- Ex-Israeli Premier Olmert Sentenced to 8 Months in Prison
- Change in overtime rules could lead to more suits over worker emails sent outside work
- Risk management strategies to reduce your risk of a claim under the new Ontario Rule 48.14
- Sony Terms With Spotify Uncovered in Contract
- Ontario employers get slap on wrist for mistreating employees
- National Post Interview With Chief Justice of Canada Beverley McLachlin
- “I’m not totally satisfied”: Dalhousie professor on dentistry report
- Ontario judge finds police tone deaf about right to counsel
- Why aren’t violent bikers in Texas labelled ‘thugs,’ when looters in Baltimore are?
- Petition to Re-Instate the Ontario E-Laws Detailed Legislative History Tables
- Nebraska lawmakers vote to end death penalty
- RCMP makes preventative terror-related arrests in Montreal area
- Bank robber’s jail term slashed by Ontario court so he would avoid deportation to Syria
Monday, May 25, 2015
140Law - Legal Headlines for the Week of May 18th
Here are the leading legal headlines from Wise Law on Twitter:
- Rachel Spence, Law Clerk & Office Manager
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Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Monday, May 25, 2015 0 comments
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
140Law - Recent Legal Headlines
Here are the leading legal headlines from Wise Law on Twitter:
- Employee tracking apps raise worker privacy questions
- Editorial: Law Society failing vulnerable refugee claimants | The Toronto Star
- Ontario Passes Protecting Child Performers Act | Entertainment & Media Law Signal
- Presiding at Same-Sex Wedding, Ruth Bader Ginsburg Emphasizes the Word ‘Constitution’
- Bid to force articling positions shot down at LSUC
- 192 Arrested in Waco Biker Killings
- Ontario court asked to find cops posing as journalists a charter breach
- Starbucks not liable for burns sustained by police officer, jury finds
- Court rejects WikiLeaks founder's appeal
- 'Enough is enough,' says suspended N.B. student after halter dress deemed a 'sexual distraction'
- Engineer's dismissal for 'FHRITP' video the latest in off-duty conduct firings trend
- Judge Awards $27,000 To Man Beaten In Toronto Police Carding Incident
- Victim surcharges 'entrench cyle of poverty': lawyer
- Video: Sonia Sotomayor On Vicious Infighting At The High Court
- Quebec school officials no longer allowed to strip search students
- CSIS can’t keep up with ‘daily’ state-sponsored cyber attacks
- SCC: Filing Suit Amid Suspension Isn’t Wilful Resignation
- Labour law experts weigh in on firing of heckler
- Ontario First: Inter Jurisdictional Spousal Support - Family and Matrimonial - Canada
- Ontario seeks input on reform of key labour and employment legislation - Lexology
- LAWPRO Magazine archives: Practice Pitfalls – Wills and Estates
- The internet is almost out of IP addresses. Expect delays
- Stop plucking scalp and pubic hair from sexual assault victims: N.S. advocates demand updated rape kit
- Law Society suspension adds to Brampton ex-MPP’s troubles | Toronto Star
- Ontario allowing employers to fire workers without cause
- Critics want to see changes to 'rent-a-cop' programs in Canadian cities - Toronto - CBC News
- Widow and ex-soldier injured in Afghanistan move for final judgment on $134M suit against Omar Khadr
- Refugee board members' rulings varied widely in 2014, data suggests
- Supreme Court ruling makes it easier for judges to deny bail - The Globe and Mail
- Tom Brady suspension appeal to be heard by NFL commissioner
- Mistrial declared after lawyer wouldn’t let client testify
- Supreme Court Justice Marshall Rothstein bids an impromptu public farewell - Toronto Star
- RCMP illegally destroyed long-gun registry records, information watchdog says
- Do courts award increases to base salary during notice period? - Lexology
- Surreptitious collection of DNA from water bottle lands N.C. lawyer for exonerated inmate in hot water
- UVA dean files defamation lawsuit against Rolling Stone
- Charge dropped against alleged B.C. terrorists
- SCC rejects argument Omar Khadr was adult offender - CTV News
- Looking at your cell phone while driving not breaking Sask. law: judge
- Why elder abuse remains a ‘hidden epidemic’: Goar
- Barring evangelical law school’s graduates ‘not reasonable,’ argues federal government
- Shooting victim Kofi Patrong wins right to sue Toronto police
- The New York Times–Facebook Deal Is Here
- Man wins lawsuit against Toronto police board after 'carding' incident
- Steve Montador's family plans to sue NHL: reports
- Toronto lawyer suspended for five months for misconduct involving Roma refugees - CBC.ca
- Judge says Facebook has right to sue DLA Piper, other law firms for representing now-fugitive Ceglia
- Bankruptcy court rulings divide up Nortel billions - The Globe and Mail
- Two of seven sexual assault charges withdrawn in Jian Ghomeshi case - The Globe and Mail
- U.K. Supreme Court to offer on-demand video service of past cases
- California woman sues employer after being fired for deleting location-tracking app
- Legal innovation summit attendees are long on ideas but short in data
- Three Ontario boards ask for high school strikes to be declared ‘unlawful’
- Rachel Spence
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Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Tuesday, May 19, 2015 0 comments
Migrating from Windows Live Mail to MS-Outlook
Which email client does your law office use?
