Fictional character from the British soap opera EastEnders
POPULARITY
Lawyers have long been hesitant to adopt technology, but the rapid advancements in generative AI have sparked a new curiosity in many attorneys. Are we heading toward a mindset shift in the profession and a swift increase in tech use? Dennis and Tom welcome Cat Moon to the podcast to get her take on the current state of AI and other technologies in the legal world. Drawing from her expertise in working with both practicing attorneys and law students, Cat shares insights on experimentation in her AI-focused lab work, collaboration strategies, tech education, and the vital importance of humble curiosity. As always, stay tuned for the parting shots, that one tip, website, or observation that you can use the second the podcast ends. Have a technology question for Dennis and Tom? Call their Tech Question Hotline at 720-441-6820 for the answers to your most burning tech questions. Caitlin “Cat” Moon is the Director of Innovation Design for the Program in Law and Innovation at Vanderbilt Law School. Show Notes KMR Episode 375: Do something new with genAI every day—read something, do something, try something. NotebookLM now lets you listen to a conversation about your sources Personal Quarterly Offsites and your personal AI agenda Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Lawyers have long been hesitant to adopt technology, but the rapid advancements in generative AI have sparked a new curiosity in many attorneys. Are we heading toward a mindset shift in the profession and a swift increase in tech use? Dennis and Tom welcome Cat Moon to the podcast to get her take on the current state of AI and other technologies in the legal world. Drawing from her expertise in working with both practicing attorneys and law students, Cat shares insights on experimentation in her AI-focused lab work, collaboration strategies, tech education, and the vital importance of humble curiosity. As always, stay tuned for the parting shots, that one tip, website, or observation that you can use the second the podcast ends. Have a technology question for Dennis and Tom? Call their Tech Question Hotline at 720-441-6820 for the answers to your most burning tech questions. Caitlin “Cat” Moon is the Director of Innovation Design for the Program in Law and Innovation at Vanderbilt Law School. Show Notes KMR Episode 375: Do something new with genAI every day—read something, do something, try something. NotebookLM now lets you listen to a conversation about your sources Personal Quarterly Offsites and your personal AI agenda
Dean Andrew Perlman of Suffolk Law School joins host Cat Moon for a discussion of generative artificial intelligence (AI) and legal ethics on Talk Justice. Perlman authored an article in February of this year, “The Legal Ethics of Generative AI,” which describes how lawyers can use generative AI while satisfying their ethical obligations.
Dean Andrew Perlman of Suffolk Law School joins host Cat Moon for a discussion of generative artificial intelligence (AI) and legal ethics on Talk Justice. Perlman authored an article in February of this year, “The Legal Ethics of Generative AI,” which describes how lawyers can use generative AI while satisfying their ethical obligations.
With this episode, we mark the third anniversary of Pioneers and Pathfinders. Nothing could mark this milestone better than to welcome back a thought leader in the legal profession and legal education, Cat Moon, lecturer and Director of Innovation Design at Vanderbilt University Law School. Since Cat last joined us on the podcast, she has co-founded VAILL, the Vanderbilt AI + Law Lab, which she also co-directs. In this program, she collaborates with professionals across various disciplines to improve legal practice by exploring and experimenting at the intersection of generative AI, legal education, law practice, and access to justice. Today, Cat discusses the resilience of her law students, the challenges ahead for lawyer training, her fascinating work with VAILL, and developing competency in the use of generative AI.
Experts discuss the vast funding gap in legal tech. LSC President Ron Flagg hosts the conversation with guests Bob Ambrogi, lawyer and award-winning legal tech journalist, and Cat Moon, director of innovation design for the Program on Law and Innovation at Vanderbilt Law School. Inspired by Ambrogi's recent LawSites article, they discuss how tech companies, big law firms and corporate law departments could step up to help close the justice gap.
Experts discuss the vast funding gap in legal tech. LSC President Ron Flagg hosts the conversation with guests Bob Ambrogi, lawyer and award-winning legal tech journalist, and Cat Moon, director of innovation design for the Program on Law and Innovation at Vanderbilt Law School. Inspired by Ambrogi's recent LawSites article, they discuss how tech companies, big law firms and corporate law departments could step up to help close the justice gap.
Experts discuss the status of alternative legal service delivery models, the various forces pushing regulatory reform forward and the biggest obstacles to changing the legal system on LSC's “Talk Justice” podcast. Inspired by a recent report from the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System (IAALS), “Community & Cooperation: Action Steps Toward Unlocking Legal Regulation,” host Cat Moon brought Stacy Rupprecht Jane and Lucian Pera together for a conversation that approaches regulatory reform from diverse angles.
Experts discuss the status of alternative legal service delivery models, the various forces pushing regulatory reform forward and the biggest obstacles to changing the legal system on LSC's “Talk Justice” podcast. Inspired by a recent report from the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System (IAALS), “Community & Cooperation: Action Steps Toward Unlocking Legal Regulation,” host Cat Moon brought Stacy Rupprecht Jane and Lucian Pera together for a conversation that approaches regulatory reform from diverse angles.
