Rethinking Your Desktop Search

Posted in Business Information, Document management, File Management, Google, Research Management, Search, Windows | Tagged , ,

Google has announced that it’s long running Desktop search tool will no longer be supported.  It was a great product for a number of reasons.  It improved over the operating system search and ran on Windows, Mac, and Linux machines.  You can download it until September 14th but current installations will not be supported after that date.

Why Desktop Search?

Why would you want desktop search, you might ask?  It provides the ability to search beyond the files on your computer, to make your searching experience more powerful.  As an example, a search with Google Desktop would return results both from your local machine and the Web, without you having to do searches in two places.  The Desktop tool was also extendable, so that it could look into files that the Windows operating system search couldn’t, improving your results.  It could also search network folders, so you didn’t have to clear that first obstacle of figuring out where you saved a file.

Still not convinced that desktop search is worth worrying about?  A LexisNexis 2008 workplace productivity survey of lawyers and non-lawyers found that nearly a third of lawyers spent between 1 and 2 hours a day looking for documents and e-mails.  Another 16% reported spending 2 to 4 hours a day.  That’s a significant amount of potential revenue, whether billable hour or lost time in an alternative fee arrangement, that can be improved by applying better search to information management.

Many lawyers have not yet migrated to Windows 7, and so are limited in their choices for alternatives.  Windows Desktop Search 4 is still available as a free download and is a huge improvement on the search within XP.  Windows 7 users have it built-in to their operating system.  Windows 7 users also have the benefit of additional search configurations, including forcing Windows 7 to index ALL the files on their desktops, and to add search connectors to enable you to search other sites from your search box.

One of the best known alternatives is Copernic, which has a commercial license for their Desktop Search Professional version.  There is a free version but it’s only for home users.  It is a more powerful tool than Google Desktop was, without some of the limitations on the size of file it could index.  It also has additional options for customizing which files are searched.  Copernic is a Windows-only product.

X1 is another well-known alternative to Google Desktop and has a range of fee-based products, for searching your business files or your Sharepoint server, among others.  Both Copernic and X1 have an e-discovery review focus, so if you are replacing Google Desktop, you may be able to get a replacement tool that can do dual duty.

Cloud Search

Another possibility is that your information is no longer stored on your desktop.  As lawyers and others move their files onto hosted Internet servers, the so-called cloud, they may not need to use desktop search any longer.  A great option is Greplin, which will search many of the most popular document and file storage sites, including Google Docs and Dropbox.com.  Here’s a quick video I made of how it works.  Another service similar to Greplin is Cloudmagic, although it searches fewer services.  I would expect to see more of these sorts of offerings appear in the future.

This is the latest in a progression of products to be sunsetted by Google.  Operating system search is improving and the Google ecosystem has been a bit sprawling, so this weeding certainly makes sense.  It’s been a good 7 years.

Share

Related Posts:

Organize and Share Your Search Results

Posted in Bookmarklet, Business Information, Content, Google, Research Management, Research Notebooks, Search | Tagged

Information Today highlighted a new search tool, called Searchteam.com. You can search at Searchteam’s site and save individual results into your account. Saved results can be sorted into tabbed folders, which can be useful if you are working on a specific legal research topic or focused on gathering competitive intelligence on a particular person or company.

Searchteam results include typical did you mean suggestions, but also flags matching subject areas, under subtopics as well as related categories. They will also highlight any folders that have been created for your Searchteam team, so that you do not duplicate previous efforts by someone else on the team.

And it is the team approach that could make this a powerful tool. Whether it is your law firm’s marketing staff or lawyers and staff in different offices, the focus is on asynchronous sharing. You can invite others to come and participate in the search, saving results to the same search folders or just accessing the results you have identified. By adopting a research notebook functionality, this works well both as an individual and group research tool. You can avoid sending repeated e-mails or maintaining document versions on topics that might be relatively fleeting in importance.

You can also add content to your Searchteam folders with their Web browser bookmarklet. This is helpful when you are not finding the relevant information in their search engine. As you move across the Web, you can select items to drop into your folders and which will then be accessible to your entire team, whether researchers or consumers of the research.

Share

Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts

Quickly Build Research Folders with LiveBinder

Posted in Bookmarklet, Business Information, Google, Research Notebooks, Search, Web Browser | Tagged , ,

Research notebooks are a great way to keep your research organized.  If you use resources like Microsoft’s OneNote, the universal Evernote, or GrowlyBird’s Growly for Mac, then your research routine involves grabbing information and placing it into a notebook as you find it.  An interesting alternative to these products is LiveBinders, a Web-based product that is in beta.  It is a research notebook concept aimed at faculty but has some interesting features that will appeal to legal researchers.

LiveBinders uses the term research binder, and like a paper-based binder, each tab represents an entry point to multiple pieces of content.  Their starter tutorial walks you through how to drop in video, images, and text.  You can also include whole Web pages.

