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With emerging new technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning, many people have started considering what legal software might mean for the legal profession’s future. Most lawyers recognize the productivity and efficiency gains brought about by legaltechnology.
This increase of 49.89% since 2017 demonstrates a rapid global growth in smartphone owners, and the World Advertising Research Centre believes that 72% of all internet users will solely use smartphones to access the internet by 2025. Mills & Reeve, the winner of KM Innovation award in 2020, created an app in 2019 called ‘What the Tech’.
After all, from the onset of technology in the workplace to the popularity of the internet, social media, legal software, and working remotely, lawyers have always adjusted to new technologies to remain relevant. How has technology changed being a lawyer in the last 15 years?
In this episode of The Geek in Review, we interview Josh Kubicki , Director and Professor of Legal Business Design Hub and Entrepreneurship Program at Richmond Law School, and the creator of the daily newsletter Brainyacts . It could be, but no one’s gonna let that because there’s so many problems with relying on it for legaladvice.
In this episode of The Geek in Review, we interview Josh Kubicki , Director and Professor of Legal Business Design Hub and Entrepreneurship Program at Richmond Law School, and the creator of the daily newsletter Brainyacts . It could be, but no one’s gonna let that because there’s so many problems with relying on it for legaladvice.
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