Timelines in Law Practice

Timelines in Law Practice

by Robin - 12:41PM, Apr 08, 2005

Are timelines used by attorneys?Would this be a useful feature to have in Notebook?

wrothnie

Member

05:19PM, Apr 21, 2005

The short answer to this is "Yes". They can be a great visual aid to illustrate / explain the sequence of events.

Robin

Member

07:09PM, Apr 22, 2005

Not being an attorney I did not know how useful a timeline feature would be. I was thinking if NoteBook had some type of a timeline feature it might be useful to someone other than myself. I know teachers use them, and I thought attorneys might use them as well. From time to time, I export information from NoteBook to import in a timeline program, but this requires some manipulation of the data before I can import it. An option to export data from NoteBook in a format that can be imported in a timeline program would be a help.

Jordan

Member

12:41AM, Apr 25, 2005

OT: Robin, what timeline program do you use? I'm looking for one, I like where Bee's Timeline is going but development is sloooowww.

Robin

Member

02:47PM, Apr 26, 2005

Jordan,

I use TimeLiner 5.0 from Ton Snyder Productions. It does not have much of a Mac like interface, but it seems to work well.

http://www.tomsnyder.com/

I will have to look at Bee's timeline program. I don't remember there being many timeline programs for the Mac; Is Bee's timeliner fairly new?

Jordan

Member

08:41PM, Apr 26, 2005

Yes, Bee Doc's Timeline is very new, it's still Beta...They release the current stable version every couple of weeks. Here's the Version Tracker Link:

http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/25450

I've been using it without any problems, but some of the features aren't functioning yet. I've "printed" to PDF and added the PDF file into Notebook, the charts look very nice.

At first I had a hard time figuring out how to import into the Timeline since there wasn't any documentation. It's actually very simple, it uses Tab Delimited Text, but the key is to format the text with the first row titled "Label", "Start Time", and "End Time". I haven't really tried Exporting from Notebook to the Bee Doc's Timeline, only the other direction, but it shouldn't be to hard to streamline using Excel, or a text editor. I mostly export from Filemaker to Timeline to Notebook via PDF. If Notebook would export to tab delimited text it could go straight into the timeline, but it doesn't yet.

-jordan

gdgrifflaw

Member

06:21AM, Apr 28, 2005

I am an attorney and would love to have a timeline feature in Notebook. Is this a possible addition?

judithblair

Member

08:43AM, Apr 28, 2005

i asked about timelines in Notebook a while ago. I'm a student beginning research on a thesis, and i wanted some way to make a nice historical timeline.

Anyway, when i asked, i was told that Notebook probably would never have this capability. Maybe if a bunch of lawyers got together to demand this feature, that would carry more weight than one lowly college student. Wink

Robin

Member

07:31PM, Apr 29, 2005

Jordan,

If Notebook would export to tab delimited text it would be a help, you still may need to diddle with the data a-bit in Excel to get the file as you need it.

In Notebook, I use a simple format where the date/time is the parent, and the event is the child. When Notebook exports a file in plain text, the child has 4 spaces for the indent. The file looks like the example below.

Untitled

Monday, September 20, 2004 8:29:32 AM
Received call from Billy Bob......
Monday, September 20, 2004 8:35:32 AM
Contacted driver, Clutch Cargo......

I open the file in TextEdit delete the title and use "Find" to find and replace the 4 space characters with a tab character. I save the file, and then I Import the file into Excel. The date/time (parent) is in the left column and the event (child) is in the right column but one row below the date/time (parent) data. I shift the event (child) column to match it's date/time data, delete the empty rows then save the file as plain text. The file looks like the example below.

Monday, September 20, 2004 8:29:32 AM Received call from Billy Bob......
Monday, September 20, 2004 8:35:32 AM Contacted driver, Clutch Cargo......

I then import the file into TimeLiner 5.0. With TimeLiner 5.0 the import file needs to be plain ASCII text, and the date and event need to be separated by a tab character and each line needs a hard return.

Jordan

Member

02:18AM, Apr 30, 2005

Robin,

I don't usually need to export out of Notebook into my timeline program, generally I import into Notebook, however since we started discussing it I got curious and played around with it.

This is what I found; You can insert a Tab Space by pressing Option and Tab at the same time. So... If each Notebook cell on the page maintains the same order with a Tab between each entry on the line, and each line is a Parent, and you then export as txt, this exports as essentially tab delimited. just delete the title and any extra lines. It works great with Bee's Timeline, but you MUST add as the first line: "Label Start Time End Time" even if you don't use each entry. So for me, it would look like this (I had to substitute (TAB) for a real tab space since the forum isn't showing it correctly):

Label(TAB)Start Time(TAB)End Time
Guttenburge invents printing press(TAB)1/1/1450
Full-color printing invented(TAB)1/1/1719
First pencils made(TAB)1/1/1795
Melvil Dewey invents vertical file system(TAB)1/1/1874
Typewritter invented(TAB)1/1/1874
Paper clip invented(TAB)1/1/1900
First ballpoint pen(TAB)1/1/1938
Desktop publishing(TAB)1/1/1984

I haven't tried Timeliner so I don't know if it works with that or not. I don't know if that would cut down on your manipulation time or not...

-jordan

Jordan

Member

01:38AM, May 13, 2005

BeeDoc's Timeline v1.0 has been released. The new help file explains how to import and export much better then I did in my last post. Here is the website:

http://beedocuments.com/timeline.html

-jordan

LiamH

Member

08:32AM, May 14, 2007

Robin,

I would say that the timeline/chronology is the bedrock of any litigator's work. When I am assembling a case the first thing that I do is prepare a chronology. It's something I was taught at Bar School as an essential to any practice.

I would welcome any form of timeline/chronology addon. I have bee documents timeline myself. It is a very nice piece of software. However, I find it does not like non-US date formats and is perhaps not suited to very intensive chronologies. For example I worked on a fraud case and needed to prepare a chronolgy to record daily events over a five year period; it was too much for timelime. I ended up just preparing a very long table in pages.

gdperks

Member

07:07PM, Oct 28, 2007

Check out TimeFlyer from http://www.asinglepixel.com.

That might suit your timeline needs better...

Prosecutor

Member

07:22PM, Jul 12, 2008

I'm pretty happy with TimeFlyer.

77miker

Member

01:27AM, Dec 19, 2009

http://www.beedocs.com

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