This Week’s Links (weekly)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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  • This Week’s Links (weekly)

    Native File for Cloud Email tags: MM LitSupport How to Make Sure Facebook Doesn’t Filter Out Page and Friend Updates tags: MM SocNetPres CA E-discovery best practices for your practice, Step 3: Cooperation tags: MM LitSupport Evernote + LinkedIn: Powering Professional Relationships tags: MM SocNetPres Why You Should Forget Facebook tags: MM SocNetPres Posted from Diigo….

  • VR in the Courtroom?

    I was reading this article the other day: Top 5 FAQ on Using Technology in Court Now, originally, I was just going to share the article on Twitter because it’s pretty good all the way around, but then I got to the fifth one: Oculus Rift: Coming to a Courtroom Near You? Using virtual reality…

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    One session I missed at Techshow

    As much as I wanted to attend the session “A Real World EDD Motion Hearing”, it ran concurrent with the CT Summation demo, in which I had hoped to get another look at iBlaze 2.9 and Discovery Cracker. Luckily for me, I found where Mazyar Hedayat at TechoLawyer Blog had posted some very detailed notes…

  • Links (weekly)

    Believing “Missing” Emails Exist Does Not Make Adverse Inference Sanctions Real tags: LitSupport MM Be Careful What You Ask For: Two New Cases Seek to Limit Burdensome E-Discovery Requests tags: LitSupport MM Scanning May No Longer Be Cool, But it’s Still Necessary tags: MM LitSupport Early Survey Results Show Strong Interest In eDiscovery Education And…

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    Linked: Employer initiatives to increase staff wellbeing found to be ineffective

    You do see the problem here, right? As an employee, great that there’s a webinar planned on stress management, but if I now have to work an hour later that day in order to attend the webinar, it’s not helping. Lots of HR departments are making tools available, but managers are still expecting the same amount of work, with the same crazy deadlines and expectations, from a likely short-staffed team, so who has time to use them?

    So they don’t help. Not because they aren’t helpful, but because you’ve made self-care and wellbeing yet another thing for your employees to do.

    Employee burnout does not exist solely because your employees haven’t figured out how to meditate. It’s systemic to our way of doing business. Unless that changes, we’re just rearranging deck chairs.

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