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Showing posts with label Tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tech. Show all posts

Friday, December 12, 2014

#BREAKING Jesse Jackass and Union goons Storm #Apple Silicon Valley Campus…

Jesse Jackson

Jesse Jackson’s gazillionth racial shakedown.
As rain pummeled the Bay Area, a group of protesters stormed Apple’s campus Thursday, calling for the tech giant to help the service workers who keep its campus humming make a better living.
Rallied by United Service Workers West and the Rev. Jesse Jackson, more than 100 people gathered at Apple’s Cupertino headquarters to draw attention to the valley’s broad use of contract workers, who carry out many tasks on corporate campuses but often make a fraction of what tech workers do. During a brief but lively demonstration, protesters dressed in plastic purple ponchos milled outside in the rain, breaking out frequently into call-and-response chants.
The energy in the crowd mounted when Jackson arrived, directing the demonstrators to repeat after him word for word: “We marvel at the growth of high tech and biotech, but we are the foundation.”
Guided by the civil rights leader, the crowd continued: “We fight today in the rain for job security and justice.”
After Jackson left for the airport, the protesters marched into an Apple building to deliver a petition, signed by 20,000 people, which calls for the company to lead a charge for better working conditions for service workers in the Silicon Valley. Emboldened, the protesters crowded the lobby chanting “Sí se puede” (“Yes, we can”) and waved a sign reading, “Apple dodges taxes, we pay the price,” as Apple employees peered down on the scene from upper floors. After a few minutes, a screeching alarm ushered the protesters back out in the rain.
United Service Workers West, a regional arm of the Service Employees International Union, has placed a particular emphasis on the security guards who work on Apple’s campus. The union hopes to organize the guards and, in the interim, is prodding Apple to use a different contractor.
HT Weselzippers

Thursday, August 21, 2014

How Not to Screw Up Tech Installations

Bread, cheese, and communication are part of the equation.

, Law Technology News
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A panel of IT professionals shared helpful hints on how to successfully distribute legal technology initiatives at a Tuesday panel at the annual International Legal Technology Association conference at the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center in Nashville.
Ways To Succeed or Screw Up Your Legal Tech Deployments” featuredBrownie Davis, manager of software and applications development at Fish & Richardson; Charlene LeMaire, principal and chief learning officer at Traveling Coaches Inc.; John Jelderks, director of IT at Barack Ferrazzano Kirschbaum & Nagelberg; and Sherry Kappel, chief consiliaria (a Latin word for trusted advisor or counselor, the company says) at Litera Corp. Scott Barrett, patent prosecution training administrator at Fish & Richardson, moderated the panel.


Read more: http://www.lawtechnologynews.com/id=1202667333939/How-Not-to-Screw-Up-Tech-Installations#ixzz3B491JHmQ

Wednesday, August 06, 2014

High-tech traffic lights could reshape the future of driving



High-tech traffic lights could reshape the future of driving

SiemensTrafficLight.jpg
Siemens AG
Imagine driving into Cleveland on Aug. 5, 1914, and being greeted at the intersection of Euclid Avenue and East 105th Street by a strange glowing orb that was put there to tell you when to go and when to stop.
Fast-forward exactly 100 years, and traffic lights serve the same basic purpose. We’re still sitting at an intersection, waiting for the light to turn green.
Now, several experts are wondering if traffic lights can be improved, or whether they will even have a place in a future society where vehicles can think, react and drive on their own.
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Saturday, April 26, 2014

Lawyers need to get techy whether they want to or not!

image
U.S. District Judge Shira Scheindlin urged lawyers to become more tech-savvy to avoid being held ethically liable for losing confidential client data. AP Photo/Richard Drew
Federal judges are becoming much more sophisticated about technology—and they're growing increasingly impatient with attorneys who are failing to keep up.
Indeed, U.S. Magistrate Judge James C. Francis of New York's Southern District—one of a panel of four "cyberstar" federal judges who spoke on the future of law and technology at LegalTech New York 2014—was among the most concerned regarding lawyers who are clueless about the latest in technology.
Francis said he sees technological advances like e-discovery as so critical to the courtroom that he views attorneys who are unaware of its nuances as essentially engaging in a slow career suicide.
"E-discovery is pervasive. It's like understanding civil procedure," Francis said. "You're not going to be a civil litigator without understanding the rules of civil procedure. Similarly, you're no longer going to be able to conduct litigation of any complexity without understanding e-discovery."

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