LLRXBuzz - June 28, 2002
By Tara Calishain, Published on June 28, 2002
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GrepLaw
The Berkman Center for Internet & Society is the organization behind
Greplaw, at
http://grep.law.harvard.edu/. Who's that? It is a research program
dedicated to the exploration of cyberspace, with a goal of creating an
interactive forum for the discussion of legal news affecting information
technology.
And that forum appears to be quite active. The center column of GrepLaw's
front page list the latest news posts with links to related information
and an option to read the other comments. Most recent subjects include
Uncle Sam
stepping into ICANN and the Cato Institute's digital copy protection
forum. (It looks very much like Slashdot. Built on Slash?)
To check out all of the topics categories, click on the Topics link under
GrepLaw in the left column. You can also try the Discussions link to check
out the current active discussions. One other item on interest in the left
column is the Older Stuff link which offers a way to search the archive.
You can search the stories, comments or users while narrowing the search
by author,
topic or section.
The column on the right is interesting too. It features links to news
articles and case docs as well as CyberLawyer Profiles. Venture a little
further downstream to the Fresh Catch, RealPlayer files. Timely, lots of
community potential, easy to read.
The Buffalo Criminal Law Center sponsors a Web portal of online law resources at http://wings.buffalo.edu/law/bclc/resource.htm . The site features criminal law information from around the world as well as in the United States.
Countries are listed in alphabetical order starting with Argentina, Australia and Austria. Some countries, such as Finland, link to Penal Codes in English and others, such as Italy and Peru, provide the information in the country's primary language. The listings are sparse for some countries, and while the titles of the sites usually say it all annotation would occasionally help.
Information from the United States includes Federal Materials such as the Uniform Code of Military Justice and the Federal Rules of Evidence. It also includes Congressional materials as well as links to Federal and State Courts. Each state has a link to its criminal procedure codes and enforcement codes. The University of Oklahoma provides the criminal codes of the American Indian Nations.
The Buffalo Criminal Law Center also has models of criminal codes and code drafts along with International Criminal Law and Criminology links. Lots of stuff here on one easy-to- nav page. Worth a look.
Appellate Litigation Blog
Howard J. Bashman chairs the Appellate Group of a Philadelphia law firm
and co-chairs the Philadelphia Bar Association's Appellate Courts
Committee. He also writes a column about appellate developments for a
daily newspaper for lawyers. Oh, and he has started a Web blog focusing on
appellate litigation at
http://www.appellateblog.blogspot.com/, to discuss decisions of the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and Pennsylvania's appellate
courts.
Recent subjects on his new blog include career decisions, with pros and
cons of being a sole practitioner or law professor. He has also recently
written about the Federal Death Penalty, Megan's Law and rulings on
nuclear exposure cases. And he's got an RSS feed. Woo!
http://appellateblog.blogspot.com/rss/appellateblog.xml
Crash Test Information
Crashtest.com (http://www.crashtest.com/default.htm)
is fairly straightforward -- it's a site of information about car crash
tests.
The front page provides a subject index of cars, from Acura to Volvo.
Beneath that are "subtopics" -- car models. The car models (in blue) are
not clickable, but the car brands (in black) are. Click on a brand, and
you'll get a chart. The chart shows several different crash tests (from
all over the world) and several different models (sometimes models are
grouped by year, like HONDA ACCORD 82-85.) Performance of each model is
noted by a color code. Not all models are noted for all tests.
You can click on each chart item for an explanation of that particular
item. Click on the model name for information about a particular set of
test.
Don't forget to check out the rest of this site. There's a frame setup
where you can compare the crash ratings of three different cars. There's
also a searchable database of recalls, rollover listings, and safety news.
Worth a look.
Jeeves Gets a New Look
News.com is reporting (http://news.com.com/2100-1023-936065.html)
that AskJeeves has a new look -- and they do; check it out at
http://www.ask.com/.
The page is much cleaner now, with the focus on the query box and three
tabs: Web Results, News Results, and Shopping Results. I did a search for
"George Bush." Unfortunately the search results are not as clear as the
front page. The top of the results page provides the questions that Jeeves
can
answer. Below that are sponsored links. (Jeeves, to their credit, DOES
denote them as sponsored links.) Finally, web page results are
presented.
Strangely, Ask Jeeves had no News results for "George Bush." I thought
maybe the quotes confused it so I tried again with the search Pakistan.
Plenty of results there, providing title of story and URL, source, and
date. The news search does not provide summary, nor does it appear to
allow you to sort by date. A search for George Bush, sans quotes, found
plenty of results. Hmm... Ask Jeeves appears to be searching the Moreover
news headlines. Isn't AltaVista already doing this?
Jeeves has also launched a "most popular" page like the Google Zeitgeist
and the Lycos Top 50; it's available at
http://www.jeevesiq.com/docs/about/jeevesiq.html. Here you'll find the
most popular Web searches, the top news searches, and the top travel
related searches for the previous week.
Mozilla
Resources
One gallant reader sent me a ton of Mozilla-related links and resources.
Check these out if you're into Mozilla and want to soup it up a bit.
If you don't mind getting "under the hood" check out
http://www.mozilla.org/unix/customizing.html for changing fonts and
other preferences that aren't available from the Preferences menu. The
site at
http://techaholic.net/ns7.html has information on customizing Netscape
7 (which as you may know is built on Mozilla.)
MozDev, at http://www.mozdev.org/,
hosts over 70 projects related to Mozilla. Projects include an alternate
user interface, a Mozilla/Blogger component, and a spellchecker. If you're
not looking for really advanced stuff, but just want a couple of hints,
check out the page of keyboard shortcuts at
http://www.mozilla.org/docs/end-user/moz_shortcuts.html.
If you want general Mozilla information, check out Hogarth's Mozilla
Resource at
http://mozilla.weebeastie.net/ for a big resource collection,
Blogzilla
(http://www.deftone.com/blogzilla/)
for the latest Mozilla news and information, and
http://www.vorstrasse91.com/moztips, with tips and plugin pointers for
Mozilla.