Vanderbilt Law School recently launched an exciting new initiative called the Vanderbilt AI Legal Lab (VAILL) to explore how artificial intelligence can transform legal services and access to justice. In this episode, we spoke with VAILL's leadership – Cat Moon,(
Welcome to today's episode of "AI Lawyer Talking Tech," your daily review of the latest legal technology news. In today's episode, we'll be discussing a wide range of topics, including the challenges faced by Native American women lawyers, the potential of AI in big law firms, Google's legal action against AI scams, and the role of generative AI in legal practice. Stay tuned as we delve into these fascinating developments and explore how AI is revolutionizing the legal profession. Top 30 Biglaw Firm's Leader Thinks AI Will Help His Firm Soar To The Top14 Nov 2023Above The LawGT Named Law Firm of the Year for Information Technology Law in 2024 ‘Best Law Firms' Report14 Nov 2023LexBlogGoogle's Legal Action Against AI Scams and Copyright Fraud14 Nov 2023The Blog HeraldClio Double Header: Chief Technology Officer Jonathan Watson and Chief Product Officer Hemant Kashyap14 Nov 2023LawSitesGunderson Dettmer Open Sources Cap Express Engine; Announces New Cap Table Platform Integrations with Carta and AngelList14 Nov 2023MyHighPlains.comCalifornia State Bar Committee Urges Regulation on AI Legal Tools14 Nov 2023JDJournalCJEU rules individuals have right to free copy of their personal data14 Nov 2023IAPP.orgAI Regulations Are Coming; How Should Companies Prepare?14 Nov 2023Corporate Compliance InsightsLexisNexis Expands Legal Generative AI Ecosystem for Lawyers & Law Schools14 Nov 2023LexisNexisGoogle Proposes A Globalist Approach To AI Regulation14 Nov 2023Web TimesThe Ultimate Guide to Chat GPT for Lawyers14 Nov 2023LexBlogLexisNexis Unveils Two New Generative AI Products14 Nov 2023LawSitesTGIR Ep. 228 – Cat Moon and Mark Williams Launch the New Vanderbilt AI Law Lab (VAILL)14 Nov 20233 Geeks and a Law BlogUS leads the world in legal challenges to generative AI14 Nov 2023Commercial Dispute ResolutionAI negotiates a contract, without human intervention14 Nov 2023Electronic SpecifierLitigation Management Software for the Growing Firm13 Nov 2023LexBlog5 Ways To Thrive As Technology Changes Lawyers' Roles13 Nov 2023Above The LawK&L Gates Recognized as IP Litigation Powerhouse13 Nov 2023K&L GatesSand Trap: The Future of the PGA Tour's Nonprofit Status14 Nov 2023Washington Journal of Law, Technology & ArtsA Summary of the Final Amendments to the NYDFS Cyber Rules14 Nov 2023Debevoise Data BlogPromoting Success by Reducing Bias in Recruitment and Talent Management at Your Law Firm08 Nov 2023Legal Marketing & Technology BlogLLM's and Order: Special AI Unit14 Nov 2023Legaltech on MediumWhat is Going to Happen to Legal Marketing in the Age of GenAI?14 Nov 2023Legaltech on MediumLitigation Prediction Platform Pre/Dicta Expands Into New Motion Types and Case Timelines14 Nov 2023LawSitesBundledocs Announce Partnership with Smokeball14 Nov 2023Legal Technology News - Legal IT Professionals | Everything legal technologyEigen Technologies Launches Eigen 6 – A Faster, Safer way to Automate Document Workflows with Generative AI14 Nov 2023Legal Technology News - Legal IT Professionals | Everything legal technologyS3E8 | Legal certification 2.0: Are LLMs turning legal education upside down? w/ Michael Bommarito14 Nov 2023The Law of TechOMB Releases Draft Guidance to Agencies on Implementing Biden's AI Executive Order — AI: The Washington Report09 Nov 2023GenAI-Lexology
Guests from Legal Aid of North Carolina (LANC) join Cat Moon to discuss creating the nation's first Innovation Lab housed in a civil legal aid organization on the latest episode of LSC's “Talk Justice” podcast.
Guests from Legal Aid of North Carolina (LANC) join Cat Moon to discuss creating the nation's first Innovation Lab housed in a civil legal aid organization on the latest episode of LSC's “Talk Justice” podcast.
Experts discuss the potential impact of generative AI on legal services on the latest episode of LSC's “Talk Justice” podcast, released today. Talk Justice Co-host Cat Moon is joined by guests Sam Flynn, COO and co-founder of the no-code automation platform, Josef; Natalie Anne Knowlton, founder of Access to Justice Ventures; and Tom Martin, CEO and founder of the no-code AI platform, LawDroid.
Experts discuss the potential impact of generative AI on legal services on the latest episode of LSC's “Talk Justice” podcast, released today. Talk Justice Co-host Cat Moon is joined by guests Sam Flynn, COO and co-founder of the no-code automation platform, Josef; Natalie Anne Knowlton, founder of Access to Justice Ventures; and Tom Martin, CEO and founder of the no-code AI platform, LawDroid.
Experts from the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System (IAALS) discuss how and why states are using non-lawyer legal service providers on the latest episode of LSC's “Talk Justice” podcast, released today. Talk Justice Co-host Cat Moon is joined by guests Michael Houlberg, director of special projects for IAALS, and Jim Sandman, president emeritus of LSC and IAALS board member.
Experts from the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System (IAALS) discuss how and why states are using non-lawyer legal service providers on the latest episode of LSC's “Talk Justice” podcast, released today. Talk Justice Co-host Cat Moon is joined by guests Michael Houlberg, director of special projects for IAALS, and Jim Sandman, president emeritus of LSC and IAALS board member.
Cat Moon and Lagniappe Law Lab Executive Director Amanda Brown discuss a legal access points research project headed up by Amanda which illustrates how collaboration and modern data methods can support important strategic A2J goals.
