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VirtualCourthouse Issue
1.5
Groupware
Judge Arthur M. Monty Ahalt - July 1996
WordPerfect. Lotus 1-2-3, Quattro Pro dBASE, Harvard graphics have all become popular PC computer applications
which aid a lawyer in the handling and presentation of words and data on behalf of a client. Computer applications
are really nothing more than a group of DOS operating commands which are executed with the stroke of one key or the
click of one icon. This generation of computing software has enabled the legal profession to make great gains in
productivity. It is not uncommon to hear claims that a secretary, wordprocessor. or para-legal has increased
productivity by as much as 30%.
As helpful as these applications have been they do not provide solutions for an attorney's main problem--documents,
documents and more documents. While an attorney can store documents created in the personal computer in a logical
computer file, access to those files is limited to one or maybe two people and the word identification is limited
to eight characters. The use of eight characters requires the use of abbreviations which are probably only known by
the creator. In addition the logical structure of the file storage is also unique to the creator. Documents which
are not created in the office even when electronically created elsewhere are also difficult and time consuming to
convert to electronic format (scanning) and then to index and make available to groups of people. Solutions to
these problems have limped along with imaging systems and document management systems until the recent advent of
GROUPWARE.
GROUPWARE can be defined in several different ways. To some it is the next generation of e-mail. To others it is
the document add on to networking. Yet to others it is collaborative computing, To everyone it is a computer
program used on networked computer workstations( a PC) which leverages networking to increase productivity. The
formal definition of groupware according to Forester Research is -"Technology that communicates and organizes
unpredictable information, allowing dynamic groups to interact across time and space." (Sounds like this was
developed specifically for a law office). The three C's of groupware as reported recently in TECHREPORT in the
Washington Post are Communication. Collaboration and Coordination.
The first groupware was developed by Lotus Development Corp. as its product Lotus Notes-which currently dominates
the market. Groupware not only allows access to network resources but it allows people on the network to use
applications together and therefore to compute together. The compelling case for groupware in the legal profession
is the logical assembly of large groups of documents which can be accessed by designated groups of people, as large
or small as needed.
Lotus Notes is not the only player in Groupware. Microsoft, Novell also have developments which are either on the
Market or will be soon. You can get more information on the Internet at the following addresses:
http:www.lotus.com
http:www.novell.com/GroupWise/
and
http:www.acl.lanl.gov/ sunrise/sunrise. html
GROUPWARE (unlike software) is more than an application software such as WordPerfect, Quicken or Lotus 1-2-3. It is
similar to an operating platform such as DOS or Windows although it does not operate by itself and must be enabled
by an operating software. It does, however, enable the development of GROUPWARE applications (Notes applications)
which are designed, sold and marketed independent of the GROUPWARE creator (Lotus Development Corp.) Private
entreprenuers are currently developing many GROUPWARE applications which are starting to appear on the market.
Examples of Lotus Notes applications which have been developed by private companies for the legal profession are
JusticeLINK developed by Anderson Consulting for electronic filing and transfer of court documents. AxisLaw, a
product of Enterprise Computing, is a Notes application which handles all documents, calendering and accounting for
personal injury, social security, and workers compensation cases. The Rust Consulting Group recently announced The
release of the JFS Litigators's Notebook which allows the documents and working notes for a case to be placed in a
laptop computer and shared with attorneys on the case.
What equipment do you need to take advantage of Groupware? A workstation with a Pentium processor with at least 75
MHz in speed, 500 MB of hard drive capacity, 8 MB of memory, a 28.8 modem and a 15" monitor. The workstation must
be connected to a LAN (local area network) or a VAN (value added network). If you are connected to a LAN, it must
have a server -- a computer with a Pentium processor running at least 100 MHz, with a hard disk with at least 1 GB
(1,000 MB) capacity and 16 MB of memory. The LAN must have network software such as Novel and Lotus Notes
Groupware. If you are connected to a VAN such as JusticeLINK or in the future a Bar Association VAN, then you do
not need the private network server.
FUNNY PLEADINGS AND THINGS
Kids have a down to earth and sometimes funny way of looking at the law. Here is a collection of some of those
observations collected during the 25 years working with law related education in the schools of Maryland:
"A good thing to remember about needing a lawyer is don't."
"Because of computers, we won't need lawyers in a few hundred years. Just wait and see."
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