Volume 2 • Issue 2 (Summer 2000)
Coleen M. Barger, Foreword
An
Environment of Change
George Nicholson, A Vision of the Future
of Appellate Practice and Process
Fredric I. Lederer, The Effect of Courtroom Technologies on and in Appellate Proceedings and Courtrooms
The
Evolution of Research
Lynn Foster & Bruce Kennedy, Technological Developments in Legal
Research
Robert C. Berring, Legal Research and the World of Thinkable Thoughts
The
Digital Record
Bradley J. Hillis, A Review of Electronic Court Filing in the United
States
Roger Philip Kerans & Patrick Keys, Use of Electronic Appeal Transcripts in the Alberta Court of Appeal
Deborah Leonard Parker, Electronic Filing in North Carolina: Using the Internet Instead of the Interstate
Briefing
and Oral Argument
Philip A. Talmadge, New Technologies and Appellate Practice
Marilyn Devin, CD-ROM Briefs: Are We There Yet?
Edward Toussaint, Minnesota Court of Appeals Hears Oral Argument via Interactive Teleconferencing Technology
Stephen J. McEwen, Jr., TV or not TV: The Telecast of Appellate Arguments in Pennsylvania
The
Decisionmaking Process
Robert C. Owen & Melissa Mather, Thawing Out the "Cold Record":
Some Thoughts
on How Videotaped Records May Affect Traditional Standards of Deference
on
Direct and Collateral Review
J. Thomas Sullivan, Redefining Rehearing: "Previewing" Appellate Decisions Online
The
Changing Culture
Michael R. Murphy, Collegiality and Technology
Henry H. Perritt, Jr., & Ronald W. Staudt, The 1% Solution: American Judges Must Enter the Internet Age
Revised 5/1/2006