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Click to WinThat corporate blog entries/twitters are already entering the eDiscovery landscape as discoverable?
That page-counts represent the amount of content needed to review and without that information, your document review projects will be skewed?
That most near-dupe technologies can not group foreign language documents together?
That Microsoft Exchange databases (.EDB files) can have thousands of mailboxes in it?
That Apple Macintosh files usually don’t have file extensions?
That AutoCad documents should be viewed in native, not TIFF, format because of their 3-dimensional layouts?
That Guidance EnCase images can be opened and mounted by other forensic software’s?
That removing near duplicate documents without first reviewing them could risk missing important information?
That most indexing tools do NOT perform OCR (optical character recognition) on flat documents during indexing, thus those documents are not searchable?
That just asking for a native production in a meet-and-confer is the equivalent of opening up a can of digital worms?
That you should use the newest version of Winzip to compress your files, because Winzip will automatically preserve file-level dates/times?
That copying 5GB of tiny files is much slower than copying 1 large 5GB file?
That your law firms’s litigation support department, if you have one, can add tremendous value (most likely) to your case if brought to the table at the beginning of discovery?
That Microsoft Outlook MSG files retain their attachments after processing, thus increasing the size of data you need to store on disk?
That 1 gigabyte of information is actually 1,024 megabytes, not 1,000 megabytes?