I raise this question, as the purchase of a new computer for my desktop has necessitated the migration of all my emails – around 20 Gigs worth – to my new machine.
Out of habit, if nothing else, we have used Windows Live Mail as my office’s email client of choice.
While I suspect MS-Outlook has long been most lawyers’ preferred email software, I was always fond of Outlook Express, the predecessor to Windows Live Mail. When OE was discontinued, we migrated to Windows Live Mail as the path of least resistance.
Windows Live Mail, however, has become increasingly clunky over the years, and key, “can’t live without them” features, such as the ability to use email stationary, have for unfathomable reasons, simply been eliminated from the software.
We worked around these limitations by continuing our use of older, legacy versions of this software. And it worked just fine.
As we discovered, however, Windows 8.1 does not appear to allow the installation of these legacy versions.
As a result, I have made a long-avoided migration to MS-Outlook.
The migration process was a rather simple, if time-consuming, three-step process.
I raise this question, as the purchase of a new computer for my desktop has necessitated the migration of all my emails – around 20 Gigs worth – to my new machine.
Out of habit, if nothing else, we have used Windows Live Mail as my office’s email client of choice.
While I suspect MS-Outlook has long been most lawyers’ preferred email software, I was always fond of Outlook Express, the predecessor to Windows Live Mail. When OE was discontinued, we migrated to Windows Live Mail as the path of least resistance.
Windows Live Mail, however, has become increasingly clunky over the years, and key, “can’t live without them” features, such as the ability to use email stationary, have for unfathomable reasons, simply been eliminated from the software.
We worked around these limitations by continuing our use of older, legacy versions of this software. And it worked just fine.
As we discovered, however, Windows 8.1 does not appear to allow the installation of these legacy versions.
As a result, I have made a long-avoided migration to MS-Outlook.
The migration process was a rather simple, if time-consuming, three-step process.
First, I exported all required emails from Windows Live Mail to a version of Outlook that was already installed on my old computer. Note that to use this method, it is necessary to have Outlook installed (with a profile set up) on the computer from which the export is being done;
Using Outlook on my old computer, I then exported all emails, via the resulting PST file, to our data server, where it will also be permanently archived for backup purposes;
Using Outlook on my new desktop, I imported the PST file from our data server, and my emails, including storage folders and subfolders, were restored.
My email life can now seamlessly carry on.
Outlook has numerous advantages over Windows Live Mail that were apparent even in this transition process.
Windows Live does not support exporting directly to our data server, for example. The software’s export function only allows saving to the desktop that hosts the program. This makes backing up and archiving a very cumbersome process.
The ability to export to a single PST file also has numerous advantages for archiving purposes.
So I am finally aboard the Outlook train.
Are there any other Windows Live Mail holdouts out there?
Outlook has numerous advantages over Windows Live Mail that were apparent even in this transition process.
Windows Live does not support exporting directly to our data server, for example. The software’s export function only allows saving to the desktop that hosts the program. This makes backing up and archiving a very cumbersome process.
The ability to export to a single PST file also has numerous advantages for archiving purposes.
So I am finally aboard the Outlook train.
Are there any other Windows Live Mail holdouts out there?
