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Law Practice Magazine — July/August 2006

Issue Cover Law Practice Magazine Logo

PERSONAL TECHNOLOGY

 

 

Features

Personal Technology Profiles

PERSONAL PROFILE: Don Degnan

Don Degnan
Holland & Hart LLP
Partner and Member of Management Committee
Boulder, Colorado

 

PROFESSIONAL LIFE

Practice focus: IP litigation.

 

EVERYDAY TECHNOLOGY

Laptop or desktop: Laptop. (Do they still make desktops?)

Wired or wireless: Wired while at my desk, but wireless throughout the office, at home and everywhere else (including my favorite café).

Browser: Internet Explorer.

E-mail: Outlook.

Search engine: Google. (Do people really use Yahoo anymore?)

Antivirus: Symantec.

Backups: Snap Mirror to back up our network. I also have two external hard drives for backups, photos, music, etc.

Security on the road: Password is it.

Remote access: Typically VPN directly into our network. I also use Tarantella, which is Web-based and essentially shoves your desktop across an Internet connection.

Cell phone or PDA: BlackBerry.

Substantive tools: Calendaring: Outlook; Case tracking: EasyDocket, our in-house docketing system; Document assembly: Microsoft Word macros; Litigation notebook: CaseMap (www.casesoft.com), with scans of all pleadings and docs in PDF format organized on a separate network drive; Group tools: Adobe Acrobat 7.0; Document management software: DeskSite 8.0 and an electronic pleading file in PDF format; Presentation software: PowerPoint.

Other favorites: Google Earth, Picasa, Google's picture organizer, and iTunes.

Who do you call when you need help or repairs? Travis, our tech support guy in Boulder. Otherwise, I dial 8400, which hooks me up with our main tech support group in our Denver office.

Greatest technology challenge: E-mail. I can't imagine life without it, but it has become an enormous time drain. Maybe I'm just weak, but I find myself checking e-mail way more often than I should. Inevitably, I get sucked into the e-mail black hole and review all the new e-mails, which distracts me from the more important tasks I needed to complete that day. On top of that, the sheer volume of e-mails we receive is debilitating. People: Think before you hit “Reply to All.” Give me the critical information I need in the Subject line, and tell me—specifically— what action you want me to take in response to your e-mail.

Pet technology peeve: Businesses and hotels that do not have high-speed Wi-Fi access throughout their properties—and getting dropped on cell calls as a result of spotty cell reception.

Embarrassing technology secret: I still keep an old-school Rolodex of business cards.

Working philosophy when it comes to technology: Less is more.

 

Additional Technology Profiles

Law Practice asked four different lawyers, from four very different practice settings, to tell us how they use technology every day. Read how Don Degnan, Terrence Brady, Brian Lewis and Susan Freya Olive put their tech tools to work.

LP

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