Year: 2013 Archives

New e-filing system

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Announced:  Friday, 11/9/12  10:00 a.m. cst

Along with Mandatory e-Filing on the Horizon, there is going to be a new e-Filing system.  Announced today, Tyler Technologies (d/b/a “TexFile”) will take the place of NIC which operated e-filing in conjunction with multiple Electronic Filing Service Providers (EFSP’s), such as Prodoc and CaseFileExpress.  There are anticipated to be EFSP’s as well in the new system.

Member presentations

Family Law Technology CLE Wrapup, Austin, Texas
by mark i. unger

On December 13-14, 2012, members of the State Bar of Texas Computer & Technology section participated in the first ever Family Law Technology CLE “From No Tech to High Tech” in Austin, Texas.

 ‘Virtu’ Al Harrison and Michael Curran work the Computer & Tech Section Table at the Conference, offering their ‘Techxpertise’ in the section App and all things TechThis seminar, which was held at the AT&T Executive Conference Center on the

Create your own cloud

Love the cloud for data storage, but hate the security issues and recurring fees? You might consider The Transporter, a Kickstarter funded private cloud device, that allows remote file sharing and retrieval. Learn more here.

Pace of Innovation

Charles Hughes Smith (OfTwoMinds) has posted a very interesting short article (with charts) regarding innovation and the ability to profit from that innovation.

You should read the article, but for the impatient, I would summerize it as follows: As innovation spreads, and skills become more widely available (worldwide), the ability for one company to maintain a large “profit gap” over its competition diminishes more rapdily. In other words, with more of the planet able to compete with American companies, it stands to reason that the profit margin that those US companies used to achieve will not last as long. Commoditization has become institutionalized.

As an example, he sites Apple and the premium that it used to command over devices running the Microsoft operating system. Today, however, even though the iPad and iPhone created a new category in the tech industry, Google has been able to make comparable (or arguably better) devices for half the cost in just a few years.

Smith’s observation echos that of Daniel Boorstin in “The Discoverers” who noted that the speed and expense of communication set the pace for learning and innovation. The obvious example of that observation is the changes wrought by the Internet.

This increased pace of innovation highlights a conundrum for patent attorneys. As the pace of innovation increases, the “lag time” between when a technology is developed and when it gets patented becomes more accute. In other words, in a fast-paced (innovative) industry, patents get issued after the profit differential (per Smith) has disappeared along with the utility of that patent. Picking up scraps for that patent is left to the patent trolls. Perhaps in those fast-pased industries, a patent registration system or a deferred adjudication system (like Japan) might be a better fit.

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