>
>
>I would think that all of the documents being requested from the Courthouse are
>public record.  Any confidential documents should never leave the lawyers hands
>(never given to the Courthouse).
>
Yes. And there are already plenty of research services that do nothing 
but pore through public records. The trick here is getting the 
technology set up and getting court permission to bring it all into the 
courthouse. Maryland does not allow outsiders to bring computers or 
cameras into courthouses at all. I don't know the laws here.
It would not be hard to make a small cart with a laptop, scanners (both 
flatbed and handheld), and a cellular phone with a  high-gain antenna 
(use a car mount; they still sell them). You'd have 14.4K uploads, which 
is faster than fax. (If you need more bandwidth, get two phones.) Run 
the whole thing on a pair of sealed 12 V batteries so you can go all 
day, and you'd be just fine.
I thought about doing something like this a few years ago. Another, 
similar thought I never implemented was what I called "temp in a box." 
My idea was that instead of just supplying a body, you'd supply an 
office-skilled person equipped with a computer, scanner, and printer. 
Give them electricity, a table, and a chair, and they could go right to 
work, using software they already knew so there would be no learning 
curve. This is not a Linux-specific idea; in fact, Windows would almost 
certainly be necessary most of the time. But it would be an excellent 
service to offer, and I think it would have high profit potential if 
marketed correctly.
- Robin
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