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Sumber : Ohbulan




How Much Percentage Does A Personal Injury Lawyer Get


This isn’t the first time I’ve written about tablets. In prior columns I’ve shared how an appellate lawyer uses his Sony Notebook, how a public defender uses her iPad, and how two federal judges use their iPads. And each time I did so, some of you lamented in the comment section that Androids weren’t getting fair coverage (yes, I read the comments sometimes).

Well, good news! Today’s column is all about Android tablets and how an Oklahoma personal injury attorney uses his tablet in his practice. And it’s not just any attorney–it’s Jeffrey Taylor, blogger at The Droid Lawyer. If anyone knows the ins and outs of using Android tablets in a law practice, it’s Jeff.

Jeff currently owns 2 Android tablets: a Nexus 7 and an Asis Transformer Infinity tablet. After using both extensively, he prefers a 9-inch tablet. For that reason, he has his sights set on the newly released Nexus 9: “I’ve used the Nexus 7 more because of the performance issues with the larger Nexus tablet. So I’m looking into getting the Nexus 9 since larger screens are easier to read.”

As a civil litigator, he spends a lot of time reviewing legal documents and depositions. According to Jeff, his tablets help to simplify that process, increasing his efficiency and reducing paper clutter. “I hate dealing with paper. My desk’s already messy enough with all the paper I have to deal with,” he says. “So instead of carrying around a big old file I can carry a tablet with all of my documents easily accessible and searchable. Because the scanning and the character recognition capabilities of OCR are so accurate, it doesn’t make sense to use paper when you have the quality of programs that we do.”

Jeff explains that because civil litigation involves so many documents, personal injury attorneys stand to benefit tremendously from using tablets in conjunction with a practice that uses less paper: “Personal injury attorneys should definitely use tablets in their practice. Being able to store document intensive files on a mobile device is huge. Not only do you have access to every document in the file, you don’t have to worry about losing or damaging it. And, you can carry the entire contents of a large, heavy file on a device that weighs less than a pound.”


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