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Monday
Mar132006

The paperless law office

I understand Adam Spence.  Too bad more lawyers don't understand people like him. 

Reader Comments (9)

a paperless law office makes things more efficent. More anmore offices are moving in that direction
Paperless offices are definitely the wave of the future. But it takes an initial investment in both technology and training to make it successful. I understand why some people are hesitant.

I'd like to see the LSBA Technology Committee ponder making some training opportunities available for interested legal practicioners. Or maybe I should get off my duff and apply to join the Technology Committee myself.
March 15 | Unregistered CommenterBrian
Please do apply. Email me and I'll put you in touch with Frank Neuner.
March 16 | Unregistered CommenterErnie
The best thing about the paperless office is that Moe can never find my bar tab...
Hi ! Your site is very interesting. Thank you.
April 3 | Unregistered CommenterBilly
Great blog!
April 7 | Unregistered CommenterJosh
все это :)
To be or not to be......I am a little surprised that no one has touched on the major difference between ivy and non-ivy schools, which I believe is diversity, although not racial diversity in particular. I went to a highly rated, fairly small public university (10,000 students, it was one of several in the state) and then to one of the fifty top twenty law schools. Virtually everyone, even a high percentage of the grad students at my university, were in state, and a large percentage of them were from a single metro area. By way of contrast, there was far greater geographic diversity at my law school and its parent university. Choose the ivy if you want more geographic (although perhaps not economic) diversity, and the state if this matters less to you.One further comment; I see education, from HS to university to graduate, as a funnel of sorts. At college, the majority of my classmates had been in the top 10 percent of their high school class. In fact, an astounding number of them had been the valedictorian of their high school. One wag noted that in a certain way, that made at least 90% of the freshman class relative failures! Sometimes it is easier to be a big fish in a small pond than vice versa.



April 10 | Unregistered CommenterI see
I'd like to see the LSBA Technology Committee ponder making some training opportunities available for interested legal practicioners. Or maybe I should get off my duff and apply to join the Technology Committee myself.



April 14 | Unregistered CommenterMpeeg3

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