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Free help for you in making online videos—and how about a Flip Squad at THE COMPLETE LAWYER?

Much nifty assistance can be found at OnlineVideoToolkit.com (free registration required). The site is owned by Jim Kukral who blogs at The Daily Flip. He recently held a contest in which the winner received a Flip video camera. Wish I'd known!

I want a Flip. I have recommended to Don Hutcheson at The Complete Lawyer that he start a Flip Squad. The Squad would be located around the country and Squad members would conduct Flip interviews of people of interest to TCL's readers for posting at the magazine's site. Maybe Flip will even contribute the cameras for the publicity. Good idea? Whom would you like to see interviewed?

idealawg is now an Alltop blog

Alltop, all the cool kids (and me)

I am very pleased to be included in Guy Kawasaki's featured blogs at Alltop. The site's tagline is "We've got all the top stories covered all the time." And I am honored to be a part of this group of blogs that was added today:

Visit us all at http://law.alltop.com. Tag line for this section of Alltop: "We've got Law covered."

101 most useful Web sites

The UK's Telegraph has published "The 101 most useful websites." See what they have chosen in these categories:

Brain Rules: 12 Principles for Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home, and School—A heady success

Book_brain_rules Not a day goes by lately when I do not see mention on blogs of the new book Brain Rules. The praise often includes the Web site created by the book's author Dr. John Medina. Coert Visser at Solution Focused Change writes:

Dr. Medina's website is an impressive display of modern day book promotion. There are video's, there's a blog, there are links to reviews and articles, and there is more.

At Neuroanthropology, Greg Downey commented on the site and also complimented Medina on his accessible way of presenting information .

The website contains a wealth of Flash-based audio-visual elements from the book, bibliography, graphics, and a host of other resources. I’m struck by several things about it; first, Medina is very savvy — he’s pitched this book brilliantly for a general audience. I don’t mean that as a backhanded compliment; in fact, it’s something that I aspire to in my own writing, and it’s educational to see such a good practitioner. Second, he’s done a great job of distilling some complicated ideas into bullet-point amenable, succinct statements.

Alvaro Fernandez at SharpBrains earlier this week posted an article by Medina which will give you the flavor of the book.

Interested in a good, non-technical, summary of the implications of recent brain science in our daily lives? Biologist John Medina offers that in his article below (as part of our Author Speaks Series) and in his new book: Brain Rules: 12 Principles for Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home, and School. Enjoy!

Matt Homann at the [non]billable hour explained his favorite of the 12 rules presented in the book.

I especially liked Rule # 10: Vision Trumps All Other Senses, and it contains this rule of thumb for presenters:

You'll get 3x better recall for visual information than for oral. And you'll get 6x better recall for information that's simultaneously oral and visual.

Hey, Matt? Have you read The Back of the Napkin: Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures by Dan Roam? I think you are going to love it!

I am reading Brain Rules and will tell you more when I have finished. So far, I have enjoyed it thoroughly. Have you read it yet?

Note (added March 30, 2008, 8:50 PM Mountain): Click for a BusinessWeek article which includes The Back of the Napkin titled "Doodling for Profits."

Here's another article on The Back of the Napkin: "Pictures aid communication, book argues." And the "lost chapter" of the book: "The 10-1/2 Commandments of Visual Thinking." (pdf)

New edition of ABA's LAW PRACTICE now online - with the debut of my new column

V34is2_124px The March 2008 issue of Law Practice is now online. This edition includes the debut of my column "Reading Minds" in which I invite four people to choose their favorite books on a topic. In this column "Creating High-Touch Relationships," Dan Hull, Karen Glover, U.S. District Court Judge John Kane, and Susan Cartier Liebel tell us about their favorite books on building professional relationships. Take a look at what they each recommend; a good read!

This March edition is the ABA Techshow Technology Tips Issue. Click on over to read many informative articles, including:

Enjoy the issue. Don't forget the articles are only available to non-subscribers until the next edition is posted so don't delay for too long.

Dr. Tammy Lenski is on virtual book tour for her new MAKING MEDIATION YOUR DAY JOB

Lot of excitement over at Tammy Lenski's Mediator Tech. She has released her book Making Mediation Your Day Job: How to Market Your ADR Business Using Mediation Principles You Already Know. To celebrate the release, she is throwing a Book Launch Virtual Party at which you can enter a drawing to win one of many excellent prizes. Don't wait because the entry deadline is 5PM EST on March 15.

More! Lenski is also on virtual book tour. Of course, that tech-savvy strategy is what we would expect from a "confessed technophile."

