Author archives

The Rise of the Worker Productivity Score

The New York Times:”…Architects, academic administrators, doctors, nursing home workers and lawyers described growing electronic surveillance over every minute of their workday. They echoed complaints that employees in many lower-paid positions have voiced for years: that their jobs are relentless, that they don’t have control — and in some cases, that they don’t even have …

Subjects: E-Mail, E-Records, Economy, Education, Financial System, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

How to track wildfires in California, Oregon, and across the U.S. with Esri’s new mapping tool

Fast Company: “Wildfires raging across the American West have grown worse in recent years, a phenomenon many scientists ascribe to climate change. In late July, California’s biggest blaze yet this year, the McKinney fire, ignited near the Oregon border and torched more than 55,000 acres of national forest in less than a weekend. Subsequent rainfall …

Subjects: Climate Change, Environmental Law

Try these Google Docs Tricks

Via Wonder Tools newsletter by Jeremy Caplan, director of teaching and learning at CUNY’s Newmark Graduate School of Journalism. “Google Docs is a contemporary classic. It’s less powerful than Notion, Coda or Craft and less streamlined than Bear, Ulysses, Drafts, or iA Writer. But it’s so reliable — and has so many capabilities — that I …

Subjects: E-Records, Knowledge Management

Tech tool offers police ‘mass surveillance on a budget’

AP: “Local law enforcement agencies from suburban Southern California to rural North Carolina have been using an obscure cellphone tracking tool, at times without search warrants, that gives them the power to follow people’s movements months back in time, according to public records and internal emails obtained by The Associated Press. Police have used “Fog …

Subjects: E-Records, Legal Research, Privacy

Climate Change Remains Top Global Threat Across 19-Country Survey

Pew – Concerns about climate, misinformation and cyberattacks predominate across 19 countries, but people are also concerned about the global economy and spread of infectious diseases. “With the COVID-19 pandemic still raging, a hot war between Russia and Ukraine ongoing, inflation rates rising globally and heat records being smashed across parts of the world, countries …

Subjects: Climate Change, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, Economy, Energy, Environmental Law, Health Care, Internet, Medicine

Project Drawdown: The World’s Leading Climate Solutions Database Is Growing

Earth.org: “Founded in 2014 by Author and Entrepreneur Paul Hawken in collaboration with over 200 researchers, Project Drawdown is one of the most influential research-backed databases of climate solutions on the planet.  The project’s mission is to help the world reach ‘drawdown’ – the point in time where levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere …

Subjects: Climate Change, Economy, Education, Energy, Environmental Law, Knowledge Management

American Association of Law Libraries (AALL) Launches New Legal Information Resource

AALL: “The American Association of Law Libraries (AALL) is offering a new resource for information professionals—law librarians, legal information professionals , and public librarians—and members of the public to easily locate online primary legal materials. The new Online Legal Information Resources (OLIR) includes information for U.S. states, the District of Columbia, U.S. territories, the U.S. …

Subjects: Courts, Government Documents, Intellectual Property, Knowledge Management, Legislation

The US government just teased its instant payment system for 2023

Popular Science: “The Federal Reserve announced earlier this week it expects its FedNow Service, a new online system facilitating instant, digital monetary transactions between people and businesses, to come online sometime between May and July 2023. The release could mark a major moment within the financial sector as it, hypothetically, could drastically undercut the need …

Subjects: Economy, Financial System

How to unsend an email in Gmail

ZDNet: “With this Gmail feature, you have up to 30 seconds to catch and unsend a grammar mistake, a misspelled name, or even the wrong recipient before it’s cast into someone’s inbox abyss. Gmail has an Undo Send feature that gives you up to a 30-second grace period after you send an email, so you …

Subjects: E-Mail