Here is a quick tip that I use all the time when I am typing on my iPad's on-screen keyboard. When you need to insert a quotation mark, the official way to do it is to tap the key that with the label .?123 and then tap the key with the quotation mark on it. But that is two motions — first tapping the key in the corner of the left side of the screen, and then tapping the key with the quotation mark near the right side. There is a faster way to do it that only involves one simple swipe.
To do this, press down on the key that has a question mark at the top and a period at the bottom, and then quickly move your finger up a little bit. You will see a quotation mark appear in a pop-up window, and just slide up a tiny bit to turn that quotation mark blue to indicate that you have selected it, and then let go. Bingo: instant quotation mark with a single swipe, and without having to press one key on one side of the keyboard and another key on another side of the keyboard.
If you want a single quote mark instead of a double quote mark, you can also use one swipe to do that. The only difference is that you swipe up from the key just to the left, the one with the exclamation mark and the comma. Tap down, quickly swipe up, let go, and then say hello to your newly inserted punctuation mark.
Those are the only two iPad keys that let you use that quick swipe up gesture, but keep in mind that you can hold down on many other keys for about a second and then swipe up to access additional characters. For example, hold down the E key to get the letter E with different accents on it, useful for typing in foreign languages.
One hidden mark useful for lawyers: the section mark. To access it, tap the .?123 key, then hold down the ampersand key. After a second you will see a § floating in a window just above the & key, and you can swipe up to select that section mark.
I am excited to welcome Connected Data as a new sponsor of iPhone J.D. The company has come up with a fantastic new product — the Transporter — that attorneys are going to love. It provides online file storage that is mirrored locally on your computers. Sounds like Dropbox, right? But unlike Dropbox, you own the server hardware so your files are 100% secure without your confidential documents being in the possession of a third party, and the product is designed from the ground up to make sharing and backup easy.
The Transporter itself is a well-designed and functional piece of hardware, which comes as no surprise if you are familiar with the Drobo, a popular storage device that was developed by many people who now work for Connected Data including its CEO. It has a unique, cone-like shape. It is about 5 1/2 inches tall and about 4 inches in diameter, so it doesn’t take up much space. The Transporter comes with an ethernet cord to connect it directly to your network, or you can get an optional wireless adapter. At my house, I use an Apple AirPort Extreme Base Station to provide Wi-Fi, and so I simply plugged the Transporter into an Ethernet port.
The Transporter has a lit band surrounding it. You can dim or turn it off if you find it distracting, but the light provides you with status information. For example, the band is solid blue when idle, pulsating blue when transferring data, pulsating yellow if disk space is low (or red if the disk is full), flashing red to yellow if there is no Internet connection, etc.
Installing the software on either a Mac or PC is simple. Once
installed, you will see a folder on your computer called Connected Data
to which you can drag your files. It comes with default sub-folders
such as “Documents,” “Photos” and “Home Movies” but you can create your
own folders and rename those if you want. Files copied to one of your
Connected Data folders are then copied over to the Transporter itself.
For example, at my office I can use my PC to create a folder called “Smith v Jones” and move over my files — correspondence, pleadings, research, etc. A local copy of those files remains on my PC for fast access, but the files are also encrypted and then stored on the Transporter that is connected to my home network. On my home computer, a “Smith v Jones” folder is created with all of the files copied over to it, so anything that I am working on at my office will be there at home if I need to access it later.
As I noted before, this sounds a lot like Dropbox, which is a compliment because Dropbox is great. But the Transporter offers several advantages over Dropbox.
First, the Transporter is secure. I only use my Dropbox to store “public” documents such as pleadings because you just never know what is going to happen to confidential documents in the possession of a third party. But with the Transporter, you own the hardware on which your files are stored, so you can feel comfortable putting your confidential attorney-client and work product documents there. Documents are sent from your computer to the Transporter using industry-standard AES 256-bit Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) encryption. You can manage your Transporter(s) via the Connected Data website, but Connected Data does not see the contents of any of your files. Your files are not located on any of the Connected Data servers, but instead stay on your Transporter hardware.
Second, the Transporter gives you more space at less cost. Dropbox provides you with 2GB for free, or you can pay $99 a year for 100 GB, $199 a year for 200 GB or $499 a year for 500 GB. And you need to keep paying, month after month, year after year. With the Transporter, you just buy the hardware once and there are no subscription fees. You can get a Transporter with 1 TB of space for only $299, 2 TB of space for $399, or you can even get a $199 Transporter with no hard drive so that you can choose a 2.5″ SATA hard drive from whatever drive manufacturer you trust the most.
Third, the Transporter lets you easily add more storage, either by upgrading to a larger hard drive, or by buying an additional Transporter.
Fourth, you can decide what files to store locally and what files to store on the Transporter. With Dropbox, you have a local copy of every file in your Dropbox, which is fine if you are using a free 2GB Dropbox or perhaps the 100GB Dropbox, but if you go larger it takes up a lot of space on your local drive. With the Transporter, you can choose to have certain folders synced locally for faster access and keep other folders only on the Transporter so that they don’t take up space on your hard drive. The default setting is that the Transporter will keep local copies on your computer of folders that are less than 10 GB, a setting that seems reasonable to me so I haven’t changed it, but you can adjust that as you like. And as noted, you can also explicitly state that certain folders should or should not be stored on your local drive. If you use a computer that does not have much drive space, such as a MacBook Air or other computer with an SSD drive, you can tweak the settings as appropriate.