“The book tour of today is very different than the book tour of yester-year,” says Lenski. “Today’s book tours tap the power of the Internet and telephone technologies to spread the word and engage readers.” Lenski’s book tour includes complimentary teleconference seminars with ADR associations and groups, blog and Podcast interviews with fellow ADR professionals, and an online prize drawing for mediation marketing services and products relevant to mediators who want to jump-start their practices.

Lenski founded her successful full-time ADR practice a decade ago and built it using the principles and processes she now shares in her book. A core faculty member in Woodbury College’s master’s in mediation program for many years, Lenski has trained and educated hundreds of practicing mediators and seen first-hand what differentiates those who have business success from those who aren’t yet able to make mediation their day job. She blogs about the intersection of ADR, technology and marketing at MediatorTech.com.

Lenski is definitely a guru of ADR marketing. Buy her book and learn from a master. And don't forget to enter that prize drawing at the Book Launch Virtual Party.

New Web site: Law Is Fun

Logo Excerpt from Law.com Legal Technology:

Fun Law Site Standing Out in Its Field
Attorney making enjoyable blogs, games and forums part of online legal community

By Douglas S. Malan
The Connecticut Law Tribune
February 19, 2008

Michael Fryar is launching a new Web site based on two revolutionary premises: the practice of law should actually be enjoyable, and lawyers by and large have great senses of humor.

The current state of the legal profession doesn't always lend itself to believing those two points, but Fryar's recent launch of Law Is Fun is aimed at spreading the word.

The profession is "shifting away from the idea of attorneys as accessible and friendly and more toward a corporate environment, jacket and tie and making sure you get your billable hours," said Fryar, a Hartford attorney who serves as the Connecticut Bar Association's program development specialist.

"Law is fun in the sense of enjoying what you're doing," he said. "This Web site is about getting back in touch with why you became an attorney."

The site purposefully strays from the typical, legal-related corporate Web sites both in design and content. It will serve as a community site for lawyers to share opinions and stories about a range of topics regarding life in the profession, rainmaking and tips on the restaurants that offer the best atmosphere for client development and meetings.

Click to read the rest of "Fun Law Site Standing Out in Its Field."

New edition of ABA's LAW PRACTICE: Marketing technology trends

V34is1_125px The January issue of the ABA's Law Practice is now online. This edition includes the following articles:

And many more articles waiting for you here at Law Practice.

Preventing neuroboomeritis: A trip to the brain gym might be one method

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San Francisco has a new "health club for your brain" called vibrantBrains™  From Brain Reserves:

vibrantBrains, a gym to exercise our brains, has recently opened in San Francisco. We all buy into the health club idea for our bodies so why not one to tone our brains, too? The vibrantBrains folks have created a pleasant, bright space on Sacramento Street, close to cafes, shops, and residential areas. They have the front of the club filled with interesting books, including some bestsellers, by scientists and others on various aspects of brain research and how the brain works; the middle part of the club is filled with state-of-the-art computers with headphones nearby. A lounge area with comfy chairs and tea, coffee, and water always available fills the floor-to-ceiling windowed alcove at the back of the club and is a great place to chat with other members. They have developed Neurobics Circuit Training, which incorporates a number of scientifically based software programs that enable a club member to work on different skills for each visit or a variety of skills within a workout and at a huge discount over trying to find and purchase these programs individually.

. . .

The vibrantBrains innovative founders, Jan Zivic and Lisa Schoonerman, may just have latched onto a trend that Boomers and others must incorporate into our lives to keep that notion that "60 is the new 40" alive and well. And just to enjoy our lives more. They will also offer a speaker series soon as well as book clubs and other related activies.

Fun idea. Although there are ways to maintain cognitive fitness which are easier and require no financial expenditure, going to the brain gym might be a good fit for those who find that the trip increases commitment and discipline. And I can see that a group of people with similar goals and interests might, with the help of the gym, develop into a like-minded (and like-brained) community. Community can be a good source of support and inspiration. Anything that furthers the prevention of neuroboomeritis has my vote.

For those of you in the Bay Area, you may want to attend the gym's Speaker Series. Some knowledgeable people will be presenting.

Note (added 7:05 PM Mountain): For the aging body: British playground for kids over 60.

Note (added April 23, 2008, 7:14 PM Mountain): From Springwise ("your daily fix of entrepreneurial ideas"): Brain gyms for boomers.

Newest edition of LAW PRACTICE TODAY is online

A new edition of Law Practice Today is up and available. Articles include

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