension to make your find function work harder.  Lifehacker has a great review of how it works:  you get a drop-down menu of up to 50 recent terms you’ve looked for with CTRL-F.  The extension will be useful if you use CTRL-F on one page, then flip to another and have to rerun the search.  Skip retyping and select from your list.

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Consuming Social Media with Search and Hootsuite

Posted in Business Information, News, Research Management, Social media, Twitter | Tagged , ,

One high volume and high maintenance information area is social media.  Twitter, Facebook, and Google+ all generate huge streams of information that have the potential for containing useful nuggets.  What do you do if you want to dig out these valuable pieces without participating in social media?

You will need to create an account but can immediately lock it against followers or friends. Try a Twitter account first because it has fewest potential missteps in securing your account.  One you have your Twitter account in hand, create another account at Hootsuite.com.  Hootsuite provides a different way of looking at activity on Twitter and other social networks.  More importantly, it has some nice features for monitoring content by keyword or Twitter username.  You can use Hootsuite to monitor content on LinkedIn, WordPress.com blogs, and Facebook, among others, but you need your own account for each of those services.

Once in Hootsuite, you have a number of options for managing your information.  It assumes you want to be social, so your Twitter feeds will automatically be displayed, even though they are empty.  You can delete each of these to clear your window, ready for having searches there instead.  You want to add a stream and the following screen will appear:

Adding a search stream in Hootsuite for Twitter messages with "premises liability" in them

Adding a search stream in Hootsuite for Twitter messages with "premises liability" in them

Hootsuite recently purchased Twapperkeeper (named with a nod towards Mead’s Trapper Keeper), a service that archived Twitter messages.  You can archive a stream based on a single keyword in Hootsuite now, or you can use the original three keyword search.  As you create each new stream, it will appear in the window.

The goal here is to rely on the search mechanism rather than the networking connections to capture information as it flows by.  Since networking requires you to make or receive connections from others, search allows you to monitor without interacting with others.  For example, if you were monitoring a particular company or topic, you can set up a search to focus on it without becoming a Facebook friend or Twitter follower of that company and explicitly showing your interest.

Once you have created a number of streams, you may find that they extend off the screen.  Hootsuite supports tabbed pages, so you can aggregate streams on a given topic (practice area specific, for example, or a corporation or industry) so that you can quickly see what is going on in any given stream without scrolling too far left or right.

Lurking on Twitter or Facebook in this way may seem rather anti-social networking but social media remains a challenge for legal professionals.  Using search to mine the information allows you to consume information that is being shared openly without having to worry about confidentiality, privacy, or disclosure of representation breaches.

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