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A recent visit to Lexis'
website for law students revealed that cite checking
has now apparently evolved into something that takes
32 printed pages to explain. When did that happen?
Computers are meant to make things easier. How long
does it take to say: "Pound the cite into the
little box, click the mouse, check the law, go to
lunch."
Let's be honest. No one has
much time to spend learning something new.
That's why TheLaw.net is built around three simple
skills that we know you probably already have: (1)
shuttling through little menus, (2) operating a
browser and (3) performing electronic case law
research.
Subscribers to TheLaw.net
include everyone from hotwired power-users who are
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We support them all and if
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The last thing you need is
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Corporation we keep it simple and we keep it real to
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TheLaw.net's
Administrative Law
Menu
makes it easy to browse to known Federal or state
administrative regulations, registers and codes, and to search for unknown
items by
keyword. Then, in one mouse click, you can pop up cases that
have construed the regulation you need to know more about.
Our software includes more than 2,000 pathfinders to
subsections of the Code of Federal Regulations alone.
TheLaw.net is a desktop powertool that you can begin using
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