Cat Moon and Lagniappe Law Lab Executive Director Amanda Brown discuss a legal access points research project headed up by Amanda which illustrates how collaboration and modern data methods can support important strategic A2J goals.
The pandemic made many things change at a rapid pace, but even with this evolution, the same competency areas are still needed to thrive in the practice of law. On Balance hosts Molly Ranns and JoAnn Hathaway welcome Cat Moon to discuss the practice, process, and people skills that make up the Delta Model, which helps lawyers bring self-awareness and growth to their work and personal lives. Cat shares examples of the Delta Model in action in the lives of legal professionals and students and recommends all lawyers rethink how they work to discover a more joyful career experience. Caitlin “Cat” Moon is the Director of Innovation Design for the Program in Law and Innovation at Vanderbilt Law School. Special thanks to our sponsor Embroker.
The pandemic made many things change at a rapid pace, but even with this evolution, the same competency areas are still needed to thrive in the practice of law. On Balance hosts Molly Ranns and JoAnn Hathaway welcome Cat Moon to discuss the practice, process, and people skills that make up the Delta Model, which helps lawyers bring self-awareness and growth to their work and personal lives. Cat shares examples of the Delta Model in action in the lives of legal professionals and students and recommends all lawyers rethink how they work to discover a more joyful career experience. Caitlin “Cat” Moon is the Director of Innovation Design for the Program in Law and Innovation at Vanderbilt Law School. Special thanks to our sponsor Embroker.
We're talking to Cat Moon this week about innovation & design in the legal field and how COVID has helped shape new trends/issues since rearing its head over the past 18+ months. If today's podcast resonates with you and you haven't read The Small Firm Roadmap yet, get the first chapter right now for free! Thanks to TextExpander, Litera, and Rankings.io for sponsoring this episode.
We're talking to Cat Moon this week about innovation & design in the legal field and how COVID has helped shape new trends/issues since rearing its head over the past 18+ months. If today's podcast resonates with you and you haven't read The Small Firm Roadmap yet, get the first chapter right now for free! Thanks to TextExpander, Litera, and Rankings.io for sponsoring this episode.
We're talking to Cat Moon this week about innovation & design in the legal field and how COVID has helped shape new trends/issues since rearing its head over the past 18+ months. If today's podcast resonates with you and you haven't read The Small Firm Roadmap yet, get the first chapter right now for free! Thanks to TextExpander, Litera, and Rankings.io for sponsoring this episode.
On today's episode, I chat with Jed MacKay! We talk - his start in comics - working at Marvel - Black Cat - Moon Knight -and what's next! All that and much more! You can follow Jed on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jedmackay You can follow The Comic Lounge on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/thecomiclounge Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thecomiclounge Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thecomiclounge Merch: https://www.teepublic.com/user/thecomiclounge Send us your feedback or comments to https://www.thecomiclounge.com thecomicloungepod@gmail.com
As we make our way to the next version of the workforce in a post-pandemic world, we look back at a discussion of the Delta Model Competencies with Northwestern Law School's Alyson Carrel and Vanderbilt Law School's Cat Moon. This interview from November of 2019 is possibly more relevant today than it was when we initially recorded it. While we typically focus on the T-Shaped lawyer model of being an expert in certain areas of the law, and knowledgeable of the necessary disciplines and technology. Moon and Carrel add a third layer to this model to cover the personal effectiveness skills needed to provide effective legal services. In their recent substack articles, Moon and Carrel have continued expanding the Delta Model competencies to fit the current disruption in the legal services industry. While the pandemic is the most obvious disrupter, there are many other factors within the work environment that make the Delta Model even more useful today as it did in its inception. Listen, Subscribe, Comment Please take the time to rate and review us on Apple Podcast. Contact us anytime by tweeting us at @gebauerm or @glambert. Or, you can call The Geek in Review hotline at 713-487-7270 and leave us a message. You can email us at geekinreviewpodcast@gmail.com. As always, the great music you hear on the podcast is from Jerry David DeCicca. The transcript is available on the 3 Geeks website.
Summer Associates and the upcoming Fall Associates had a unique experience with their On-Campus Interviews (or OCI) over the past two years. Some of the recruits still have not actually met face to face, the members of their firm who hired them. We talk with Kerry Benn, Director of Series, Surveys & Data at Law360 about Law360 Pulse's recent survey on this topic and see how the firms, the students, and the schools adjusted during the pandemic. The survey of over 1,200 law students breaks down the popular firms and practice areas, how COVID impacted the process, and how things look as students make their way into the firms this Summer. Information Inspirations Our previous guests Cat Moon and Alyson Carrel are teaming up with Dennis Kennedy later this month for a TRB (Thorn, Rose, Bud) Retrospective. They are asking for law students, legal educators, law school administrators, and education experts to apply for this three-hour event to be held on June 24th and share their COVID era experiences and talk about what they should STOP doing (thorn), KEEP doing (rose), as well NURTURE (bud) once the pandemic comes to a close. The offices may be reopening in some areas, but in the theme of "let no crisis go to waste," Perkins Coie and some other firms are using this transition back to the office to test things like hoteling, reverse hoteling, and telepresence rooms. There won't be a return to a normal office routine, but the next year is going to show us what is "next" in how we work in a post-pandemic legal industry. Back in Ep. 112, we talked with Dan Packel about FisherBroyles' desire to show that a distributed law firm could compete with the AmLaw200 firms. Well, it turns out that they can. FisherBroyles came in at #198 this year and showed that alternative methods to the traditional law firm works. This is making other firms take notice of the competition. Trailblazers in diversity efforts want neurodiversity included in the conversation. Last week's guest is one of those trailblazers. In her recent Medium article, Dr. Caitlin Handron openly discussed her battle with bipolar disorder, and "outed herself" to her boss and to the world in order to take steps toward normalizing the discussion of neurodiversity in the workplace. Let's all learn from her bravery and willingness to be vulnerable, and continue this conversation with our colleagues at our own workplaces. Listen, Subscribe, Comment Please take the time to rate and review us on Apple Podcast. Contact us anytime by tweeting us at @gebauerm or @glambert. Or, you can call The Geek in Review hotline at 713-487-7270 and leave us a message. You can email us at geekinreviewpodcast@gmail.com. As always, the great music you hear on the podcast is from Jerry David DeCicca. Transcript available on 3 Geeks website.
Future law will be done by the law students of today. To make the legal systems and legal practices fit for purpose in the digitalized era, it is necessary that lawyers know more than just the law. But what are the skills needed for the lawyers of the fourth industrial revolution? And more importantly, are contemporary law schools committed to building those skills? Back in the day when Henna and Nina were law students, it was possible to graduate from law school without ever seeing an actual legal document, yet practicing how to make one. It is no wonder if law graduates struggle adapting to real working life, if the real working life never goes to lecture halls. In this episode we discuss how to make law better through legal education with Caitlin “Cat” Moon. Cat teaches law and legal problem solving in the Program on Law and Innovation at Vanderbilt Law School in Nashville, Tennessee. Cat explains why we need human centric design thinking to solve the legal problems of today, and how to build 21st century legal competence by using the Lawyer Skills Delta Model. She also tells about her popular Legal Problem Solving course at Vanderbilt, and we hear what skills podcast making can teach for a future lawyer.
Like many of those changing the industry, Cat Moon has a long and multilayered CV. She's a lawyer. She's a lecturer at Vanderbilt. She's a writer and speaker. She's an organizer. But getting to know Cat in conversation reveals a unique point-of-view that no traditional CV can capture. In a wide ranging discussion that moves from how Cat navigated teaching during the pandemic, to the work she's doing with Design Your Delta, this self-described “curious lawyer” shares her thoughts on how empathy will change the shape of the profession, and why we need to think beyond the client in the delivery of services.
Darlene and Mike are joined by Cat Moon to discuss how the business of law is taught. Cat is the perfect person to speak about this topic, as she is Vanderbilt University's Director of Innovation Design for the Program on Law and Innovation. PLUS: A debate on exercise listening and the brilliance of Seth Meyers. SHOW NOTES: -Check out Cat on Twitter at @inspiredcat -This interview was recorded in the late fall of 2019 -Sorry for Mike's bad audio! FEEDBACK, CREDITS & REVIEW Please give us feedback here: http://bit.ly/LLPFeedback Music credit: Thanks to Nick Fowler who composed and performed our theme music. To learn about his work, visit teknologyproductions.wixsite.com/teknology. Art credit: Thanks to Jenny Henderson for our LLP artwork. To learn about Jenny and see her work, visit: https://www.jennyhendersonstudio.com/ Please rate, review, subscribe and comment. We would so appreciate your feedback (I mean, we're just two lawyers trying to podcast).
Vanderbilt Law's Cat Moon is known for teaching her students about making the law more accessible and making legal delivery more seamless. With a background in communications, law, and now academia, Moon reveals how our legal ecosystem and other professional services have not kept pace with the rest of the world. Tune in to hear Moon's ideas for new solutions, and learn how human-centered design can be applied to the practice of law as well as everyday business problems. Moon also discusses professionals using social media, explaining how Twitter has been a helpful tool in her own collaboration efforts. She shares her experience of teaching classes during the COVID-19 pandemic, and states that, despite having to broadcasting in a mask behind plexiglass, Moon has been able to create a close connection with her students by constantly experimenting in the classroom. Hosts: Lavinia Calvert & Deborah Farone Co-Producer: Katelin Zweifel-Korzuchin & Brit Nowacki Audio Engineer: Nikki Rasmussen Editor: Jessica Penfield
In this episode of Talk Justice, recorded live at LSC’s 2021 Innovations in Technology Conference, host Jason Tashea discusses insights and takeaways from the conference with three legal technology leaders: Steven McGarrity, executive director at Community Legal Aid Services; Cat Moon, director of innovation design and lecturer in law at Vanderbilt Law School; and Ilenia Sánchez-Bryson, chief information officer at Legal Services of Greater Miami.
“A LAWsome Christmas Carol” brings Dickens’ famous cautionary tale to the world of legal marketing & technology in a festive and unforgettable way. A lawyer stuck in the past is taken on a voyage by time-travelling spirits, and along the journey, learns the true meaning of the law firm. Starring: Mike Whelan, Erin Levine, Jess Birken, Michael Simon, Jared Correia, Cat Moon, David Kempston, Paul Julius, and Jacob Sanders. Written, Scored, and Produced for Audio - Jacob Sanders
Cat Moon leads the Program on Law and Innovation (PoLI) at Vanderbilt University's law school, a role that she took on after practicing law for nearly 20 years in Nashville, Tennessee. At PoLI and beyond, for the last several years she has become a passionate voice for making lawyers - and law - better. Mike Madison talks with Cat about PoLI, her vision for future lawyers, and her work helping to build and promote the Delta Model for lawyer competence. Cat Moon's biography at Vanderbilt Law. The Program on Law and Innovation at Vanderbilt. The Delta Model. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A few years ago, Robert Taylor and Jeff Marple of Liberty Mutual Insurance, along with Suffolk Law School's Gabriel Teninbaum sat down at Back Bay Harry's and hatched a genius plan over some truffle fries and sandwiches. The idea was to leverage Suffolk's law school technology training for students along with Liberty's desire for the law schools to help students actually learn how to address the issue of design thinking and how it applied to real-world legal issues they were facing. And while the truffle fries were still hot, the Boston Legal Design Challenge was born. On November 13th, 2020, the 4th Annual Challenge takes place, this time in a virtual setting. Fifty participants, making up 10 teams of five students from around the country will learn more about Design Thinking, identify an issue within the legal industry which needs addressing, and at the end of the day, pitch that idea to a blue-ribbon panel made up of Cat Moon, Bob Ambrogi, and Jason Barnwell. The winning team walks away with a few thousand dollars, and all of the participants end up with significant new skills to differentiate themselves from their fellow students. The competition is not just limited to law students, or to those people within Boston. Bob, Jeff, and Gabe are looking for diverse teams made up of different schools, disciplines, and geographical regions. Enrollment is open now, so go to LMI.co/BLDC to sign up. Information Inspirations Sometimes efficiency comes from small improvements in processes. One basic efficiency for word processing is to keep your hands on the keyboard, and away from the mouse. Deborah Savadra at Legal Office Guru has a short 7 1/2 minute video showing how you can use shortcuts and macros to reduce the use of your mouse, and just be a better user of MS Word. We're all concerned about data privacy whether it is the type of browser, search engine, or messaging app we use. Microaggressions are not small problems. They are the equivalent to death by a thousand cuts and can lead to an unbearable work environment for those who are the recipients of these acts. For Black attorneys, microaggressions are a constant issue. American Lawyer brought together five attorneys to have a roundtable discussion on the issue, and the result is an absolute must-watch for anyone who truly cares about improving themselves and wanting to learn how to identify when their own actions constitute microaggressions. We all watch the news. Most of us saw that debate. We know misinformation is rampant in our daily lives. The Knight Foundation and a few other prominent organizations are working to help us learn how to identify this misinformation. Listen, Subscribe, Comment Please take the time to rate and review us on Apple Podcast. Contact us anytime by tweeting us at @gebauerm or @glambert. Music by Jerry David DeCicca.
In this episode, Cat and Chris speak to Alyson Carrel, professor at Northwestern Law and legal innovator extraordinaire, about what it means – empirically and practically – to be a high functioning lawyer. Alyson and our very own Cat Moon are co-creators of the Delta Model which is a multidimensional paradigm of what it takes to practice law. Of course, it takes knowledge of the law itself. But it also takes a human who knows how to take charge, play well with others, and to self-reflect and assess. This model is not merely descriptive, however, but is itself a call to action. This discussion will give law students a vital glimpse into the skills and behaviors that they need to cultivate not only to be a good law student but to be competently prepared for the real thing once these three years fly on by.At the top, Rachael, Chris and Cat give a rundown on the thorn-bud-rose of the week, talking about law firm deferments, why bad midterm grades are a great opportunity, and we brag on our fantastic students here at Vanderbilt Law.Check out the show notes for all things Delta!https://bit.ly/zoomingshownotes
Welcome, law school class of 2023! And welcome back 2L and 3L students! This year’s law school journey begins amid a public health crisis that will present unique challenges to you as a human and as a future lawyer. The delivery of your education will be different. And your opportunities to find your place in this outstanding community will, more than ever before, require a commitment to engage in and embrace this experience. Your law school’s commitment to you remains the same, but with your professors and administrators have their eyes wide open about the myriad ways things are not law-school-as-usual. With all of this in mind, we are coming at you with a podcast episode to share a personal message at a social distance. Chris Meyers, Cat Moon and Rachael Andersen-Watts have joined up for Season 2, this time to reflect on what law school connection and community will look like in 2020-21.https://bit.ly/zoomingshownotes
We've been off for a month and we come out swinging for this #Barpacolypse #Diplomaprivilege episode. Each July, thousands of law students and attorneys are required to sit for and pass the bar exam in their states if they wish to practice. The fairness, bias, and necessity of the test has been called into question in the past (Note: the exam is a relatively recent method to determine attorney competency to practice), but COVID 19 may finally force states to do away with the bar examination. The public has called administration of the test into question, due to COVID 19 health concerns, and the response from state and national bar examination boards and state courts have been a hodgepodge of confusion and guarding the status quo. Today's guests, Professor Cat Moon from Vanderbilt University, Brian L. Frye, Associate Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law in Lexington, and recent Georgetown Law School Graduate, Stefanie Mundhenk are digging deep to expose concerns and implications surrounding the 2020 bar exam and to examine creative approaches, such as Diploma Privilege and supervised practice, that not only will protect their health but may prove to be a better gauge of attorney competency. And if you think the bar exam is a good gauge, please see an excellent My Cousin Vinny tweet thread. More reading: The Case for Replacing the Bar Exam With "Diploma Privilege" The Pandemic Is Proving the Bar Exam Is Unjust and Unnecessary Veteran State Court Judge Rips Bar Exam, Says Test ‘Does Not Function To Protect The Public' COVID-19 IS CREATING A STATE OF EMERGENCY FOR INCOMING PUBLIC DEFENDERS. DIPLOMA PRIVILEGE IS THE ONLY SOLUTION. NCBE Trashes Diploma Privilege, Sprinkles In Some Racist And Sexist Conclusions Ditch In-Person Bar Exams During Pandemic, ABA Says Rome Wasn't Built in a Day and Online Bar Exams Can't Be Listen, Subscribe, Comment Please take the time to rate and review us on Apple Podcast. Contact us anytime by tweeting us at @gebauerm or @glambert. Or, you can call The Geek in Review hotline at 713-487-7270 and leave us a message. You can email us at geekinreviewpodcast@gmail.com. As always, the great music you hear on the podcast is from Jerry David DeCicca.
Caitlin Moon is a professor at Vanderbilt Law School in Nashville, Tennessee. Cat teaches primarily in the areas of technology and innovation in the practice of law. In this episode, we tackle how the law students of today are learning not only new technology to bring to the practice of law, but altogether new paradigms of client relationships and monetizing a law license. We also discuss the current dilemma that new law school graduates are facing as fifty states wrestle with the bar exam in the era of COVID-19.
It's episode 75!! We think we look fabulous and that we definitely don't look a day over 50. While most professional associations are experiencing significant changes due to the Coronavirus Pandemic, today's guests have launched a brand new network and say that this might be one of the best times to enter the market. The Legal Value Network (LVN) focuses on the delivery of services and connecting professionals from law firms, corporate legal departments, alternative legal services companies, and technology providers. Kristina Lambright and Purvi Sanghvi are part of the LVN Executive Board and discuss the launch of the network, and how they are providing content and connections to those in the network. Information Inspirations Denton's Managing Partner wrote an excellent article in The Hill entitled "Let's stop asking 'When are We Going Back to the Office?'" The leader of the world's largest law firm had some sharp criticism for many of the partners at his firm who are pushing for a return to the office. He points out the privilege that many of these partners are expressing without consideration to the staff, and the gender disparity that will occur if there is a rush to get back to the office. It turns out that "Don't let an emergency go to waste" is a Rahm Emanuel reference, and it turns out that we've been saying it wrong... and incompletely. According to Emanuel's interview on Freakonomics, the quote was, “Never allow a good crisis to go to waste. It's the opportunity to do the things you never thought possible and make them possible.” Our friend, Cat Moon, through her Make Law Better initiative, is looking for volunteers who are legal innovators and are looking for ways to help during this pandemic. Check out Marlene's ILTA co-committee members, Amy Monaghan and Mike Ertel's article on Empathetic Human-Centered Design Overlay on Design Thinking Post COVID-19. Listen, Subscribe, Comment Please take the time to rate and review us on Apple Podcast. Contact us anytime by tweeting us at @gebauerm or @glambert. Or, you can call The Geek in Review hotline at 713-487-7270 and leave us a message. You can email us at geekinreviewpodcast@gmail.com. As always, the great music you hear on the podcast is from Jerry David DeCicca.
At Vanderbilt Law School, Cat Moon works with both law students and lawyers to help move the legal industry forward through the use of innovative design practices. In her Daily Matters discussion with Jack Newton, Cat talks about the new realities facing legal educators and students in the wake of COVID-19. She also describes the Delta Model for legal professionals (balancing the elements of people, process, and practice), and she provides some resources and suggestions lawyers can explore to bring innovation into their practices at this critical time.
In this episode, we are once again joined by Tunji Williams, co-founder of DealWIP, which has now been "paused." The team did what they could with the long sales cycle for legal technology companies. Their productivity tool was spectacular and solved a real problem. Unfortunately, that is insufficient for success in the software game. Tunji was kind enough to join Cat Moon and Nick Rishwain to give us his experience in the startup world, what went well, what went wrong, and how he's moving forward. This is a very candid and transparent discussion. Tunji answered all sorts of questions from our live audience. Nick was joined by first time co-host, Professor Cat Moon. Cat Moon is the Director of Innovation Design for the Program on Law and Innovation (PoLI) at Vanderbilt Law School. In this role, she works with PoLI colleagues to design the curriculum for both the JD program and the PoLI Institute, which provides interactive training in legal innovation to practicing lawyers and legal professionals. We hope you enjoy: More information about Tunji Williams: Tunji Williams on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tunji-wil.... Tunji Williams on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TunjiWilliams. Tunji is now Director of Strategy for Transaction Management at Litera Microsystems. More about Litera Microsystems: https://www.litera.com/. More information about Cat Moon: Cat Moon on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/caitlinmoon/. Cat Moon on Twitter: https://twitter.com/inspiredcat. Cat Moon's Vanderbilt course website: http://www.legalproblemsolving.org/. More information about the show can be found at: https://legaltechlive.com/. Category Science & Technology
On this second part of a two-part series, Professor Cat Moon and Jordan Furlong discuss COVID 19's impact on legal education and law firms. The conversation explores: * The "knock out effect" the crisis has on the various parts of the lawyer formation system * Who might take ownership of coordinating the new landscape of lawyer accreditation * The opportunities lifelong learning creates for law schools to be involved in the ongoing development of legal professionals * How human-centered design and project-based learning offer ways to integrate the three sides of the Delta model of lawyer competency * How small and solo law firms might be impacted by the crisis
This episode is the first of two episodes that discuss the future of the profession in the wake of the COVID19 crisis. Guests Jordan Furlong and Cat Moon discuss: * How COVID 19 exposes the access to justice crisis the profession has created * Why the crisis offers the opportunity to leverage technology in new ways * Why the structures and systems that have defined the profession have been so durable * Whether lawyers view the crisis as a blip or a transformation * How leaders can pivot toward innovation
