Matthew Bender Online was one of the earliest digital successors to legal treatises on cd-rom. When it was released in the early 1990s, MBOnline offered an elegantly simple interface and eliminated the technical idiosyncrasies ( I almost wrote atrocities) of managing networked cd-roms. It allowed lawyers to have digital access to multi-volume treatises. But it was
Two days after writing the “glass ceiling” story about “good girls revolting” at Newsweek in 1970, I had the opportunity and good fortune to have lunch with the CEO of Wolters Kluwer. I am embarrassed to admit that until recently, I had not been aware that the CEO of any
Lexis Quietly Acquires a Collection for Oxford University Press
This past week Lexis quietly acquired the a collection of 55 titles from Oxford University Press US Law Division. Now before you get too excited here’s the bummer – the collection does not include one of my personal favorites, the Oxford Dictionary of American Legal Quotations by
My first reaction to the LexisNexis purchase of Knowledge Mosaic was. “but why?” Doesn’t Lexis already have much of the same content as KM in their own mega system, so why buy redundant content? My second reaction was a chill running down my spine as I recalled the last time a mega vendor purchased a small