Lexis v. Westlaw
Posted: Sat Apr 03, 2010 12:24 pm
Do you prefer one to the other and why? It's amazing how we all form our preferences and I was just curious others reasoning ...
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I use West because (1) I get better results; (2) I like the Keycite graphical view; and (3) I hate our Lexis rep.jlockhart6 wrote:Do you prefer one to the other and why? It's amazing how we all form our preferences and I was just curious others reasoning ...
Not if you use the digests effectively. Once you find a case on point, it takes 0 time to click on Keynotes, thereby creating personal digests. You could use Lexis to find the first case though.Renzo wrote:I prefer Westlaw and I use Lexis more often.
Why, you ask? Because those damn fools at Westlaw have insufficent server capacity, so it takes me like 3 min to log in, then every query takes like 90 seconds to come back. If I were in practice and billing by the hour, Westlaw would be costing my clients like $500 a day in lost time.
google scholar rocks. Lexis has better search functions imo. I hate westlaw's password/login nonsense. I also heard that Lexis and westlaw are scrambling to integrate a more google-like search algorithm. That would be wonderful and would probably seal the deal for me.OperaAttorney wrote:I search for most of my stuff on GoogleScholar. (For statutes, I use Westlaw only because I'm used to it.) Then I pull up the document on LEXIS and email it to myself. I do that because LEXIS allows me to print beautiful single-column documents.
West does as well.OperaAttorney wrote:I search for most of my stuff on GoogleScholar. (For statutes, I use Westlaw only because I'm used to it.) Then I pull up the document on LEXIS and email it to myself. I do that because LEXIS allows me to print beautiful single-column documents.
This is almost 100% false. I have literally been doing the same exact thing on both and have about 7,000 westlaw points and 2,000 lexis points. Also, the best things on Westlaw cost 20,000 - on Lexis the same things cost like 80,000.kings84_wr wrote:Lexis because Lexis rewards are better then westlaw
How do you only have 2,000 lexis points? I have 4x that many and haven't done nearly all the optional trainings and such.stinger35 wrote:This is almost 100% false. I have literally been doing the same exact thing on both and have about 7,000 westlaw points and 2,000 lexis points. Also, the best things on Westlaw cost 20,000 - on Lexis the same things cost like 80,000.kings84_wr wrote:Lexis because Lexis rewards are better then westlaw
I got around 8,000 Lexis points just last semester, its really easy to get them.stinger35 wrote:This is almost 100% false. I have literally been doing the same exact thing on both and have about 7,000 westlaw points and 2,000 lexis points. Also, the best things on Westlaw cost 20,000 - on Lexis the same things cost like 80,000.kings84_wr wrote:Lexis because Lexis rewards are better then westlaw
WestLaw Next has a new Google-like search algorithm.rando wrote:google scholar rocks. Lexis has better search functions imo. I hate westlaw's password/login nonsense. I also heard that Lexis and westlaw are scrambling to integrate a more google-like search algorithm. That would be wonderful and would probably seal the deal for me.OperaAttorney wrote:I search for most of my stuff on GoogleScholar. (For statutes, I use Westlaw only because I'm used to it.) Then I pull up the document on LEXIS and email it to myself. I do that because LEXIS allows me to print beautiful single-column documents.
+1emilybeth wrote:I don't remember my Westlaw password. Hence, Lexis.
How did you manage that? I have approx. 1,400 after nearly two semesters. I looked at my rewards statement and basically no matter how much research I do in a given day, they only give me 15 points. I thought we were rewarded per search, but apparently not. If I do one search in a given day, 15 points (plus whatever promotion they have going on at the time). If I do 20 searches in a given day, 15 points (plus whatever promotion they have going on at the time).kings84_wr wrote:I got around 8,000 Lexis points just last semester, its really easy to get them.stinger35 wrote:This is almost 100% false. I have literally been doing the same exact thing on both and have about 7,000 westlaw points and 2,000 lexis points. Also, the best things on Westlaw cost 20,000 - on Lexis the same things cost like 80,000.kings84_wr wrote:Lexis because Lexis rewards are better then westlaw
Most months you get double or triple points for shepardizing a case. You've always only gotten points once per day, and the reason why is both pretty obvious and clearly stated. You also get points for doing one-off training exercises, online quizzes, etc. that are occasionally announced.caoyun wrote:How did you manage that? I have approx. 1,400 after nearly two semesters. I looked at my rewards statement and basically no matter how much research I do in a given day, they only give me 15 points. I thought we were rewarded per search, but apparently not. If I do one search in a given day, 15 points (plus whatever promotion they have going on at the time). If I do 20 searches in a given day, 15 points (plus whatever promotion they have going on at the time).kings84_wr wrote:I got around 8,000 Lexis points just last semester, its really easy to get them.stinger35 wrote:This is almost 100% false. I have literally been doing the same exact thing on both and have about 7,000 westlaw points and 2,000 lexis points. Also, the best things on Westlaw cost 20,000 - on Lexis the same things cost like 80,000.kings84_wr wrote:Lexis because Lexis rewards are better then westlaw
Word.Cole S. Law wrote:Lexis. The Matthew Bender guides do most of my work for me.
I think everyone at NYU uses Lexis because Westlaw is so darn slow (also, they seem to like the Lexis rep's method of training). It's a shame, because I think the searching is better on Westlaw.Renzo wrote:I prefer Westlaw and I use Lexis more often.
Why, you ask? Because those damn fools at Westlaw have insufficent server capacity, so it takes me like 3 min to log in, then every query takes like 90 seconds to come back. If I were in practice and billing by the hour, Westlaw would be costing my clients like $500 a day in lost time.