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| Who We Are |
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Rachi Messing
Rachi is the Vice President of Technology Services at DiscoverReady LLC. He has focused his professional career on designing, implementing and supporting complex Discovery Management Solutions including Electronic Repositories and Electronic Data Discovery.
Prior to joining DiscoverReady, Rachi served as Senior Litigation Technology Consultant at RLS and Solutions Engineer for Merrill Corporation where he worked on some of the most complex electronic document reviews for many of the country’s largest law firms and corporate legal departments. His experience ranges from large patent litigation matters to SEC investigations.
Rachi is proficient in most major litigation support applications including: Attenex, Summation, Concordance, Opticon, LiveNote, Sanction, Trial Director, Ipro, Etech, UR-Law, Discovery Navigator, Ringtail, iCONECT, WebBlaze, Doculex, LAW, IPro, Zprint, and Discovery Cracker. He is also a certified trainer for Concordance, Summation, and iCONECT and frequently conducts admin and end-user training in these applications. Rachi is also the co-author of Litigation Support Today magazine's "Tech Talk" column.
Rachi is Microsoft and Citrix certified and has a clear understanding of how large IT systems integrate and can be utilized in the data collection and data review process. Rachi graduated from Towson University with a Bachelors degree in Economics.
Litigation Support Today Magazine
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A hash code is a digital signature or “fingerprint” that is used to identify an electronic file. The MD5-hash is a 128-bit hash value that has commonly been used to check the integrity and compare the contents of messages. It is typically shown as a 32-character hexadecimal number. (download pdf to read more)
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There are many useful apps out there - some we use day in and day out and others that we use only from time to time. Access, Excel, VB, Rename utilities all are handy and useful tools that we find ourselves using all the time, but our favorite applications are text editors such as UltraEdit ( www.ultraedit.com from IDM Computer Solution) or TextPad ( www.textpad.com from Helios Software Solutions). (download pdf to read more)
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It is well known that when dealing with electronic documents there is metadata associated with the document that may not be readily apparent or visible when first looking at the document. For example, in a Microsoft Word document there may be the name of the person who created the document or different revisions to the document that have been made over time. The ABA has also stated recently that there are not any ethics issues with examining metadata within documents so don’t be surprised if your attorneys start asking about types of metadata available. (download pdf to read more)
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