Next he explained why it is so important for lawyers to carefully research and
learn about legal technology tools prior to investing in them.
This is a
column about legal technology, but sometimes legal innovation involves creating new business models that have little to do with technology.
She knows
more about legal technology than most in her field and willingly shares that knowledge in an easy and understandable way in her many writings and lively presentations.
Just back from last week's LegalTech in New York, and with the perspective of someone who has been writing
about legal technology for more than two decades, I am convinced that I have never before seen a time of such intense and creative innovation in legal technology.
Our representatives at Legaltech New York will explain how our customizable software can make your office more organized and more productive, as well as answer any questions you might have
about legal technology in the workplace.
As developers of cloud - based law practice management software, we here at MyCase love to read and learn everything there is to
know about legal technology and legal practice management.
Previously, he served as the technology and online editor for InsideCounsel magazine, where he wrote
extensively about legal technology, electronic discovery and data forensics.
It turned out to be fun and more of a conversation than a Q&A, as Sam and I talked
about the legal technology trends that defined 2015 and did some crystal - ball gazing looking ahead to 2016.
At the same time, given that it has been roughly half a decade since the
buzz about legal technology took root in Singapore, it is also appropriate to do a stocktake on the state of legal technology in Singapore for our readers.
I've been writing at my own
blog about a legal technology startup whose CEO is alleged to have masterminded a half - million - dollar fraud in which he allegedly impersonated a lawyer and forged court and government documents.
No matter where you stand on the issue of artificial intelligence, if you think you should care about technology because it might replace you, rethink that thought, and consider instead the conclusion in Why Should You
Care About Legal Technology that ignoring it will be perilous.
She regularly contributes to the ABA's Legal Technology Today blog, writing there and
elsewhere about legal technology, blockchain, kanban and Agile project management, design thinking, and work / life alignment.
TECHSHOW is
all about legal technology education by lawyers for lawyers — we strive for CLE credit on our sessions and do not tolerate selling from the podium.
While there is a certain group that gets very
excited about legal technology, there are the managers and bean counters in firms that cringe when the «tech heads» start talking as they only anticipate the costs and potential disruptions in workflow that could arise from introducing something new into the well - oiled and functioning office machine...
And in those firms, often as not, the
conversations about legal technology are less about deploying machine learning capabilities and more about implementing a basic, functional technological structure that will help them run their practices more efficiently and cost - effectively.
In the hopes of fostering unique and innovative
thought about legal technology, Suffolk also hosts «hackathons,» events where large numbers of people meet to engage in collaborative computer programming.
As developers of web - based law practice management software, we here at MyCase love to read and learn everything there is to
know about legal technology.
And then, so you see my blog there and then in the ABA Survey when they talk about what people learn from things, like, one of the big sources of the ABA Journal were I've written a tech column for years, and so, I unfairly like to add those numbers together and look at what a large percentage of people are
learning about legal technology for me, and then Tom, of course corrects my analysis of those numbers.
The evening wound down in a Q&A session, with a few jabs at Bush v. Gore and some final thoughts on the fate of newspapers in America (Toobin fretted that we may be close to the day when a mid-size American town has no paper of its own), but nothing
more about legal technology.