Following the recent merger between PISCES and OSCRE Americas, OSCRE (the Open Standards Consortium for Real Estate), today announced its new Board of Directors which has been created to fully represent the geographic diversity and industry sectors covered by the new global organisation. In addition OSCRE also announces that Catherine Williams will continue as Chief Executive.
The Board now includes: Catherine Williams, Chief Executive of OSCRE; Andrew Lloyd, Managing Director, MDA SearchFlow Ltd, Bruce Kellogg, Senior Vice President Industry Relations, ARGUS Software Inc, Ted Stratis, Director Information Management Office, ING Real Estate, Craig Cuyer, Global Chief Information Officer, Cushman & Wakefield, Inc, Paul Albone, Head of IT, TM Property Service Ltd, Ed Lubinecki, Managing Director, RealFoundations, Ian Cullen, Co-founding Director, Investment Property Database (IPD), Robert Toothaker, IREM International President 2007, Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM), and Mick Flynn, Managing Director, Trace Solutions Ltd.
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Friday, December 18
by
Charles Christian
on Fri 18 Dec 2009 08:38 GMT
Thursday, December 17
by
Charles Christian
on Thu 17 Dec 2009 14:17 GMT
Jacqui de Gernier, most recently responsible for new business sales & account management in the south of England for Pilgrim Systems, has joined the sales team at Aderant. Before joining Pilgrim in April 2007, she spent seven years with Tikit and before that was with TFB.
In other Aderant news... • Aderant has secured two more wins for its Aderant Expert system. The Maitland Group, which provides legal, fiduciary and asset management services to corporations and high net worth families & individuals, has selected Aderant Expert in a win against Elite 3E. The Maitland Group has 12 offices throughout the UK, Europe and South Africa. And, 100 fee earner Florida law firm Trenam Kemker has selected Aderant Expert. Although the firm used one of Aderant's older products, it did review the market (including looking at competitor products) before selecting Expert. • Sydney-based Allens Arthur Robinson went live on Aderant Expert in one year across 14 offices in eight countries. The implementation also included Aderant's File Opening Workflow system.
by
Charles Christian
on Thu 17 Dec 2009 12:10 GMT
News from the Land Registry...
• The Land Registry's House Price Index is now live. www.landregistry.gov.uk • The Land Registry has also announced that the Business Gateway is now open to all customers beyond those selected for the initial pilot. The LR say... "Business Gateway is the B2B technology platform that allows you to access Land Registry services using XML via the Internet. We developed it in response to customers growing need to access our services directly from their Case Management Systems (CMS). This initial release of Business Gateway offers: 1.Information Services • Official Copy where Title Number is known (OC1) • Official Copy of documents referred to in the register (OC2) • Official Search of Whole with Priority (OS1) • Title number enquiry by property description • Land Charges Bankruptcy Search (K16) and 2. Network Service • Electronic Charge in Standard Form (create Charge (e-CSF) and make it effective) "Customer feedback during the course of the pilot so far has been invaluable, and we would like to thank all pilot participants for their contribution throughout this process. Many more of you have provided us with feedback and we would like to thank you for this too. The Business Gateway was initially aimed at conveyancers in the remortgage market who had a CMS, and who could benefit from further automation of their processes. This tended to be the higher volume conveyancers. "During the course of the project, the views of other conveyancers and their software vendors and other intermediary service providers were put to us, and highlighted further the need to broaden access.Having proved the technical resilience of the service during the initial pilot period, we are now in a position to offer increased access to the Business Gateway. The changes mean that the Business Gateway can be used by (amongst others): • Conveyancers • HIP providers • Property search or other intermediaries • Providers of hosted services • Debt recovery agencies "There are a number of intermediary solutions that are possible, and given that this is a new market for Business Gateway, we would like to exercise some caution until we are more familiar with this environment. As such, we would be pleased to discuss your solution with you and ensure the Business Gateway and the associated legal agreements are suitable. You will need to sign up to Land Registry portal to gain access to the Business Gateway, and those wishing to use the Electronic Charge in Standard form (e-CSF) will still need to enter into and be bound by the requirements of our Network Access Agreement. Please contact the Channel Partners Team on the email below for further details. Timescales There have been a number of changes as a result of the tests carried out during pilot, which will need to be implemented before we consider the pilot fully completed. • An improved Test System is currently being built that will allow easier access for a larger number of testers to overcome limitations found with the original test system. This is planned to be available at the end of January 2010. • Further software improvements are being implemented and will be released on 1st March 2010. • To help you with the new service, we are holding a Technical Workshop during the week of 25th January 2010. Please register your interest by email to the address below. "We now look forward to welcoming you to the Business Gateway. Please contact the Channel Partner Team on channel.partners@landregistry.gsi.gov.uk and one of our account managers will contact you to discuss the sign-up process. Wednesday, December 16
by
Charles Christian
on Wed 16 Dec 2009 13:57 GMT
The UK's IRIS software group intends to have certified support for Microsoft Windows 7 in all its Windows based products by the 2nd half of 2010. The company already supports Windows 7 within several of its legal and accountancy practice solutions. New versions of its accounting, payroll, charity, project management, membership and other solutions will adopt the new Microsoft operating system as part of the next two rounds of enhancements and updates.
by
Charles Christian
on Wed 16 Dec 2009 13:46 GMT
The December issue of the Legal Technology Insider newsletter (UK + EMEA edition) is out now. The print version should be hitting desktops from tomorrow and the digital issue is popping into email inboxes at this very moment. The next issue is out on 28th January.
