Did you break the law today ??

Submitted by sclausnitzer on Wed, 07/02/2008 - 9:03am.

According to this article ( http://www.ij.org/first_amendment/tx_computer_repair/6_26_08pr.html ) any IT Pro who "repairs" a PC in Texas without a Private Investigators license will be doing just that.

This leads to other serious questions for our Texas brethren:
- Will this apply to in-house repairs?
- Will your school pay for such licensing?
- Will you throw away every computer at it's first BSOD for the next three years?
- Will this allow PC techies to carry guns?

With penalties up to $4,000, 1 year in jail, and civil liability up to $10,000 for both the tech and the customer, it looks like Texas may soon be forced into "outsourcing" computer repairs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Scott A. Clausnitzer
Director of I.T. Services
Atlanta's John Marshall Law School
1422 W. Peachtree St NW
Atlanta, Georgia 30309
P: 404-872-3593 x104
F: 404-873-3802
E: sclausnitzer@johnmarshall.edu
W: http://www.johnmarshall.edu
---------------------------------------------------------

( categories: hot topic | teknoids )
Submitted by marbux on Thu, 07/03/2008 - 1:25pm.

On Wed, Jul 2, 2008 at 10:26 AM, William Andersen
wrote:
> Friends:
>
> As I begin a book-length research project, I was wondering about current
> research/outlining/writing programs. Is there a preferred model at your
> school? Or do most rely on more mechanical ways of noting, keeping track of
> and reorganizing research material in aid of a written end-product?

A bit more information would help make a better recommendation:

1. What word processing program running on which platform is the
target for the final work product?

2. Is this a solo project or is there a need for a server-side
collaborative solution to do the work?

Best regards,

Paul E. Merrell, J.D. (Marbux)

--
Universal Interoperability Council