
On The Future Of Offices And Cities
The bottom line: I'm worried -- very, very worried.
The bottom line: I'm worried -- very, very worried.
It’s not a matter of not having time, says tech columnist Jeff Bennion, it's a matter of time management.
By going paperless and using trial presentation software, you may be able to become a more efficient and effective litigator.
Making Acrobat easier and more intuitive helps lower the hurdles most attorneys face in making the transition to a paperless office.
Legal technology is not about having transparent touchscreen monitors or fancy algorithms; it's about finding ways to work more efficiently so you can spend more time focusing on substantive things and less time doing mundane tasks.
The new Adobe Acrobat will give you a user-friendly and powerful tool to make working with scanned documents much more convenient.
Share your insights in this brief survey.
How does a federal trial judge use technology in her chambers?
Over the weekend, Justice Thomas, Justice Alito, and Justice Sotomayor participated in an extraordinary joint interview at their alma mater, Yale Law School.
Additional thoughts on going paperless, from technology columnist Jeff Bennion.
What are the advantages of going paperless, and how can you execute on this strategy?
Discover five practical ways to harness AI and eliminate busywork—so you can focus more on your clients and less on repetitive tasks.
Yesterday I was at a local coffee shop around the lunch hour. I spotted a man that I think was Morgan Spurlock. I am not positive that it was him, but he had red hair and the Horseshoe mustache. It is possible that I saw Danny Bonaduce, a mustached Alfred E. Neuman, or some other […]