Join Chad and Nitin to learn more
about mobile lawyering and collaboration in today's post PC world during the LTRC's next free webinar: Secure Collaboration in the Cloud.
Not exact matches
A
lawyer for the Dowler family has been talking
about allegations that a private investigator working for the News of the World hacked into the
mobile phone of their murdered daughter.
* For more interesting statistics
about how
lawyers use cloud - based law practice software and their mobile devices, make sure to check out our infographic on the Rise of Mobile for L
lawyers use cloud - based law practice software and their
mobile devices, make sure to check out our infographic on the Rise of Mobile for La
mobile devices, make sure to check out our infographic on the Rise of
Mobile for La
Mobile for
LawyersLawyers.
The information
about mobile apps is contained in Volume VI of the survey, covering
mobile lawyering.
-- TechnoLawyer publisher Neil Squillante talks
about the future of
mobile technology for
lawyers in 2009.
It asks
lawyers about their use or plans to use Macs and other Apple products, as well as
about their preferences for
mobile devices, their use of iPads, and their use of cloud - based applications.
They have
mobile applications in the works which will allow
lawyers (or other users, but we're not concerned
about them) to send secure messages right from their
mobile device.
There's no doubt
about it — it's a digital and
mobile world and
lawyers can no longer ignore the vast societal changes that are occurring.
Sam Glover: Okay, and we're back, and Brad you just hinted to me what we're talking beforehand
about you're working on some
mobile legal clinics which is interesting because I've always wanted to just drop in and be a
lawyer for free in a neighborhood, or a park, or library, or something and usually it always seems to make sense to do it with more structure behind it.
This week, Sam talks with Kristin LaMont,
lawyer and adjunct professor,
about how to maintain your work - life balance when your firm goes
mobile.
Route1 is a
mobile app for busy
lawyers which puts detailed information
about law firms» jobs that are relevant to them directly into their hands.
«We started to think
about what it would look like if
lawyers started to communicate almost exclusively over
mobile,» Newton said.
Cloud computing tools and applications like Google Docs or Office to Go provide firms the benefits of the
mobile office while helping to keep
lawyers connected to one another but raise questions
about security.
Mobile computing has made it easier than ever for
lawyers to practice law from just
about anywhere.
In this episode of Digital Detectives, hosts Sharon Nelson and John Simek talk to Tom Lambotte, CEO of GlobalMac IT,
about how cybercrime has evolved and what Mac - using
lawyers can do to protect their information, including using a password manager and investing in
mobile device management.
The survey also reveals that
about half of all
lawyers either regularly or sometimes use their
mobile devices in the courtroom.