Increasingly, lawyers practice outside of their offices, requiring services and products such as wireless networking (3G and 4G mobile standards), mobile apps, smartphones, and tablet, netbook, notebook, or laptop computers.
Travel-savvy attorneys hit the road with only the minimum number of devices necessary to complete their work quickly and effectively. Writer John Edwards recommends ten things that can stay home
Originally Published: Law Technology News
Daniel Martin Katz, assistant professor at Michigan State's School of Law, announced at an event hosted by Fordham University Law School that he is developing "a group of assassins" who are g
Originally Published: Law Technology News
...News, finds legal professionals everywhere as either providing or supporting their mobile device use. As mobile devices and applications become more prevalent...
Originally Published: Law Technology News
...crowd. But what happens when data collaboration and delivery travels to the mobile devices we all carry? Most CIOs see the introduction of unnecessary risk...
Originally Published: Law Technology News
...device management, user interface navigation, and Web browsing. "The mobile landscape is preparing for another shift, and with BlackBerry 10 we are...
Originally Published: Law Technology News
In a telling sign of the shifting smartphone battle at U.S. law firms, the CIO of the nation's largest BlackBerry shop is anticipating mass migrations away from the platform within six months
Originally Published: Law Technology News
...by predictions made by computers. "It's not going to end lawyering ... but I definitely think some percentage of tasks that lawyers do are...
Originally Published: Law Technology News
Texas Lawyer
...added. New York-based Lexis is still evaluating how to make CounselLink mobile applications, which was ...
Thomson Reuters is updating its ProView legal e-book reader with new usability features and more access options, while simulaneously planning for an audience that is larger in scope
Originally Published: Law Technology News
The new iPad has several lawyer-friendly features, including four times the screen resolution of the iPad 2, built-in speech-to-text conversion, and an optional fourth-generation cellular network con
Originally Published: Law Technology News
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