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Denise Howell Denise Howell
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Dennis M. Kennedy Dennis M. Kennedy
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Tom Mighell Tom Mighell
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Marty Schwimmer Marty Schwimmer
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Ernest Svenson Ernest Svenson
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Denise Howell is a seasoned appellate and intellectual property litigator based in Los Angeles. Denise writes one of the first and most popular law-related blogs, Bag and Baggage, coined the term "blawg" and helped pioneer podcasting for lawyers. Microcontent obsessed since 2001, she is frequently quoted in the media on legal issues involving intellectual property and technology law. "Sound Policy" is Denise's show at IT Conversations, and it's also what she hopes results from the briefs she submits to court. Email Denise at dhowell@gmail.com.

Dennis Kennedy is a computer lawyer and legal technology expert based in St. Louis, Missouri. An award-winning author, a frequent speaker and a widely-read blogger, he has more than 300 publications on legal, technology and Internet topics, many of which are collected in his e-books. Dennis has been described as someone who knows almost every rock song in existence and, more importantly, how they apply to technology and law. Email Dennis at his gmail address.

Tom Mighell is Senior Counsel and Litigation Technology Support Coordinator at Cowles & Thompson in Dallas. He has published the Internet Legal Research Weekly newsletter since 2000 and blogged about the Internet and legal technology at Inter Alia since August of 2002. With Tom's singing, Ernie on guitar and Dennis' encylopedic knowledge of rock music, we may have the beginnings of a good band, if this whole blog thing doesn't work out. Email Tom at tmighell@swbell.net.

Marty Schwimmer left a partnership in the largest trademark practice in the world and founded Schwimmer Mitchell, a full-service IP micro-boutique in Westchester County, New York, where he represents owners of famous and not yet famous trademarks. He founded The Trademark Blog, the first IP law blog and the one with the most pictures. He is the first to come in and the last to leave in his firm. Email Marty at marty@schwimmerlegal.com.

Ernest Svenson practices law with a mid-sized law firm in New Orleans, specializing in business-related lawsuits. Most of his practice takes place in federal court, especially the Eastern District. He is best known for his weblog Ernie the Attorney, which he started as an experiment. Like many experiments it got out of control. Nevertheless, he continues to practice law and, occasionally, to seek enlightenment. Email Ernest at esvenson@gmail.com.
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October 12, 2005

Thinking In Search

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Posted by Denise Howell

I expect people (Tom?) do this a lot, I just noticed it this morning and realized I do it all the time: thinking in search. What it is: absently stringing together queries in your head that you need to plug in the next time you're in front of a search engine, in order to get things done in work and life. At the moment, mine have to do with an obscure California statute, and Snoopy.

Comments (2) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Technology


COMMENTS

1. ask osk on October 14, 2005 11:15 AM writes...

thinking in search...check
usually when i am driving down the road, i see dozens of visual reminders of subjects to search because they seem life changing at that moment...anything to get out of driving in LA traffic i guess...problem is writing and driving don't mix. guess i will just go to a meeting instead...its either that or get an assistant to torment. i can picture myself with my very own personal "Smithers"

thank you for your accurate insight denise

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2. Elandra on October 17, 2005 6:30 AM writes...

Uh... no. Not even a little bit. After years of spending (wasting) time on the net I'm still thinking in English.

Then again, that's not necessarily a good thing since I also frequently suffer from search-engine mind-wipe. I bring up Firefox and in the 0.2 second it takes to load Google, I've totally forgotten what it was I was going to look up in the first place.

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