Not exact matches
Multiple Listing Service (MLS) A networking system, frequently
on computer, in which a number of real estate
firms share information about their client's
homes that are for sale.
Hudes» practice focuses
on antitrust and complex commercial litigation, having litigated cases involving everything from
home insulation and
computer hardware to transgenic corn seed and food products, according to his
firm bio.
• The Top Ten Legal Technologies — What Every Solo and Small Law
Firm Should Be Using • Collaborating and Communicating with Clients in a Web 2.0 World • Speech Recognition Software and Digital Dictation — Talk to Your
Computer — it will listen • Moving to a Paperless Office — It's Easier Than You Think • Your Bottom Line and PCLaw — How it Can Make Your Life Easier and Your
Firm More Profitable • Identity Theft and Fraud — Protecting Client,
Firm and Personal Data in a Wired World • Adobe Acrobat and PDF Files — The New (and only) Standard for Sharing Information • Microsoft Office — Word, Excel and PowerPoint — Tips and Tricks for Getting the Most Out of These Essential Tools • Surviving and Thriving in Tough Economic Times — How to Buld and Maintain a Better Clientele and a Successful Practice • Productivity Tools to Help You Attain Work - Life Balance in Trying Times • Hiring, Evaluating, Retaining, Firing — Managing Human Resource Issues in Small
Firm • E-Discovery for the Rest of Us — Dealing With Electronic Information
on Smaller Matter • Email Emancipation — How to Cut the Time that Email Takes Out of Your Day • Mobile Lawyers and the Remote Office — Maintaining Productivity from
Home, the Cottage, and Overseas • Succession Planning and Retirement — Preparing for the Day You Stop Lawyering
Regardless of the data protection systems that
firms may have set - up, like an elaborate remote access system, there is always a temptation, for example, to not carry a laptop but rather to put the documents you need
on a feather light USB key and then work from a desktop
computer at
home, offline and thus free of the distraction of an everlasting online Risk game.
Essentially, the San Francisco - based
firm is looking to create the world's first vision assistant, by combining Wi - Fi - equipped cameras, AI, and
computer vision tech that can identify specific people and their movements and Minority Report - style gestures — negating the need to whip out your phone or call out to Alexa, Google
Home, or Siri for when you need to turn
on the TV or turn down the volume
on your speakers.