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
...sophisticated, said law firm consultant Kent Zimmermann, who sees more firms developing apps that provide content and services to current or prospective clients. ...
Originally Published: The Recorder
As smartphones grow ever more capable, they bring some of the same challenges as computers: namely, how to get the most out of them while avoiding any pitfalls
...for them these days. So I took to my colleagues in the legal marketing community and especially to my groups on LinkedIn yes, LinkedIn...
Originally Published: The Legal Intelligencer
Having a mobile office sounds like a great idea ? at least until it's time to take your smartphone, notebook, tablet, digital camera, batteries, cables, memory cards and everything else along on a bu
...of companies adopting a BYOD strategy. Executing enterprise apps: There's an agreement for that. If flying cars ever take...
An interactive trial presentation encourages jurors and the judge to follow along and remain in the moment, rather than zone out. Interactivity can be achieved by something as simple as having an exp
The prevalence of BYODs in the workplace signals a need for companies to revise their monitoring policies, explains Stephen Wu of Cooke Kobrick & Wu
Originally Published: The Recorder
...reports authors. The proliferation of smartphones and mobile apps presents another set of security worries, as these devices routinely connect...
Originally Published: Corporate Counsel
Consultant John Cleaves explains how to move around the courtroom and interact with exhibits and demonstratives to distract jurors from their own predicament and keep them focused on the trial
Originally Published: Law Technology News
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