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~ Articles and Research for Legal Professionals

The Researching Paralegal

Tag Archives: iPad

“How To” Tip for iPhone and iPad.

15 Sunday Nov 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology

≈ Comments Off on “How To” Tip for iPhone and iPad.

Tags

iPad, iPhone

How to Use Caps Lock on Your iPhone and iPad, by Lori Kaufman, How-To Geek Blog

http://www.howtogeek.com/233097/how-to-use-caps-lock-on-your-iphone-and-ipad/

You just got your new iPhone after switching from Android and you want to type something in all caps. How do you use caps lock in iOS 9? We’ll tell you how to type all caps and also how to enable and disable the caps lock feature. . . .

Continue reading →

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How To Add Section and Paragraph Symbols on An iPhone or iPad.

05 Monday Oct 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apple, Apps, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology

≈ Comments Off on How To Add Section and Paragraph Symbols on An iPhone or iPad.

Tags

Codification App, iPad, iPhone, iPhone J.D. Blog, Jeff Richardson, Keyboard Character Shortcuts, Section Sign

Sections And Pilcrows — Making The § And ¶ On The iPhone, by Jeff Richardson, iPhone J.D.

http://tinyurl.com/qdk2snp

Yesterday, I reviewed an app called Codification, which uses for its icon the section symbol — §. That is certainly a symbol that lawyers need to type a lot, but it isn’t immediately apparent how to do so on an iPhone or iPad. . .

You can type many additional characters using the iPhone and iPad keyboard by holding down on a letter. I see that I haven’t posted a full list of those shortcuts since 2010, back when iPhone J.D. had far fewer readers, so I thought it might be useful to post the list again, which is largely still the same in iOS 8 . . . .

Continue reading →

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Are iPad Text Messages Protected Under Your State’s Wiretapping Laws?

30 Tuesday Jun 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Admissibility, Appellate Law, Case of First Impression, Evidence, Government, Intellectual Property, iPad, Legal Technology

≈ Comments Off on Are iPad Text Messages Protected Under Your State’s Wiretapping Laws?

Tags

iPad, Pennsylvania Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance Control Act, Privacy, Text Messages, The Democratic Underground.com, Wiretapping

iPad Texts Not Private Under Wiretap Act | The Legal Intelligencer*, The Democratic Underground.com

(The Legal Intelligencer requires subscription but is free for 5/mo articles.)

http://www.democraticunderground.com/10026893652

iPads are popular in the legal and business world. It would be a good idea to check your state’s wiretapping law and determine whether your client’s and your own text iPad messages have a reasonable expectation to privacy. -CCE

An iPad does not fall within the telephone exemption under the Pennsylvania Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance Control Act, and users of the device do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy when it comes to sending text messages, the state Superior Court has ruled in a case of first impression. . . .

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Take Depositions To The Next Level With High Tech.

13 Monday Apr 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Clouds, Discovery, Dropbox, iPad, Legal Technology, Presentations, Tablets, Video Deposition

≈ Comments Off on Take Depositions To The Next Level With High Tech.

Tags

Brian Focht, Deposition Exhibits, Depositions, iPad, Live Stream Video, Tablets, The Cyber Advocate, Video Depositions

4 High Tech Ways to Improve Your Depositions, by Brian Focht, The Cyber Advocate Blog

http://www.thecyberadvocate.com/2015/04/08/4-high-tech-ways-improve-depositions/

Last week I had the (good?) fortune to attend two depositions spanning three days in a construction defect case. We represent a fairly peripheral sub-contractor, so despite exceeding 20 total hours, I didn’t get the opportunity to ask a single question. However, we’re not so peripheral that I could completely space out.

Over the course of three days, which included the introduction of about 100 exhibits (I’m impressed at the plaintiff’s counsel’s restraint, except when you consider that many exhibits exceeded 250 pages each), I listened intently. Or as intently as possible.

Until the other part of my brain, the part that writes this blog, kicked in. I analyzed what I thought was an intelligent, if complicated, system put in place that uses Dropbox for sharing exhibits. But that was really it. No video, no digital exhibits, remote participants listening by phone. I couldn’t help but think that there had to be a better way than this. . . .

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ABA’s Hackness to Justice And All Types of New Apps.

28 Saturday Mar 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apps, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology

≈ Comments Off on ABA’s Hackness to Justice And All Types of New Apps.

Tags

American Bar Association, Apps, Hackness to Justice, iPad, iPhone, iPhone J.D., Jeff Richardson

In The News, by Jeff Richardson, iPhone J.D.

http://tinyurl.com/nf2zx6m

Please read the entire post. As always, Jeff Richardson has plenty of news to share. -CCE

This past weekend, the ABA Journal sponsored its second Hackcess to Justice legal hackathon, where attorneys and programmers worked all weekend to create apps that help lawyers and increase the ability of individuals to gain access to legal services.  This year the event was in my hometown of New Orleans, but unfortunately I wasn’t able to go.  Victor Li of ABA Journal describes the winning apps.  The first prize went to an app called Legal Proof that helps an attorney or a client collect and organize evidence.  Second prize went to New Orleans attorney Ernest Svenson and Massachusetts attorney William Palin for their PaperLess app.  Read the ABA Journal article to find out about the other best entrants. . . .

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Use The GoodReader App To Sign PDF Documents On iPhone or iPads.

18 Wednesday Mar 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Adobe Acrobat, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology

≈ Comments Off on Use The GoodReader App To Sign PDF Documents On iPhone or iPads.

Tags

.pdf, iPad, iPhone, iPhone J.D. Blog, Jeff Richardson, Signatures

GoodReader Update Adds Signatures, by Jeff Richardson, by iPad J.D. Blog

http://tinyurl.com/l4bvqj6

The GoodReader app is one of the most frequently used apps on my iPad because it has such great tools for organizing my documents, syncing them to my computers, and annotating PDF files.  And perhaps best of all, the developer is constantly finding ways to make the app even better.  This week, GoodReader version 4.10 was released, and it adds the ability to create and add signatures to your documents.  I’ve used many other apps with a signature feature, but GoodReader does such a nice job of implementing the feature that it may now be the best way to sign a document on an iPad or iPhone. . . .

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iAnnotate App For iPad — Annotate And Manage With Lots of Tools!

22 Sunday Feb 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apps, iPad, Legal Technology

≈ Comments Off on iAnnotate App For iPad — Annotate And Manage With Lots of Tools!

Tags

.pdf, App, iAnnotate iPad App, iOS Apps, iPad, iPhone J.D., Jeff Richardson, Legal Productivity, PACER, Travis Francis

iPad App: iAnnotate – A Powerful PDF Tool for Lawyers, by Travis Francis, Legal Productivity

http://tinyurl.com/mgzommq

iAnnotate is a powerful document mark-up and management app that allows users to annotate, manage and share PDF, DOC, PPT and image files.

With iAnnotate, documents can be synced and imported from Box, Dropbox, Google Drive, Microsoft SkyDrive or WebDAV, and other iOS apps.

Once downloaded, the app includes numerous annotation tools including pen, highlighter, typewriter, stamp, straight-line, note, underline, strikeout, photo, voice recording, and date stamp. Locating these tools is easy and you can even customize the toolbar to include your most-used tools.

Users are also given the option of saving and syncing their annotations to either the original document or to a copy of the document.

The $9.99 iAnnotate iPad App (also available for Android devices) is particularly useful for lawyers. Jeff Richardson over at iPhone JD notes:

“All federal court pleadings on PACER are in PDF format and many state courts are moving to PDF electronic documents, other counsel frequently send me files in PDF format, when I do legal research I download the cases in PDF format, exhibits are in PDF format…[and iAnnotate] seems to be the most powerful and sophisticated app that I’ve seen for working with PDF files on the iPad.”

Check out also, Using iAnnotate to Review Court Decisions on your iPad: A paperless way to highlight text and take notes, then email or upload into Dropbox.

If you are looking for a powerful, comprehensive tool to annotate and review documents while on the go, iAnnotate is definitely worth the try.

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Use Technology In Court, But Keep It Quiet!

12 Thursday Feb 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in iPad, Laptop, Legal Technology

≈ Comments Off on Use Technology In Court, But Keep It Quiet!

Tags

Apple Wireless Keyboard, Court Reporter, Depositions, Goodnotes, iPad, iPhone J.D., Jeff Richardson, Stenomask, Trial, Typing Keyboard, Wacom Bamboo Stylus

Quiet Keyboards For Court?, by Jeff Richardson, iPhone J.D. 

http://tinyurl.com/ool4gwt

I recently received an email from Baton Rouge, Louisiana litigator Ross Dooley of Roedel, Parsons, Koch, Blache, Balhoff & McCollister. He is looking for a quiet external keyboard that he can use with his iPad to take notes in court. He told me that he was recently using his iPad with the Apple Wireless Keyboard during a hearing when the judge’s minute clerk alerted him that his typing was too loud. This was a courtroom in which the court reporter was wearing headphones and speaking into a stenomask, and apparently the sound of the typing was somehow amplified in the court reporter’s headphones.

I don’t often encounter a court reporter using a stenomask, but even so, I rarely type using a keyboard with my iPad in court because I do think that the noise can be distracting. If I am going to use my iPad to take notes, I instead use a quiet stylus like the Wacom Bamboo Stylus duo and an app like GoodNotes. But I cannot write using a stylus as fast as I can with a pen, so for those times in court when speed matters, I just use pen and paper.

On the other hand, in depositions, I use a keyboard with my iPad all the time. In that setting, I have never found the Apple Wireless Keyboard to be too loud, nor have I found the sound of other keyboards to be too distracting. . . .

Continue reading →

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iPhone Candy Courtesy of iPhone J.D. Blog’s Sixth Anniversary!

19 Wednesday Nov 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apple, Apps, Clouds, Emails, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology, Microsoft Office, Tablets, Word

≈ Comments Off on iPhone Candy Courtesy of iPhone J.D. Blog’s Sixth Anniversary!

Tags

Apps, GoodReader 4, iCloud, iPad, iPhone, iPhone J.D. Blog, iPin, Jeff Richardson, Powerocks Super Magicstick, Reader 7

Six Years Of iPhone J.D., by Jeff Richardson, iPhone J.D. Blog

http://tinyurl.com/oc2ptjb

Congratulations and thanks to Jeff Richardson for six years of iPhone J.D. Blog. As usual, Jeff shares a sweet collection of apps in honor of his yearly anniversary. Thank you, Jeff! -CCE

iPhone J.D. turns six years old this week.  Seems like it was just yesterday that I wrote the first post on iPhone J.D., explaining why I found the iPhone a valuable tool in a law practice.  Back then, almost no attorneys used iPhones (about 5% according to a 2008 Am Law Tech Survey), but now the majority of attorneys in the U.S. use an iPhone (around 60% according to the ABA).

Over the past six years, I’ve written over 1,200 posts on iPhone J.D., including reviews of over 300 apps, reviews of every major iOS device released by Apple (from the iPhone 3GS to the new iPhone 6 and all models of the iPad) and reviews of over 300 accessories.  I’ve also tried to provide lots of tips and tricks for getting the most out of your iPhone and iPad, and discussed all of the tech news that I think that you might want to know about if you use an iPhone or iPad.

Through the years, I’ve gotten tons of great feedback from iPhone J.D. readers, ranging from emails to over 2,500 comments on the site, and I’ve been honored to share guests posts by attorneys from around the world who use iPhones and iPads in their law practice.  Site traffic has grown steadily every year, and in just a few days, one of you is going to load iPhone J.D. and it will be the 5 millionth page view since the site launched.

Popular posts this year.  It’s a tradition on iPhone J.D.’s anniversary (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) to identify the most popular posts from the prior 12 months.  Perhaps it reveals something about the topics that iPhone and iPad owners have been thinking about lately.  Here are the ten most viewed posts published in the last year . . . .

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Apple iCloud’s Two-Step Verification – Why It Didn’t Stop Hackers.

01 Monday Sep 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apple, Cell Phones, Clouds, Cybersecurity, Encryption, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology, Mac

≈ Comments Off on Apple iCloud’s Two-Step Verification – Why It Didn’t Stop Hackers.

Tags

Apple, FireEye, iCloud, iPad, iPhone, Passwords, Two-Step Verification

Apple Says It Is “Actively Investigating” Celeb Photo Hack, by Arik Hesseldahl,

http://tinyurl.com/les3wqe

Apple said Monday it was ‘actively investigating’ the violation of several of its iCloud accounts, in which revealing photos and videos of prominent Hollywood actresses were taken and posted all over the Web.

*     *     *

Security experts said the hacking and theft of revealing pictures from the Apple iCloud accounts of a few celebrities might have been prevented if those affected had enabled two-factor authentication on their accounts.

Apple hasn’t yet said anything definitive about how the attacks were carried out, but security researchers at the security firm FireEye, examined the evidence that has emerged so far, and said it appears to have been a fairly straightforward attack. That said, it is also one that could have been thwarted had some additional steps to secure the targeted accounts been taken.

That additional step is known as two-factor authentication. Apple calls it ‘two-step verification,’ although it doesn’t work very hard to tell people about it, said Darien Kindlund, director of threat research at FireEye.

‘In general Apple has been a little late to the game in offering this kind of protection, and doesn’t advertise it,’ he said. ‘You have to dig through the support articles to find it.’

When enabled, two-factor authentication requires users to enter a numerical code that is sent to their phone or another device, in addition to using their regular password. Since the number constantly changes, it makes it much more difficult for attackers to gain access the account, even if they know the password.

Assuming the compromised accounts were running without the two-step option turned on, it would then have been relatively easy for the attacker to gain access to the accounts.

As The Next Web reported earlier today the attack may be linked to software on GitHub called iBrute that is capable of carrying out automated brute-force attacks against iCloud accounts. In this scenario, an attacker simply guesses a password again and again until they succeed. While tedious and time-consuming for a person, it’s a simple and infinitely faster process for a computer.

The as-yet unknown attacker had one other thing going for him: Apple allows an unlimited number of password guesses. Normally, systems limit the number of times someone can try to log in to a system with an incorrect password before the account is locked down entirely. Apple has since fixed that aspect of the vulnerability.

‘The attackers never should have been allowed to make an unlimited number of guesses,’ Kindlund said. . . . [Emphasis added.]

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Lawyer Explains How TrialPad 4.0 Made Trial Presentation A Piece of Cake.

12 Saturday Jul 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Adobe Acrobat, Apple, Apps, Graphics, iPad, Legal Technology, Mac, Presentations, Technology, Trial Tips and Techniques

≈ Comments Off on Lawyer Explains How TrialPad 4.0 Made Trial Presentation A Piece of Cake.

Tags

Ian O’Flaherty, iPad, Lawyerist Blog, Todd Hendrickson, Trial Exhibits, Trial Presentation, Trial Tips & Techniques, TrialPad

TrialPad 4.0: Trial Presentation Made Easy, by Todd Hendrickson, Lawyerist Blog

http://lawyerist.com/74651/trialpad-trial-presentation/

I recently put TrialPad 4.0 through its paces during  a two-week trial — but not from the start. As in the past, I felt to overwhelmed to add figure out a new app to my trial prep to-do list.

So I started trial using Acrobat to display documents. I am very comfortable with Acrobat, and I knew I would not have to wonder about how to find a particular feature or function in the middle of trial.

After all, like most paperless lawyers, I use Acrobat on a daily basis. But by day two of what I knew would be a two-week trial, I was frustrated with the limitations of Acrobat, particularly the inability to do a call-out on the fly. This was hampering my ability to really emphasize key pieces of evidence.

A heavenly light should have descended.

I had a copy of TrialPad from Ian O’Flaherty, who developed it. Ian was kind enough to provide me with a code to download TrialPad at no cost. This is probably why I felt no need to use it, since I wasn’t invested in it. But now I had to get up and running overnight if I wanted to use something better than Acrobat during my trial. And I did get up and running overnight. I went back to my hotel room, loaded up the documents I knew I would be working with the next day, ran through the process of presenting and annotating, and then set back to prepare for the next day of trial.

With more than a little trepidation, I hooked my iPad up to my projector the next day at trial.

A heavenly light should have descended. I’m not kidding, TrialPad was nearly magical. To say that ease of use is built in is a vast understatement. . . .

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Sixty-One Legal Apps for iPhone and iPad.

21 Saturday Jun 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apple, Apps, Cell Phones, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology, Mac

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Apps, iOS, iPad, iPhone, Lawyerist Blog, Legal Apps

Every Legal App for iPhone and iPad, by Lawyerist Blog

http://tinyurl.com/o2fsuxf

Sixty-one legal apps for iPhone and iPad! Maybe not every legal app out there, but definitely worth a look. Some are free; some are not. Please also check out the comments at the end of the Lawyerist post – more apps are mentioned there. -CCE

iOS apps for lawyers abound, whether for case management, billing, or trial preparation. This page has every legal app for iOS that we could find in the App Store.

There are just a few exceptions. This does not include apps that have not been updated since 2011 and have few or no reviews in the App Store. Apps that are simply mobile versions of a legal publication aren’t here, either, since the app doesn’t do anything over and above the website. Finally, the App Store is full of applications that simply repackage freely available content, such as the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Unless an app added some significant extras (such as the ability to annotate or cross reference) to that type of content, it’s not here.

The table below is searchable, and you can sort by each column. Use the comments to let us know if we missed an app, and look for an Android app catalog in the near future. . . .

 

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Use Reflector App to Display Your iPhone or iPad on Your Computer.

07 Saturday Jun 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apple, Apps, Cell Phones, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology, Mac, PC Computers

≈ Comments Off on Use Reflector App to Display Your iPhone or iPad on Your Computer.

Tags

Apps, iPad, iPhone, Legal Productivity Blog, Lisa Pansini, Reflector App

App of the Week: Reflector – Display Your iPhone or iPad on a Computer, by Lisa Pansini, Legal Productivity Blog.

http://tinyurl.com/loqy8ek

Please note the related posts at the end of this article by Ms. Pansini. –CCE

If you’ve ever tried to display your mobile device on a big screen without wires or an Apple TV, you know how complicated it can be. Enter, the Reflector app. Reflector is an AirPlay receiver that allows you to display your mobile device on a big screen without any hullabaloo. . . .

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Complete Guide to Everything Apple for Legal Professionals.

18 Sunday May 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apple, Apps, iPad, iPhones, Law Office Management, Legal Technology, Mac, Technology

≈ Comments Off on Complete Guide to Everything Apple for Legal Professionals.

Tags

Accessories, Apple, Apps, iPad, iPhone, Law Office Management, Legal Technology, Mac, State Bar of Michigan Practice Management Resource Center

Mi Apple Practice, from the State Bar of Michigan Practice Management Resource Center

http://www.michbar.org/pmrc/applepractice.cfm

Everything related to using Apple products in a law office, e.g., iPhones, iPads, and Mac. Accessories, apps, articles, blogs, podcasts, how-to’s, reviews, groups, websites, and more – it’s all here. -CCE

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GoodReader4 App for iPads Adds PDF Page Management.

10 Saturday May 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Adobe Acrobat, Apple, Apps, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology

≈ Comments Off on GoodReader4 App for iPads Adds PDF Page Management.

Tags

.pdf, Adobe Acrobat, GoodReader 4, GoodReader App, iPad, iPad Air, iPhone, iPhone J.D. Blog, Jeff Richardson

Review: GoodReader 4 — Next Generation Of Goodreader Adds PDF Page Management, by Jeff Richardson, iPhone J.D.

http://bit.ly/1uOPxXx

GoodReader has long been one of the most useful apps on my iPad because it makes it easy to organize documents into folders and read them on the iPad.  I have folders for each of my cases, sub-folders within each case folder for Correspondence, Pleadings, Exhibits, etc., and I sync all of my non-privileged documents to and from my iPad using Dropbox.  It’s a good system that has worked well for me, and I know countless other attorneys who do the same thing.

Yesterday, the next generation of GoodReader was introduced.  It is a new app called GoodReader 4, and you need to pay for it.  It is currently on sale for $2.99, but after an introductory period the price will go up to $6.99.  Unlike the prior version of GoodReader, GoodReader 4 is a universal app so you can buy it once and use it on both your iPhone and your iPad.  You can tell the old app from the new app because the old app icon was green whereas the new one has an aqua gradient  The old version of GoodReader was also updated yesterday to version 3.21, and you need to get that update in order to migrate your documents from the old version of GoodReader to GoodReader 4. . . .

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At Last! The Microsoft App For iPad, With Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.

29 Saturday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apple, Apps, Excel, Legal Technology, Mac, Microsoft Office, PowerPoint, Word

≈ Comments Off on At Last! The Microsoft App For iPad, With Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.

Tags

ABA TECHSHOW, App, Excel, iPad, iPhone J.D. Blog, Jeff Richardson, Microsoft, Microsoft Office Mobile, PowerPoint, Word

Microsoft releases Word (and Excel and PowerPoint) for iPad, by Jeff Richardson, iPhone J.D. Blog

http://tinyurl.com/l44cvjy

I’m at ABA TECHSHOW in Chicago right now, and the big news on Thursday was that Microsoft released a version of Word (and Excel, and PowerPoint) for the iPad.  I have been kicking the tires on this app since it was released Thursday afternoon, and I am incredibly impressed.  Unlike Microsoft Office Mobile for iPhone released last year, the new Word app for the iPad has virtually every feature that lawyers want to use.  Every attorney who uses an iPad will want to get this app. . . .

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iPhone J.D.’s Latest “In The News”

15 Saturday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apple, Cell Phones, Google, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology, Mac, Tablets

≈ Comments Off on iPhone J.D.’s Latest “In The News”

Tags

Alan Cohen, Apple, AppleInsider, Brian Chen, Daring Fireball, Good Technology, IDG News Service, Investors.com, iPad, iPhone, iPhone J.D. Blog, Jeff Richardson, Jeffrey Taylor, John Gruber, Juan Carlos Perez, Laptop, Law Technology News, New York Times, Patrick Seitz, Samsung, The Droid Lawyer, Tim Cook, Tom Mighell, Wall Street Journal

In The News, by Jeff Richardson, iPhone J.D. Blog

http://tinyurl.com/kn6r3xt

Another excellent review of legal technology news for the past week. -CCE

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iPad Apps from Tom Mighell’s 2014 Webinar.

14 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apps, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology, Mac

≈ Comments Off on iPad Apps from Tom Mighell’s 2014 Webinar.

Tags

Apps, iPad, iPads, Legal Productivity Blog, One Hour for Lawyers, Tim Baran, Tom Mighell, Webinar

Roundup of Apps from iPad for Lawyers Webinar (2014), by Tim Baran, Legal Productivity

http://tinyurl.com/mbs5tlor

Tom Mighell, author of iPad Apps in One Hour for Lawyers, put on another widely popular webinar for us. Here’s the much requested list of iPad apps he covered.

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Do You Know Whether Your Judge Uses an iPad or Tablet? Find Out Before You Submit Your Next Brief.

28 Tuesday Jan 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, Apple, Brief Writing, Footnotes, iPad, Judges, Legal Technology, Legal Writing, Trial Tips and Techniques

≈ Comments Off on Do You Know Whether Your Judge Uses an iPad or Tablet? Find Out Before You Submit Your Next Brief.

Tags

Columbia Business Law Review, Daniel Sockwell, Eugene Volokh, iPad, Matthew Butterick, Typography for Lawyers

Writing a Brief for the iPad Judge, by Daniel Sockwell, Columbia Business Law Review

http://cblr.columbia.edu/archives/12940

‘Know your audience’ is a fundamental rule of skillful writing. For lawyers writing briefs in the 21st century, a key part of knowing your judicial audience is knowing what device will display your brief. While some judges print briefs and read the hard copy, a quiet revolution is occurring: more and more judges are reading briefs primarily on iPads or other tablets. According to experts on legal writing, this change in reading should trigger a similarly significant change in writing.

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iPhone J.D. Reports Survey Results on Attorneys’ Use of iPhones and iPads.

10 Tuesday Dec 2013

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Cell Phones, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology

≈ Comments Off on iPhone J.D. Reports Survey Results on Attorneys’ Use of iPhones and iPads.

Tags

Apps, International Legal Technology Association, iPad, iPhone, iPhone J.D. Blog, Jeff Richardson

ILTA Survey Reveals Extensive Lawyer Use Of iPhones, iPads, by Jeff Richardson, iPhone J.D. Blog

http://tinyurl.com/lpj2a7x

 

Jeff Richardson reports on lawyers’ iPhone and iPad use, mobile security, and the top thirty apps. -CCE

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In Love with the iPad Air

04 Monday Nov 2013

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology

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Tags

Apple, Handhelds, iPad, iPad Air, iPad mini, iPhone, IPhone 5, Smartphones

My Experience with the iPad Air, by Jeff Richardson, iPhone J.D. Blog

http://perma.cc/0UTXYQh7ysn

Jeff Richardson has found a new love:

If my third-generation iPad and my iPad mini had a baby, and if the proud parents were lucky enough to realize the dream shared by all parents that their child be even smarter than they are, the result would be the iPad Air.  I’ve been using an iPad Air extensively for the last three days, and it truly combines the best features of the iPad and the iPad mini, plus offers more.  This is an amazing product, and it is hard for me to imagine any lawyer not finding a lot to love about the iPad Air.

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Edit and View Microsoft Office Documents on iPads

18 Friday Oct 2013

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in iPad, Legal Technology, Microsoft Office

≈ Comments Off on Edit and View Microsoft Office Documents on iPads

Tags

Apps, iPad, Legal Technology, Microsoft

The best ways to edit and view Microsoft Office docs on your iPad,
by Geoffrey Goetz, GigaOM
http://gigaom.com/2013/06/19/the-best-ways-to-edit-and-view-microsoft-office-docs-on-your-ipad/

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