CaseCheck expands coverage

CaseCheck issued this press release a few days ago, and it’s a great service, so I thought it was worth popping on here:

CaseCheck Launches UK-wide Service – Free Access to over 5000 legal case summaries and more

Scotland’s leading online legal information provider, CaseCheck, has linked up with Law Brief Publishing. This collaboration with the English legal publisher will give users free access to a database of more than 5,000 case summaries. The resource is popular with the Scottish legal community and has ambitious plans for the rest of the UK and beyond.

The free web-based resource now covers all major areas of law across the UK and EU, and includes expert opinions covering a wide variety of specialist subjects. Visit www.casecheck.co.uk to find out more.

CaseCheck is the brainchild of legal geek, Stephen Moore, who gave up practicing law for a career in legal information technology. Moore combines his work as a technology consultant with a number of leading law firms, with development of the CaseCheck concept.

Moore explains: “As soon as we launched we began getting great feedback. In spite of there only being 10,000 lawyers in Scotland the traffic picked up really quickly. Revenue grew on the back of that traffic and we became committed to seeing how we could develop the idea into other jurisdictions. It was just a question of finding the right partner.”

Law Brief Publishing was set up by Tim Kevan, a barrister, writer and entrepreneur. Commenting on the tie-up, Kevan said: “From the start Stephen really impressed us with his dynamic and innovative approach. CaseCheck has the potential to be an extremely important application and we are delighted to be helping with that. In return Stephen is able to give our extensive back catalogue of case reports a new audience.”


I love the fact that Stephen Moore is a self described “legal geek”! 🙂

UK Library blogger wiki update

So, a month or so ago* I did a trawl through all the institutional / professional group blogs on the UK Library Blogs wiki, checked that the ones I’d found before were still there, added any new ones I’d found, and added a new area on entries, for account information on those groups or professionals with Twitter accounts listed on their blog.

I’m trying to do the personal blogs soon too, but with more work, less time to do it in, and my own life getting a bit busy, don’t hold your breath for that to happen in the next few days! 🙂

As always, if you’re not on there (and that’s quite likely, the Magical Interweb is a big place, with many nooks and crannies hiding things), contact me either via the ‘contact owner’ option on the wiki front page, or via the email cunningly disguised in the right hand sidebar here, and I’ll add you as soon as I can 🙂

*Oh, looks like it was a bit more than a month, more like two! Time flies!

Dear Bloglines…

….I love you, really, I do.

I know, I know: I may have become slightly disillusioned late last year, and threatened to leave you for Greader, or Netvibes, or NewsGator, or any of the other feed readers I tried out when you were having “personal issues” and trying to “find yourself”.

But I stayed with your original version, I didn’t desert you for that fickle Beta, I liked you just the way you were. And I didn’t get on with those others like I do with you.

And I thought you appreciated that. You bucked up your ideas, sorted yourself out, and I thought we were happy together.
Until this week.

My dear, why do you now think I want you to import every post, from every feed I take, dating back to 2007, all marked as new and unread?

I mean, it’s nice that you want me to have comprehensive information, but really, it would have been better just to stick with what I asked you to do, which was supply me with the feeds, and make them go away once I’d read them. It’s nice that you think I might want to keep them around, but really…no.

And that new thing you’re doing of making feeds appear unread, even though I’d read them a few seconds before? And regardless of how many times I “mark as read”? Stop it. It’s not as endearing as you may think it is. And it wasn’t even funny the first time.

Now, I think we’re strong enough to be able to work through these issues together, but it’s got to be a team effort. So, if I promise to not shriek in a high pitched manner, and mash the keys, will you promise to stop doing these really, really annoying things to me?

Mmkay?