It has some distinctive features though.  The one I found most intriguing was the ability to create a new binder based on a Google search.  You log in to your LiveBinder account, create a new binder and, at the bottom of the form for creating the binder, select to create it from a Google search.  You type in the search query keywords you want to use, and when the binder is made, it pre-populates with content based on that search.  If you have done some Google searching on a topic and have a good, tight query, this is an excellent way to grab a bunch of information and put it into a research notebook.  From a productivity standpoint, you may find that it is easier to start with a pre-populated notebook and weeding out pages, rather than starting from a blank slate and filling it.

The Google search option strikes me as a great opportunity to create fast client development binder or business information about an opponent.  If you need to do a quick grab of information, and look at it or save it for later, this would be an efficient way to do it.

Lawyers who want to grab resources for CLE presentations that they are giving can create a binder and use a presentation mode to display the information.  It opens a new Web browser window without tabs or menus with your binder inside.

Creating a new binder is simple.  You can also take a current LiveBinder and copy it, so that you can quickly get your research going.  LiveBinder offers a bookmarklet to drop on your Web browser toolbar, for quickly adding content to your binders.

Your research binders are private but can be shared publicly or by a private link if you want to share research (useful if you are a law clerk, research attorney, or librarian doing research for others) with others in your firm.  Like any cloud-based system, your content is not guaranteed against disclosure to courts, and there is no encryption.

Share

Related Posts:

Research Add-ons Chart for Lawyers Using IE, Chrome, Firefox, and Safari

Posted in Add-on, Business Information, Canada, Case Law, Evernote, Firefox, Google, Google Chrome, Internet Explorer, Safari, Search, U.K., U.S. | Tagged , ,

This page was inspired by a recent conference presentation I saw that focused, like much of this blog, on extensions and tweaks for Mozilla’s Firefox or Google’s Chrome Web browsers.  The legal profession is predominantly using the Microsoft Internet Explorer browser, however, probably at even greater levels than the general population.  It is sometimes hard to determine what add-ons or extensions work for Microsoft Internet Explorer, because there is no comprehensive central marketplace for available resources.

Here is a chart with a list of free extensions that can help your online research and the browsers for which they are available.  It’s not comprehensive, but it has a number of resources that are available to 3 or more browsers.

I have made a selection for each category and browser but there may be other options.  Keep in mind that the add-on may be for a particular version of the Web browser or require a particular operating system, so they may not install for the version you are running.  You can also go directly to sites like IEAddons.com for Internet Explorer, Mozilla’s Add On site, Google’s Web Store (or the old extension site), Safari Addons, and the Userscripts.org site to find tweaks for all major Web browsers.

Feel free to add your own favorite research-related extensions or add-ons in the comments!

  1. Click the icon that matches YOUR browser to go directly to an available extension.  If the icon is grayed out, then I didn’t provide a link.
  2. Hold your mouse pointer over the icon before you click it.  I have added a tool tip for each icon to try to help you before you click away.
Access Internet Explorer-designed Sites without Internet Explorer IE Tab 2 Add-on for Mozilla Firefox IE Tab Add-on for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
Block Ads IE Adblocker Adblock Plus Add on for Firefox Adblock Add-on for Chrome AdBlock for Safari
Bookmark Synchronization XMarks Add-on for Internet Explorer Bookmark synchronization is built in to Firefox browser Bookmark synchronization built in to Chrome Web browser XMarks Add-on for Safari
Case Law Citation Locator UK ONLY:  Justis J-Link Add-on for Internet Explorer US ONLY:  Jureeka Add-on for Mozilla Firefox Not available for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
Citation Management with Zotero (free) Not available for Internet Explorer Zotero Citation Management Add-on for Mozilla Firefox Zotero Alpha Add-on for Google Chrome Zotero Alpha Add-on for Safari
Diigo Web Highlighter and Research Manager [FLI post on Diigo] Diigo Research Manager Toolbar for Internet Explorer Diigo Research Manager Toolbar for Mozilla Firefox Diigo Research Manager Add-on for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
Evernote Web Clipper [FLI post on Evernote]

Evernote Add-on installed with Evernote for Windows

Evernote Add on for Firefox

Evernote Add-on for Chrome Add-on for Safari installs with Evernote for Mac
Google Search Result Term Jumping / Highlighting Google Toolbar for Internet Explorer supports term highlighting and jumping Search WP Add-on for Mozilla Firefox Word Highlight Add-on for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
Google Scholar Star Pagination for Cases [FLI post on pagination] Not available for Internet Explorer Not available for Firefox Google Scholar Star Pagination Add-on for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
Greplin Personal Cloud Search [FLI post on Greplin] Not available for Internet Explorer Not available for Firefox Greplin Add-on for Chrome Not available for Safari
Instapaper Deferred Reading Instapaper Bookmarklet defers reading for Internet Explorer Instapaper Bookmarklet defers reading for Mozilla Firefox Instapaper Bookmarklet defers reading for Google Chrome Instapaper Bookmarklet defers reading for Mac
Readability Not available for Internet Explorer Arc90 Readability Add on for Mozilla Firefox Arc90 Readability Add-on for Chrome Not available for Safari
Surf Canyon Personalized Search Results Surf Canyon Personalized Search Results for Internet Explorer Surf Canyon Personalized Search Results for Mozilla Firefox Surf Canyon Personalized Search Results Add-on for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
Share

Related Posts: