Tech and Tales from the Rural Lawyer

Category Archives: Law Office Technology

From virtual assistants to the paperless law office, the Rural Lawyer looks at the technology that makes running a law office easier

12 Bytes of Techmas

Trees on a snow covered mountainIn no particular order and without even an attempt at a rhyme scheme, here are the 12 things every lawyer should have at their fingertips.

  1. The number of the Lawyers Concerned For Lawyers branch for their state. Hey, lawyering is stressful at the best of times – these folks can help in the worst of times.
  2. The number for their professional responsibility board. If in doubt get an opinion before hand; it’s way cheaper than an ethics complaint afterwards.
  3. Some type of document assembly software. It makes you and your staff way more productive while reducing errors in documents.
  4. Some type of document management software. I’m sure your secretary knows where every document you’ve create lies on your hard disk, but do you? Document management software not only helps you locate documents, it can track changes, manage access and help eliminate those “#$%! I saved over the original” moments.
  5. A merchant account. Having the ability to take credit cards makes getting paid much easier.
  6. A good automated backup system because that hard disk is not going to last forever and one day you will erase that really important document.
  7. Bookmarks for:
  8. A link to the Courts, Secretary of State, Attorney General, and Revisor for your state. These agencies web pages often offer useful resources beyond information on court cases, corporations, policy, and statutes.
  9. The email addresses of a few trusted colleague you can go to for those “am I over-thinking this” and “WTF should I do now” questions. A good colleague is someone who’s willing not only to give you advice, but will administer the occasional dope-slap when you need one (Solosez provides access to a group of good colleagues).
  10. A comfortable place to take a nap. It may seem like goofing off, but a nap a good way to reboot your brain. In fact there’s a growing body of research that shows napping boosts intelligence, learning capacity, creativity, performance, and lifespan. If you’re not sure how to nap effectively, check here and here.
  11. Encryption software. First, encryption helps keep your client files safe in the event your server (where ever it may be) is hacked (and don’t think for a moment that this is a matter of  “if”  – it’s a matter of “when”). Second, if medical information ever crosses your desk, thanks to HIPAA, you’ll need to be able to encrypt it (while HIPAA doesn’t specifically require encryption, if a file containing medical information is ever compromised, the only way to avoid a HIPAA breach is to encrypt the file).
  12. The name and contact information for a good virtual legal assistant. Even if you have staff, there are times when work load exceeds capacity. Being able to offload some things to a virtual assistant can make the difference between hitting and missing deadlines (or even better between eating almost warm takeout and eating dinner with your family).

(Re)connecting

Telephone Operator circa 1920-1930Fall has come to the little law office on the prairie and as the veil between the worlds briefly thins, it is a time to reconnect with our ancestors and time to review the old cell phone plan. Once again I trudge to the local cell phone service and walk past the shiny new smartphones and over to that dark corner of the store where the just plain phones sit.

I will admit to having a somewhat perverse sense of amusement upon seeing the sales persons face when I ask for a cell phone that just makes phone calls — no texts, no web, no smarts. The look begins with an expression of complete incomprehension – I’m never sure if it is because they can’t understand why I would want such a thing or if it is because they can’t believe such a device actually exists – an ends with complete shock as it dawns on them that I am seriously interested in a piece of technology generally reserved for someone’s elderly maiden aunt.

So, why don’t I carry a smartphone? Reason one: I’m cheap and dumb phone, iPad and MIFI (I like Karma) gets me all the smart & connected I need for less than the cost of a smartphone plan. It helps that I don’t mind being disconnected from the demands of electronic communication on occasion A benefit of being out where cell phone service can have holes you can measure in terms of minutes is that you learn that it is not all that important to answer an e-mail or voicemail within seconds of receiving it – what is important is that you do return them.

Reason two is that my dumb phone goes a week on a charge. This means that rather than weighting my briefcase down with an array chargers, adapters and cables, I can weight it down with the important stuff like chocolate, coffee, and the occasional client file.

Finally, I think being less connected electronically means that when I meet with people, I’m there with them; the office stays in the office. I guess that I’ve reached that stage in life where multi-tasking takes a back seat to being there and building relationships (plus there has to be some sort of health benefit from not continuously squinting at tiny screens).

A Heartbeat Away

A few years back, when the little law office on the prairie was nothing more than a passing fancy, I found myself farming a few acres at the intersection of 3 roads in the foothills of the Appalachians. While this corner was simply a boundary point to me, it was of great interest to the… Continue Reading

The Ides of Tech

As I write this, it is abundantly clear that for the little law office on the prairie, Persephone has not yet returned to Demeter’s loving arms and the only technology I’m actively searching for is a front end loader with a longer reach. Out here, the size of the clean up technology is fairly accurate… Continue Reading

A Refurbished Collie

Having started my career in computer science as a the junior system administrator assigned the unenviable task of re-inking the line printer ribbons (yes, back in the paleolithic age of computers, printers actually banged bits of type into an inked piece of cloth to produce easily smeared letters on a roll of perforated paper) I… Continue Reading

Collies

The gaelic word “collie” (or “colley”) generally translated as “something useful” (an apt name for a class of working dogs). But rather than talk about the dogs that bear this honorific, these posts (this is the start of what will be an irregular series at best) take a short look at the “collies” of the law… Continue Reading