#HOMEschooled While the remote work and teaching environment might be new to most law professors, Vanderbilt Law School's Cat Moon has lots of experience. That's not to say she hasn't had her own frustrations, but she's coping better than most. She talks with me about the issues that law professors and law students are going through as all US law schools find themselves to be online schools. In a survey she gave Vanderbilt students, they pointed out a number of simple issues that are happening as professors teach remotely. Things like not using a microphone (earbuds/microphones), or not facing the right direction while teaching. Granted, these professors are being thrust into a teaching style they may have never experienced. And, they were forced into this within a matter of days. We're all learning, and we all need to give each other a little slack. One thing this model does expose, however, is the lack of technology skills that law professors have. It's something that many of us have pointed out for years, and now we're seeing it in real life. As you'll hear me say over the lifetime of this podcast, "never let an emergency go to waste." The silver lining may be that we finally convince law professors that they absolutely need to be better with technology. There is a lot coming down the pike for law schools and the legal industry. The LSAT may be cancelled this summer. Is there going to be a Bar Exam? How are those hiring law students going to react to PASS/FAIL grades? Everyone is anxious about all these changes, and the leaders of the industry need to step up and ease these concerns by facing them and giving these students solid answers. Cat sees this as an opportunity and lists a few things that we could actually benefit. Remember, we may all be In Seclusion, but we're in this together. Host: Greg Lambert (@glambert) Producer: Janice Anderson Artwork: Dean Lambert Music: Jerry David DeCicca Twitter: @InSeclusionPod --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/inseclusion/message
“A LAWsome Christmas Carol” brings Dickens’ famous cautionary tale to the world of legal marketing & technology in a festive and unforgettable way. A lawyer stuck in the past is taken on a voyage by time-travelling spirits, and along the journey, learns the true meaning of the law firm. Starring: Mike Whelan, Erin Levine, Jess Birken, Michael Simon, Jared Correia, Cat Moon, David Kempston, Paul Julius, and Jacob Sanders. Written, Scored, and Produced for Audio - Jacob Sanders
We have discussed the concept of the T-Shaped Lawyer on previous episodes, but we jump into a new concept this week called the Delta Model. Alyson Carrel from Northwestern Law School joins returning guest Cat Moon from Vanderbilt Law School's Program on Law and Innovation to discuss this intriguing idea of helping lawyers understand the pyramid of skills surrounding understanding the law, business & operations, and personal effectiveness. We suggest taking a look at this primer from Carrel, Moon, and other members of the Delta Model working group (Natalie Runyon, Shellie Reid, and Gabe Teninbaum) from Bill Henderson's blog, Legal Evolution. This model of three principles, along with the ability to shift the center of importance for each skill set, helps explain, and guide the overall needs of the legal industry. Carrel and Moon give us an insider's view of the model and explain why this concept will help with the holistic training of law students as well as practicing attorneys. Information Inspirations In the article, Innovation, Disruption, and Impact: Should We All Jump Aboard the Legal Tech Hype Train? by Peter Melicharek and Franziska Lehner, the authors talk about the need to unwind the PR from the actual technology in the legal industry. The primary benefit of technology is to assist in achieving results by eliminating mundane tasks, and assisting in getting to better legal results, faster, and cheaper. Once again... read the Delta Model primer. It's so important, it is inspirational. Can law firms actually create a four-day work week? One smaller firm in Florida says yes. ALM's Dylan Jackson interviews the managing partner of Orlando based Benenati Law about how he has created a four-day work week, and three-day weekends, and the benefits they've discovered of this alternative work model. A recent Microsoft survey found a 40% increase in productivity in some of their four-day work schedules. Perhaps it could do the same at firms?? If you're looking for a great podcast that discusses UX and User Design, then Wireframe has just what you need. Listen, Subscribe, Comment Contact us anytime by tweeting us at @gebauerm or @glambert. Or, you can call The Geek in Review hotline at 713-487-7270 and leave us a message. You can email us at geekinreviewpodcast@gmail.com. As always, the great music you hear on the podcast is from Jerry David DeCicca, thanks Jerry!
Three law school innovators, three law firm innovators, a law student, and a biglaw Partner meet on a podcast... this podcast... and share thoughts on how to improve law students' tech skills before they arrive at the firm. That is the setting for this episode of The Geek in Review. Nikki Shaver, Director of Innovation and Knowledge from Paul Hastings got this conversation started on Twitter when she discovered that most of the New Fall Associates (NFAs) did not take any technology or innovation courses while in law school. This is not an uncommon story. There seems to be little incentive, either on the law school, or law firm side of recruiting which stresses tech competencies. But just because that's the way it has always been, that doesn't mean there isn't room for improvement. There is definitely room for improvement! So we wanted to get a group together and do just that. We asked Vanderbilt Law School's Cat Moon, Vermont Law School's Jeannette Eicks, and University of Oklahoma Law School's Kenton Brice to cover the law school innovation perspective. Nikki Shaver, Marlene, and Greg cover the law firm innovation perspective. We also asked Jackson Walker Partner Matt Acosta, and Michigan State University Law School student, Kanza Khan to jump in and share their experiences with the expectations for legal technology skills. We take a deep dive into the topic ranging from what law schools are actually offering students, what are law firms expectations for tech skills, and are law firm recruiting, and law school placement incentivizing students to be more proficient with tech before they arrive as NFAs? Update on Government Actions on Legal Information It's been a few months since we last talked with Emily Feltren, Director of Government Relations with the American Association of Law Libraries. While the country may be focused on the impeachment inquiry, Emily catches us up on legislation that has passed the US House (and is sitting in the US Senate.) There's a potential Thanksgiving budget crisis... yeah, we hadn't heard that either. And, there were hearings last week on FREE PACER (and how some US Judges are not on board for that.) So Jam Packed, We Had To Postpone Information Inspirations We skipped the Information Inspirations portion this week. We promise it will be back in the next episode!! Listen, Subscribe, Comment Contact us anytime by tweeting us at @gebauerm or @glambert. Or, you can call The Geek in Review hotline at 713-487-7270 and leave us a message. We'd love to hear any ideas you'd like us to cover in future episodes. Also, subscribe, rate, and comment on The Geek In Review on your favorite podcast platform. As always, the great music you hear on the podcast is from Jerry David DeCicca, thanks Jerry!
