Thursday, May 04, 2006

WayPoint in The Lawyer's PC

CaseLogistix WayPoint Data Converter is featured in the May 15 edition of The Lawyer's PC newsletter, published by Thompson West.

Click here to read the article in PDF format.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

Byrne Named To Head Bulldog Club Staff

JACKSON, Miss. - CaseLogistix Inc. today announced that the Mississippi State University Athletics Department has hired Greg Byrne as Associate Athletic Director for Development and External Affairs. He has served as National Sales Director for CaseLogistix the past 18 months.

Byrne, who will spearhead MSU’s athletic fund-raising efforts and oversee the Bulldog Club staff, has spent 13 years in intercollegiate athletics. He has previously served as Associate Director of Athletics for Fund-Raising and Development at the University of Kentucky and in a similar fund-raising capacity at Oregon State University.

A native of Pocatello, Idaho, Byrne was responsible for raising funds for athletic scholarship, capital projects and major gift-giving at both institutions. He began his athletic career in 1992 with the Fiesta Bowl.

Byrne earned his bachelor’s degree from Arizona State University. He and his wife, the former Regina Misa, have two sons, Nicholas and Davis. Byrne’s father, Bill, is the Director of Athletics at Texas A&M.

CaseLogistix will conduct a national search to replace Byrne.

Monday, May 01, 2006

WayPoint on Law.Com

From Law Technology, April 25 Edition by David Snow:

That same afternoon, I took in a demo of a promising new product from document management software maker CaseLogistix, based in Jackson, Miss. The WayPoint Data Converter, released in March, is a stand-alone export/import utility that allows users to quickly convert documents between popular file formats and litigation support software using an open-source WayPoint XML file specification. You'd use it to convert a pile of documents from, say, Summation or Concordance to or from WayPoint XML, and to any other supported file format. According to the company, it can handle 300,000 pages in less than an hour.

"It's a massive cost-saving tool," said CaseLogistix's lead developer, Jason Cox . He added that the company will keep adding popular file formats to the application -- it currently works with about 10 formats commonly used in the legal industry -- and that its already-simple interface will become easier to use when tasks are graphically represented in a redesigned version due within about two months.

For the entire article, click here.

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