Fifth, you can use multiple Transporters to create backups. You can share a folder with someone else who has a Transporter and a copy of the folder will be kept on his Transporter as well. Or, you can buy an additional Transporter and choose to share a folder with that Transporter. For example, you can keep one Transporter connected to the network in your main office and another Transporter connected to the network in a satellite office. Tell the Transporter software to copy some or all of your folders to that second device, and that way even if there is a disaster at your main office and both your computer and the first Transporter are destroyed, you still have a copy of your folders on the Transporter at your satellite office. Thus, Transporter offers you the same off-site backup security that you get by paying for an account with a company like Backblaze or Carbonite.
Many attorneys like to use Dropbox because it makes it easy to share files and folders. The Transporter also does a great job with sharing files with others, whether they are in your office or around the world. You can give one other person, or a team of people, access to folders on your Transporter, and they can access and work on files on that folder but they won’t have access to other folders. Likewise, someone else can give you access to a folder on their Transporter, and the contents show up in your own Connected Data folder. So you can either use one Transporter for your entire team (or perhaps even your entire office), or you can use multiple Transporters with different people having access to different folders.
I should note that the Transporter handles local files a little
differently than Dropbox. With Dropbox, you see a folder on your hard
drive that contains your Dropbox files. If you drag a file from your
desktop to your Dropbox folder, the file is moved from the desktop to
the folder. The local Transporter folder works like a virtual external hard
drive, so if you drag a file from your desktop, the original file stays on your desktop and a copy is placed in your Transporter folder on your computer. (And then that file is encrypted and stored on the Transporter hardware.) For people who share a lot of folders, this is a safety feature because someone else with access to one of your Transporter folders has the ability to delete a file, and if they do so you might want to go back and get the original file. But right now, I only have a few shared folders and I am mostly using the Transporter to sync folders between my work and home computer, so I have been moving files to the trash after I put a copy in a Transporter folder.
The Transporter is still a new product. Last year, it was the subject of a successful Kickstarter campaign, and the company just started shipping Transporters in February of 2013. The company sent me a free review unit so that I could try out the product in advance of this sponsorship, and I just received a second free review unit so that I can test using one Transporter to store backup copies of folders. (One thing that every attorney in New Orleans learned during Hurricane Katrina is the importance of off-site backup.) While the software on my PC and my Mac works great, the iPhone/iPad app is still in beta testing and should be ready in a few weeks. Once the app is available and I have tried it out, I’ll post about my experiences. For anyone like me who depends upon access to files on an iPad, that app is a critical part of the usefulness of the Transporter.
But even though this product is new, I am very excited about it. In my one week of testing so far, it has worked great, and once the iOS app is released, the Transporter may well change the way that I work with files. Transporter offers the advantages of traditional cloud storage while offering much more storage at much less cost, provides the enhanced security of an external hard drive in your locked office, and allows you to use additional Transporters to get the same protection that you would otherwise have to pay for on a monhtly basis with an off-site storage company.
Thanks again to Connected Data for sponsoring iPhone J.D. this month, and kudos for coming up with such a useful product.
Earlier this week, I was a guest on Arizona attorney John Skiba’s JD Blogger podcast, a podcast geared at attorneys who use blogs, podcasts, or other social media to market themselves. I talked about the history of iPhone J.D. and my blogging workflow, and even recommended a few apps that will be very familiar to many iPhone J.D. readers. You can click here to get to the page where you can listen to the podcast episode or subscribe to the JD Blogger podcast. And now, the news of note from the past week:
St. Louis attorney Dennis Kennedy analyzes whether lawyers should create apps to promote their law practice in an article for the ABA Journal. The current crop of apps, he notes, “seem to fall into two categories: big-firm apps and auto-accident-firm apps.” I think it makes more sense to create a mobile-friendly website than a dedicated app, but I certainly don’t pretend to be a marketing expert.
I seems that I mention California attorney David Sparks every week in In the news, but he can’t seem to stop posting useful tips. This week he recommends using Siri to quickly calculate dates on the iPhone, a great tip and something that I do all the time … although I also still like to use DaysFrom.
This week, Apple and numerous other businesses filed amicus briefs with the U.S. Supreme Court in the two same-sex marriage cases that are being argued this month. On Wednesday, Apple and others filed a brief opposing the Defense of Marriage Act in United States v. Windsor, a case that will be argued on March 27. On Thursday, Apple and others filed a brief opposing California’s Proposition 8 ban on same-sex marriages in Hollingsworth v. Perry, a case that will be argued on March 26. Those two links are to the SCOTUSblog pages that provide links to briefs; as of early Friday morning, the Apple amicus briefs were not yet posted, but I imagine that they will be soon.
Good Technology software is used by half of the Fortune 100 and many law firms to provide enhanced security for mobile devices. This week, Good announced that 77% of all of its mobile device activations in the last quarter were iPhones and iPads, with Android accounting for nearly all of the rest.
Bryan Chaffin of The Mac Observer started a series called “Meet the Board” that will profile each of the eight directors on Apple’s board. This week was the first entry, a profile of Disney CEO Bob Iger.
If you lose your iPhone in New York, you’ll be pleased to know that, as reported by Jamie Schram and Chuck Bennett of the New York Post, the NYPD formed a dedicated team of police officers to work with Apple and track down stolen iPhones.
And finally, one year ago I noted that an iPhone saved the life of a man in the Netherlands when it deflected a bullet. Lacie Grosvold of the CBS affiliate KTVA in Alaska reports that an iPhone similarly saved the life of a Joel Stubleski, a U.S. soldier stationed in Afghanistan when it was in his pocket and deflected a bullet. Subleski says that “my iPhone saved my life” and now uses a picture of his shattered iPhone as a cover on his new iPhone to serve as a reminder.