May It Please The Court |
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Here’s a primer on how to use MIPTC: Where You Can Read (and hear) “All About It.” MIPTC is available on your friendly neighborhood computer, be it a Mac or PC. You can also get it on your PDA. Yep, MIPTC is PDA-friendly and available on the very small screen. We’re also audio-ready – you can hear us on your headphones, speakers, iPod or Pocket PC. Registered Trademark and Creative Commons. You may have also noticed that MIPTC is trademarked – both our name and the Judge, so no copying without permission. The rest is governed by a Creative Commons license. Copy the text and audio at will, just give MIPTC credit. Quote of the Day and Posts. Each post is linked with
the Quote of the Day, so if you want to see the quote that I picked
to go with the particular post you’re reading, then click the
Permalink Posts. Most of the time I post about cases and news articles that fall within my practice areas – business litigation, including environmental, contract disputes, intellectual property (patent, copyright and trademark litigation), tax and international trade. Sometimes, though, items just catch my eye, and you’re going to see it in the blog, warts and all. If you have some suggestions, send me an email. The links in my posts open new windows in Windows. That way, you can find your way back to where you started easily. If you don’t like new windows popping open, sorry; it was a choice I made when we set up the blog, and it seems to have worked well so far. Podcast. Audio recordings of each Quote of the Day and Post narrated by J. Craig Williams. You can either click on this link to listen to the recording, or by accessing MIPTC’s Podcast feed, you can download them to your iPod or Pocket PC and take them on the road with you. You’re no longer tied to your computer terminal. Comments. Go right ahead. Early and often as far as I’m concerned. Comments that have no relationship to the post will be deleted. Comments that are judged inappropriate will likely be deleted. I sometimes will comment on your comment if you raise a point that should be addressed. Sometimes I comment on one of my posts as a follow-up if I don’t want to draft an entire new post. Here’s a couple of tips on using the Comment feature.
If you want to put a link in your Comment, click on the picture of the
world. Then in the first dialog box, put in the text you want highlighted
as a hyperlink. Click OK, then in the second dialog box, put in the
link (using the entire http:// … address), click OK again, and
you’re done. The B, I and U symbols to the left are the same ones
you use in your word processor to bold, italicize
and underline text. The emoticon button Email. When you click on the link J. Craig Williams, it will start up your email program, and the address will read jcraigwms at wlf-law.com. Remove the “[space] at [space]” between jcraigwms and wlf-law.com and replace it an @ symbol, and you’re in business. Let me know what you think. I try to respond to each email. Corrections. Yep. I make ‘em. Do you know about all of them? Nope. Not if they’re just spelling or grammatical. If they’re substantive corrections, I’ll mostly admit to it and make the correction. Sometimes the correction is in the post, sometimes in the Comment. No rhyme or reason, just the correction. Left nav bar.
Bottom of the Page Navigation. The links at the bottom take you in to various pages on our law firm’s website, WLF | The Williams Law Firm, PC. Please feel welcome to visit. |
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