Keyword: microsoft
- Microsoft: Unbundling the Browser (05/02/2010)
Stephen Hornsby and Owen Thomas ask if Microsoft’s commitments to unbundle its browser will make a difference, and whether the European Commission really care if they do it or not - Getting the Best from RSS (26/11/2008)
Alex Newson discusses how lawyers can make the most of RSS. - Implementing an Online Learning Programme (06/10/2008)
Elizabeth West looks at the challenges faced by law firms when implementing online learning programmes for IT or legal training, and reports on a meeting of the SCL KM Special Interest Group in July, hosted by Lovells LLP. - The End of Lawyers’ IT? (05/09/2008)
Alastair Morrison updates readers on his views on SaaS and considers the possibility that cloud computing will transform the way in which lawyers buy and use IT. - Analysing Unstructured Data: Electronic Discovery and Computer Limits (26/08/2008)
Touching on porno hedgehogs and Croatian language recognition systems, Andrew Harbison and Pearse Ryan offer a fascinating insight into the problems associated with analysing unstructured data and the limitations inherent in using computers for electronic discovery. They also explain how the problems are not just of concern to litigators but to data protection lawyers and others too. - Legislating for Web 2.0 – Preparing for the Communications Act? (12/08/2008)
Chris Marsden explains what makes the 3rd Annual SCL Policy Forum on 22 & 23 September 2008 such an important event. - Litigation Readiness: Prevention Better than Cure (26/03/2008)
Documents coming out of your ears? Disclosure and compliance a problem? Andrew Haslam looks at the documentary equivalent of preventative medicine. - Facing up to Encryption (20/03/2008)
IT Columnist, Rupert Kendrick, reports on a recent survey that highlights the inadequate approach that many law firms show towards encryption and looks at some proprietary solutions - The Rise of Machinima (18/02/2008)
- FaceBook Data Concerns (01/02/2008)
Printed from www.scl.org ( (c) The Society for Computers & Law)

