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Harris County Robert W. Hainsworth Law Library

1019 Congress
Houston, Texas 77002
7137555183

Harris County Law Library

Harris County Robert W. Hainsworth Law Library

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Ex Libris Juris - HCLL Blog

Microsoft Excel for Lawyers: Potential Pitfalls and the Promises of Proficiency

December 27, 2016 Heather Holmes

Several Tech Tuesday blog posts have provided tips for using Microsoft Word in the practice of law. Today's tech tip focuses on Excel, another popular program in the Microsoft Office suite.

Excel is a data management tool used for organizing, calculating, graphing, and sharing tabular information. The importance of developing proficiency in the use of Excel cannot be overstated. Knowing how to manipulate spreadsheets is just as important as properly formatting a written document, and without a firm understanding of how Excel works, embarrassing and potentially costly errors can result. Consider the following: 

When Barclays sent over its offer to buy up Lehman Brothers in the immediate wake of the firm's September 2008 collapse, it did so with an Excel spreadsheet. The makers of the spreadsheet, which detailed Lehman's assets and what Barclays was willing to buy, hid, rather than deleted, nearly 200 cells. But when a junior law associate at Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton converted the Excel file to a PDF and e-mailed it over to the bankruptcy court, the hidden parts of the spreadsheet reappeared. The result: Along with the parts of Lehman Barclays wanted, the British bank was also forced to swallow losses on an additional 179 toxic deals it never intended to buy.

 -- From Stephen Gandel, writing in Fortune magazine, April 17, 2013

This cautionary tale is just one example of how Excel has been used improperly, with very negative consequences. This is obviously a mistake of greater magnitude than most attorneys encounter on an average day, but nonetheless, it does illustrate the perils of using software improperly.

If you're interested in learning how to use Excel in the practice of law, keep an eye on the LTI Course Catalog to find out when the Harris County Law Library will offer a CLE program on Excel for Lawyers. In the meantime, visit the website of Excel Esquire, where you will learn many practical tips for generating Bates numbers, using pivot tables, sorting metadata, and much more.

In Legal Tech Institute, Tech Tips, Tech Tuesday Tags Technology, Legal Tech

New Features on Lexis Advance Coming in January 2017

December 13, 2016 HarrisCounty LawLibrary

Today, the Legal Tech Institute at Harris County Law Library hosted a training session called Introduction to Lexis Advance. This Vendor Visit provided a nice overview of basic search functions within Lexis Advance and featured many tips and tricks for more effectively locating cases and statutes. The session also offered a preview of upgrades that will be added to the Law Library's Lexis subscription in January. Upgrades include:

  • National Primary Plus - National cases, statutes, administrative and agency materials plus all law reviews and journals
  • National Briefs, Pleadings, and Motions - includes documents from the most dynamic and high-stakes practice areas of litigation
  • National Verdicts and Settlements - including IDEX and American Lawyer Media (ALM) VerdictSearch
  • News - robust collection of all LexisNexis news sources 
  • Matthew Bender Federal Practice Forms - provides a complete range of litigation forms needed for practice in any federal court from federal district courts through and including the Supreme Court of the United States 
  • Lexis for Microsoft Office

The Legal Tech Institute will offer training sessions in the new year to introduce these and other features of Lexis Advance. Check the LTI Course Catalog for details about Vendor Visits and the rest of our legal tech CLE programs. 

In Featured Resources, Legal Tech Institute, Tech Tips, Tech Tuesday, Research Tips Tags Technology, Lexis

Blending Your Legal Research, a Legal Tech InStitute CLE

December 6, 2016 HarrisCounty LawLibrary

Join us at noon on Thursday, December 8, 2016 for a one-hour CLE entitled Blending Your Legal Research. This program, the latest course offering of the Legal Tech Institute at Harris County Law Library, will emphasize the value of using free online research tools to develop more effective research strategies, especially when combined with Westlaw and Lexis, two of the legal databases offered free of charge to Law Library visitors. This "blending" of legal research tools and strategies will be the focus of the hour, and we're happy to welcome two special guests from the Texas State Law Library to help us demonstrate this approach.  

Librarians from the TxSLL will talk about their Digital Collection, which includes a whole library of eBooks from Lexis. They will demonstrate how to access these resources remotely with a TxSLL library card, which you can register for onsite on the day of the program.

Those who attend in person or who view the live stream of this presentation on the Harris County Law Library's YouTube channel will be eligible for one hour of CLE credit.

To enroll in this course, please visit the LTI website. We hope to see you there!

In Legal Tech Institute, Research Tips, Tech Tips, Tech Tuesday

Master Microsoft Word at the Harris County Law Library's Legal Tech Institute

November 15, 2016 Heather Holmes

The Legal Tech Institute at Harris County Law Library is offering a free CLE program this Thursday, November 17th, at 12:00 pm. Join us as we present Microsoft Word for Lawyers and Other Law Types, and ramp up your productivity in just one hour. Learn time-saving tips for drafting legal documents more efficiently. Automate routine tasks, and eliminate the frustration of using Word in your daily practice. Become a Microsoft Word power user!

This practical, skills-based presentation will be customized for the needs of today's legal professionals and is guaranteed to make your work easier. Please join us!  For details and to register for this course, please visit the Legal Tech Institute Events page.

In Events, Tech Tips, Tech Tuesday, Research Tips, Legal Tech Institute Tags Legal Tech
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Ex Libris Juris - HCLL Blog RSS

What’s behind the name? “Ex Libris Juris” is Latin for “from the books of law” and much of the information here will relate to the legal information collected and curated by the Law Library. Additionally, “Ex Libris” has long appeared on bookplates – labels appearing inside the front cover of books – and has acquired the connoted meaning “from the library of” to show ownership of the book. Using this connotation, the phrase becomes “from the library of law” and better describes the posts about digital resources, event announcements, and research tips that will regularly appear here.

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