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.

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Make Your Right Click Menu Do Magic with Spellbook

Posted in Add-on, Bookmarklet, Google Chrome, Internet Explorer, Link Shorteners | Tagged ,

Bookmarks (or Favorites, as they are known on Internet Explorer) enable you to save a link to a page so that you can return to it in the future. A close relative of the bookmark is the bookmarklet.  It usually blends a link to a site with some additional code so that, when you click on it, an additional action is performed.  For example, if you use the Bit.ly sidebar bookmarklet, it opens a window and automatically shortens the URL of the page you are viewing.  As you add these bookmarklets to your research experience, you can organize them in a folder for easy access.  The only drawback to having them in a folder is that you may forget what you have in that folder unless you use them regularly.

One way to keep them more visible, if you use Google Chrome, is to add the Spellbook extension to put them on your right-click menu.  Internet Explorer users since version 7 will be familiar with this concept.  Highlight a word on a Web page, place your mouse beside it and click your right mouse button, and a number of options appear including Internet Explorer Accelerators.  The Accelerators work very much like bookmarklets, in that you can send the text to be translated or inserted into a blog or saved to some other location.

As Lifehacker explains, Spellbook works the same way.  It becomes an entry on your Google Chrome right-click menu, so that once you are looking at a page and right-click, you will see Spellbook in the menu list.  Select Spellbook, and you casee all of your bookmarklets and can select the one you want to use.  How does it know which bookmarklets to use?  You place them in a bookmarklets folder and Spellbook uses that to create its menu.

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Making Your Information on Google a Priority

Posted in Content, Document management, E-mail Management, File Management, GMail | Tagged , , ,

Google Mail users will be familiar with the Priority Inbox.  This is an optional feature that attempts to automatically sort your incoming e-mail into groups:  Important and Unread, Starred, and Everything Else.  You can mark e-mails as important or not important, to help train your Priority Inbox.  You are not limited to just those three categories.  You can set up a priority view for other Google Mail labels – messages from the court, for example – so that they appear as a priority group of messages.

Now you can add the same sort of organization to your Google Docs account.  Check out this Lifehacker post for screenshots.  The revised Google Docs interface now has a right hand column where you can see a thumbnail of a document and, below, see in which collection it is contained.  Unlike a typical folder structure – but just like the labels in Google Mail – you can place a document into multiple collections.  Your list of collections appear on the left hand side of the screen, making it easy to navigate through your documents.  You can create sub-collections too, keeping that folder structure vibe alive!  Click on My Collections in the left hand column and mouse over the collection you want to add a sub-collection to, and you will see a menu called Actions appear at the right hand side of the screen.  Click on it and select New and then Collection.  Type in the name of your new collection and when you click OK, it will add your new collection.  You can now start to organize content into this new entity.

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Google Mail Nested Labels

Posted in GMail | Tagged , ,

The Google Mail Blog took the covers off a new feature in Google Mail (GMail) that allows for nesting of folders.  As I mention in the text, the labels in Google Mail enable quick organization of your messages.  Unlike folders, you can apply multiple labels to a message so that is essentially filed in multiple locations.

This does not appear to be new, since many GMail users have been creating nested labels for awhile.  The way to do it is simple.  Create a top level label, then create a new label that starts with the top level label, and is followed by a back slash:

top level:  Libraries

sub label:  Libraries/new_label

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