What we wouldn’t do for some of that Pony Express guts and glory. The United States Postal Service has requested a slow down for its services. Instead of the one day service it now provides to neighboring communities and cities, if the cutbacks are approved, deliveries will be two and sometimes three days.
Alexandria's waterfront is in the news.
The following article and video describe the problems attorneys may encounter when using the iPad2 and a Smartcover. As of the posting of this article, no fix has been released, but an end run fix is suggested.
Social media in the news is hitting all industries, including court reporting. The following article describes how the NLRB and different companies are responding to increased usage of social networking.
Are you coming home after a grueling day at work and want to complain to your "friends"? Are you an employer wanting to surf around and check out some of your employees facebook pages? Think again. This issue is far from settled. Sharing what we think and using what we know is still a very sensitive minefield. We'll keep updating the issue as more cases in this arena develop. Check out this article:
Local libraries in Arlington are now allowing WiFi checkouts. At this point Kindle is the only e-reader to deliver library books, but to be sure others will want to a marketshare.
Court reporters prove to be more and more in the limelight.
When the pressure is on, court reporters rise to the challenge. On a daily basis, all across the country reporters enter the courtroom or deposition room ready to take down the record. Rarely, however, is it with as much notoriety or anticipation as these two ladies faced for several weeks this summer in a Florida courtroom. Read their story.
Woud you like an interesting read? Check out what Tam Harbert has to say about technology impacting more than just the production of court reporting. This issue runs through the arena of quality right to the heart of the matter: legalities of digital technology and courtroom admissibility.