Among other things, the December issue contains some interesting statistics on the potential wasted budgets spent on records management... According to new research carried out by records management specialists Legal RM, UK law firms could be paying seven times as much as they should on the off-site storage of their records. A sample of 21 top-50 firms revealed that between them they are currently spending a total of £7.7 million a year on off-site document storage. This figure only relates to actual storage, ‘ancillary costs’ (such as charges for registration, collection and delivery) are extra. Currently the firms have over 3 million boxes of deeds in storage and between them are registering 608,000 new files each year. However, while the average price per box is just £2.52 a year (in London prices average nearer £3.30) Chris Giles of Legal RM says the important metric is how many files and boxes firms are paying to store unnecessarily. For example, the survey also found only 61% of firms had document retention and destruction policies – and that less than half of them had actually implemented those policies. The next result was the average time each file was retained was 11.23 years, whereas according to Giles, at least 50% of those could be destroyed immediately, with a further 10% disposed of in each subsequent year. Giles calculates that if you multiply what firms are spending each year over the lifetime of their documents’ storage (in this sample £86 million) and compare what they could pay with proper lifecycle management (£12.8 million) there is an overspend – or wastage – of 85%. • Legal RM is holding its next Records Management Networking Event on 14th January (between 4:30pm-6:30pm) at the London offices of CMS Cameron McKenna. The session will be looking at the pricing policies of off-site storage vendors, including their ancillary charges. For details email Chris Giles on chris@legal-rm.com
by
Charles Christian
on Wed 16 Dec 2009 12:00 GMT
According to Rory Sutherland, the vice-chairman of advertising agency Ogilvy Group UK writing on his Campaign magazine blog, Accenture's decision to drop their sponsorship of Tiger Woods is wrong because because surely "Tiger's decision to outsouce sexual services to a range of competing
providers is in line with Management Consultancy's established best
practice?" not least because "Previously he had been tied to a monopoly Scandianvian supplier - with the cripplingly high social costs this usually entails." The post ends by saying "By sourcing girls locally, he was also reducing distribution costs and
helping the environment...... while allowing him to adopt a
best-of-breed approach to sexual delivery, rather than depending on a
single source."
You can read the full posting here http://tinyurl.com/yc835to
by
Charles Christian
on Wed 16 Dec 2009 08:36 GMT
When you were young, you often got book-tokens or record-tokens instead of gifts in your Christmas stocking – well today there is an alternative: a divorce-token or voucher.
It is the idea of London-based divorce lawyers Lloyd Platt & Company who have introduced a half or one hour Legal Advice Gift Voucher. The idea was prompted by a comment by a client’s relatives that they wished to make contribution towards their relative’s legal fees on divorce. In order to soften the fact that their relatives were in fact making such a contribution, Vanessa Lloyd Platt, senior partner of Lloyd Platt & Company, suggested that perhaps she would provide a 'gift voucher' for this purpose. The relatives were delighted, commenting they knew many others who'd also be interested in purchasing vouchers for members of their families – and so the gift idea began... According to the firm, the people requesting these vouchers have so far included... • Friends who having witnessed a decline in their friend’s relationship, want them to obtain advice and see the Gift Voucher as a subtle and less embarrassing way of dealing with the subject. The vouchers have provided an opportunity for relatives to make a contribution towards legal fees without feeling that they are undermining or encouraging the situation. • Others who have approached the firm have been both husbands and wives who have said that this is an ideal way that they can finally broach the subject that they no longer wish to be in the marriage, by purchasing such a Gift Voucher and suggesting that this would be the best way forward. • Mistresses have been enquiring as to the amounts that they can pay and vouchers that they can buy for their lovers to finally get on with the promise of divorcing their wives. • Parents and grandparents alike who are worried about their offspring have been buying them, declaring in some cases as they were purchasing them, that they had never liked a son-in-law/daughter-in-law in the first place. • Employers are buying the Gift Vouchers for their employees so that they can deal with their matrimonial problems and not bring them into the office. • Celebrities are buying them for their celebrity girlfriends instead of the usual handbag. • Agents in the world of media, sports and otherwise are buying them for their clients as a fait accompli to take legal advice instead of having to listen to endless stories of matrimonial unhappiness. (Are these called Tiger Vouchers? ...Ed) The firm adds "Whilst at first sight the issuing of Gift Vouchers for the ending of marriages seems to be somewhat unpalatable, perhaps it is just simply a sign of the times. Along with divorce cards, divorce parties and divorce flowers, the Divorce Gift Voucher seems a must." For details visit www.divorcesolicitors.com or phone: 020 8343 2998. These will then be dispatched by post and are valid for one year from the date of issue. Tuesday, December 15
by
Charles Christian
on Tue 15 Dec 2009 15:44 GMT
Boyes Turner, based in Reading, UK has selected Elite 3E to replace its legacy LexisNexis Axxia system. The firm included Aderant in its evaluation for an advanced financial and practice management system. Boyes Turner's finance director Jeremy Sleap said “Following a review of the market, we chose 3E as we believe that it gives us a flexible platform, which will develop with the firm over the coming decade.”
by
Charles Christian
on Tue 15 Dec 2009 09:00 GMT
Hammonds LLP says it has improved its fee
earner to secretary ratios from 3:1 to 4:1 with Bighand's digital dictation system assisting the firm to achieve this objective.
BigHand
is now used at all Hammonds UK offices plus the firm’s Brussels office. In
addition to the desktop software fee earners are able to submit dictation or
delegate tasks via their Blackberrys and then track progress also from their
smartphone. Bighand software is now set to be rolled out to Hammonds offices in
Spain, France and Germany. Monday, December 14
by
Charles Christian
on Mon 14 Dec 2009 16:00 GMT
Mercers, a long established Thames Valley firm of solicitors, has selected Linetime to replace their existing IRIS AIM Evolution system after a comprehensive evaluation process. Linetime will be supplying Liberate Practice Management and Case Management software to all users in the firm.
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