LLRXBuzz - November 11, 2002
By Tara Calishain, Published on November 11, 2002
The Latest on Legal Research
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Fantasy Supreme Court!
Okay, this is a bit offbeat and a bit outside the usual scope of this
newsletter, but it's also kinda cool and all work and no play makes Tara a
dull LLRX columnist.
Are you familiar with Fantasy Football, or Fantasy Baseball? Players
create teams with the stats of real sports players. The fortunes of the
"fantasy" teams rise and fall on the real-life performance of the players.
With Fantasy Court
(http://www.fantasycourt.com/)
players choose the outcome and majority/minority split of each case on the
Supreme Court's docket for this term. They get points for correct choices,
and the player with the highest points will win a prize at the end of the
term.
Sound cool? Well, there's one more snag; you have to be licensed
attorney to participate, so I won't be playing. But I wish I could; no
offense to fantasy sports players but it sounds a lot more fun than
"Fantasy Lawn Darts" or whatever.
Canadian Documents
An Internet source for 100,000 Canadian Documents dating as far back as
1982 is available at
http://publications.gc.ca/.
To locate a particular document you can browse the catalogue by subject or
department or execute a keyword search. Additional search criteria
includes title, author, ISBN and all or any words in the Input Field.
Search results can be sorted by title, author, Agency, Year, Catalogue
number or a word in the Input Field. Publication files include the title,
issuing agency, price and catalogue number. Some items are available
online, some are not. There are instructions available on how to order
materials that are not available online.
Florida Library Information
Florida's State Library has a online database of Library Information at
http://librarydata.dos.state.fl.us/intro.htm. The database
includes information searchable by organization name or organizations
within a city. You can
also search for library projects by name, number or sponsoring
organization. In addition, this database can be used to search for
contacts by last name or city.
Search results for organization include the name and location with type,
such as institutional, public or special. Additional information includes
telephone numbers, an e-mail contact and Internet address. Search results
list contacts, projects and any organizations with which it may be
affiliated. This is excellently done; a lot of information here with
plenty of special libraries included.
Online Newsletters
Andrew Brandt, in the October 25 issue of PC World (http://tinyurl.com/2gsq)
reports on fifteen mailing lists and online newsletters that he considers
to be excellent sources of free information. He details the difference
between the two types and why a good newsletter is like candy. Some of his
favorites are
"Lockergnome" "Internet Tourbus" and "Woody's Office for Mere Mortals."
The Online Newsletters are grouped into three categories: Tips and Help,
News and Current Information and Shareware/Freeware and Sites. Each entry
links to the source's Web site and describes the information in the source
with its high and low points as well as the bottom line. He also provides
the delivery
frequency and tells how to subscribe. Cool if you're looking for some
general tech guidance.
Georgia Launches Insurance Database
The state of Georgia is testing a database for police agencies to use to
verify that drivers have insurance coverage on their vehicles. A
spokesperson for the Georgia Insurance Information service recommends
drivers use this testing period to verify insurance information and
vehicles identification number.
The testing period will end the first of February when the database will
be Georgia's official information source. Check out the WSB-TV article on
the new resource at
http://www.accessatlanta.com/partners/wsbtv/news/insurance1031.html.
Google Turns the Corner to Three
Billion Pages
A hundred years ago when I was young, I boggled at Google's claim of a
billion pages. But now I will be blasé. Google is now claiming an index of
over three billion pages on their Web site. Yawn. FAST, on the other hand,
is at 2.1 billion (see the bottom of
http://www.alltheweb.com/ for the number.)
National Library of Scotland Offers
Ask-A-Librarian Service
After a six-month test run, the National Library of Scotland has started
offering a new electronic reference service. Fill out the online form at
http://www.nls.uk/info/readingrooms/askalibrarian.html and the
librarians of the
NLS will either get back to you or pass your question to another library
if their resources are not sufficient to answer your query. The site warns
that response could take a while but does allow you to track the progress
of your
question.
Even if you're not interested in asking a question, take a couple minutes
to check out the National Library of Scotland. They have an excellent
digital collection at
http://www.nls.uk/digitallibrary/index.html.
Christian Science Monitor Offers
Dozen RSS Feeds
Today is happy dance day here at ResearchBuzz; the Christian Science
Monitor has announced a dozen freely-available RSS feeds at
http://www.csmonitor.com/rss/.
Categories for the feeds include Work & Money, Sci/Tech, and The Home
Forum. There's also one RSS file that contains links to the entire content
of the newsletter by section (that's about three dozen stories.) The feeds
are in RSS 0.91, so they'll work in all the feed aggregators that I know
of.
If you were out getting a root beer the last time I was ranting about RSS
feeds and you need a little background, the URL above also provides
general information about RSS feeds and points you to software you can use
to read them.