Visit our Toronto Law Office website: www.wiselaw.net
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Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Tuesday, May 19, 2015 0 comments
Labels: SlawTips
Monday, May 11, 2015
140Law - Legal Headlines for the Week of May 4, 2015
Here are the leading legal headlines from Wise Law on Twitter:
- Legal Aid seeks standing at penalty hearing for disgraced refugee lawyer | The Toronto Star
- Omar #law #legal (via @DrDawg)
- Omar Khadr's odds of winning US appeal look good, legal expert says - CBC.ca
- Egypt's Mubarak sentenced to 3 years in prison after retrial
- Tories push gun control changes through Parliament
- Omar Khadr's lawyer calls Harper 'bigot,' says he 'doesn't like Muslims'
- BBC News - Microsoft to stop producing Windows versions after Windows 10
- 5.9 Grams Of Pot Got Baltimore Man 20 Year Sentence
- AG Loretta Lynch announces ‘pattern and practice’ probe of Baltimore police practices
- ‘None have the right to legislate except Allah': U.K. Muslims told voting is a sin in election leaflets
- Court: Twins have different dads
- Ford scandal melodrama made Sandro Lisi case bigger than it should have been: DiManno
- Judge blasts evidence in trial of Rob Ford associate, hints entire case may be tainted
- Burlington doctor's licence revoked for sleeping with 3 patients
- Omar Khadr released, thanks courts and Canadian public for trusting him
- Police look into suspicious packages mailed to courts in Atlantic Canada
- Judge doesn’t buy that woman was too drunk to remember, convicts her of indecent act on plane
- Judge orders NHL Commissioner Bettman to testify in concussions lawsuit
- Toronto loosens rule for food trucks in city
- Federal suit says Marriott denied new mom lactation breaks because she’s a surrogate
- Suspicious packages sent to 17 court offices in Manitoba
- Suit filed against Pacquiao for not disclosing injury
- Ex-girlfriend sues Mayweather
- Omar Khadr bail decision delayed - Edmonton Journal
- For real Shawshank escapee, 56-year run is over
- Quebec judge says video of him in alleged drug deal was really just a meeting between lawyer and client
- Justices’ Opinions Grow in Size, Accessibility and Testiness, Study Finds
- Take control of CAS system, Ontario urged
- TWU decision unreasonable, federal government argues
- Bieber’s lawyers say Toronto limo driver made up story in lawsuit against singer
- The epic legal battle for Omar Khadr’s release
- Insulting police online banned by Quebec town
-Rachel Spence, Law Clerk
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Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Monday, May 11, 2015 0 comments
Monday, May 04, 2015
140 Law - Leading Legal Headlines for the Week of April 27, 2015
Here are the leading legal headlines for the week of April 27, 2015 from Wise Law on Twitter:
- Prisoner's window escape from Toronto courthouse was brief
- Canada’s first legal incubator opens at Ryerson
- Criminal Arrested After 'Liking' His Own Mugshot On Facebook - MTV
- Ottawa seeks emergency stay to stop Omar Khadr’s release
- Controversial lawyers Groia and Galati among newly elected benchers
- Bid Rigging trial: After complete rout, prosecution ponders next steps - Ottawa Citizen
- Traffic tickets: Online system proposed for Ontario
- Omar Khadr’s bail release not an issue for U.S., spokesperson says
- Rare move by Ontario appeal court overturns jury verdict
- Ontario Superior Court Awards Damages for Family Status Discrimination
- Prosecutor outlines charges in Freddie Gray's death
- SCC: Wrongfully convicted BC man can sue for damages - CTV News
- Legal scrappers Rocco Galati and Joseph Groia elected Law Society benchers | The Toronto Star
- Results: Bencher Election 2015 | The Law Society of Upper Canada
- Ontario Justice of the Peace fired for sexual harassment
- Guard covered security camera to hide allegedly drunk Rob Ford
- Mandatory minimum drug sentence appeal to be heard by Supreme Court
- 26 Months' Notice Awarded to Dependent Contractors
- Skip Child Support. Go to Jail. Lose Job. Repeat.
- Psychologists met in secret with Bush officials to help justify torture: report
- Conrad Black loses bid to have Supreme Court of Canada hear case over millions in back taxes
- B.C. teachers lose latest court fight on class size, composition
- Ten shocking details from the report on sexual misconduct in Canada's military
- Expert witnesses need not be independent, Supreme Court rules
- Province defends right to lay polygamy charge in Bountiful case
- Obese Canadians should be granted legal protection from discrimination, professor says
- Ontario law passes to let asthmatic kids carry inhalers in school
- Takeaways from oral arguments on same-sex marriage at US Supreme Court in Obergefell v. Hodges
- Chess, bridge and other ‘mind’ games are sports, British judge rules because the brain is a ‘muscle’
- ‘Tricky’ to predict who will replace Justice Rothstein
- Orangeville and Midland police offer up stations for Kijiji, Craigslist transactions
- No written notice of decision to ban Senate expenses for partisan purposes, Duffy trial hears
- Hearings into Justice of the Peace’s remarks should proceed, lawyer says | The Toronto Star
- Supreme Court of Canada to announce Thursday whether it will hear Conrad Black’s tax appeal
- LSUC AGM motion seeks to force articling jobs on firms
- Promised doctor-assisted dying law hasn’t materialized yet
- Mother-daughter Pink concert wasn’t an abuse of parental discretion, judge rules in custody tiff
- The James Holmes trial puts sanity on the stand
- Finland: Where going 14 km over the limit could land you with a $58,000 speeding ticket
-Rachel Spence, Law Clerk
Visit our Toronto Law Office website: www.wiselaw.net
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Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Monday, May 04, 2015 0 comments
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