On this episode of The Geek in Review, Anusia Gillespie, the US Head of Innovation at Eversheds Sutherland, sits down with us this week to discuss what she refers to as the "New Big Law" market's inverted approach to innovation. In a market filled with problem solvers, sometimes the innovation we create solves a problem first, and then sets out to find the problem for this solution. Gillespie finds that innovation is disciplined and structured in its approach, but broad and creative in its thinking. Innovation definitely doesn't live in any one discipline. Innovative solutions might require technology expertise, but it could just as well only require professional development expertise or strict legal expertise. She's convinced that we need to move away from this type of anchoring bias to ensure that, in this time of rebuilding law into New Big Law, legal innovators finally design and implement correct and smart solutions. With the various professionals needed to identify problems, and create solutions, you need leadership, structure, a bit of fun mixed in, and a champion-forward approach. We dive into issues ranging from an overview of how Eversheds defines innovation to case studies of Gillespie's publication on smart solutions for lateral recruitment and onboarding. Information Inspirations There are five very good podcast recordings from Legal Talk Networks "On the Road" series from the American Association of Law LIbraries (AALL) conference in Washington, DC. Check it out. Subscribe to it (and to The Geek in Review whle you're at it!!) Finnemore Craig's managing partner, James Goodnow, writes that his kids don't want to be lawyers! It's not surprising, but is it really all that bad? Maybe. Our fellow 3 Geek's writer, Ryan McClead, was interviewed by the ACC's Rachel Zahorsky about all those innovation subsidiaries that have been all over the news lately. McClead thinks there may be more sizzle than steak, saying that he doesn't think that anyone is doing it very well, and that the innovation created on the outside, doesn't seem to be making it back inside those firms. Cat Moon's #FailureCamp was a success. Marlene was excited about all of the Twitter traffic and information that came out of the workshop, and she hinted, pretty loudly, that she'd love one of the cool t-shirts the attendees were issued. Bonus Nerdy Info Inspo's: Marlene goes full nerd and dives into archaeoludology, the study of ancient games. Not to be outdone, Greg nerds up and points to a recent episode of The Nod which discusses Jerry Lawson, and his invention of the gaming console cartridge. Listen, Subscribe, Comment Contact us anytime by tweeting us at @gebauerm or @glambert. Or, you can call The Geek in Review hotline at 713-487-7270 and leave us a message. We'd love to hear any ideas you'd like us to cover in future episodes. Also, subscribe, rate, and comment on The Geek In Review on your favorite podcast platform. As always, the great music you hear on the podcast is from Jerry David DeCicca, thanks Jerry!
The lawyer on today's episode is Cat Moon. Cat is a director of the program on law and innovation at Vanderbilt Law School in Nashville, Tennessee. She's also one of the leading voices on legal innovation and future of legal education. And as part of the summit on law and innovation, she will be hosting the first failure camp for legal innovators in Nashville on 20 July 2019. the human side of the podcast is Kelly McBroom. Kelly is founder and CEO if Big Dump Plungers, a company building and selling toilet plungers made from recycled sports equipment. Kelly holds a marketing degree from Montana State University and she's also a former member of the Canadian National Ski team. Learn more about our workshops and events at change.legal
In this episode no. 11, I interview lawyer and academic Caitlin "Cat" Moon; the Director of Innovation Design for the Program in Law and Innovation (PoLI) at Vanderbilt Law School and Director of the PoLI Institute which provides training in legal innovation to practicing lawyers and legal professionals. I could relate to the fact that Cat’s experience spans academia, innovation, private practice and public service law. The expansiveness of her work means she can see synergies where others don’t and add value across many areas. You will want to listen to this episode if you are interested in knowing about human centred design, essential factors for positive change, the importance of mindsets, and some of the unexpected benefits of legal innovation. This interview will appeal to a broad range of listeners and especially be of interest to you if you are a legal educator or law student, legal designer, chief innovation officer or tasked with bringing different programs or mindsets to your organisation. Links: POLI Institute Vanderbilt Law School Legal Problem Solving California Task force on access to justice Brene Brown "The Call to Courage" Andrea Perry-Petersen – LinkedIn - Twitter @winkiepp – andreaperrypetersen.com.au Twitter - @ReimaginingJ Facebook – Reimagining Justice group
Darlene and Mike discuss Daniel Pink's book "A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future." The team focuses on Pink's "six senses” — on which professional success and personal satisfaction increasingly will depend. Design. Story. Symphony. Empathy. Play. Meaning. PLUS: Shout outs to Cat Moon (@inspiredcat) and Breanna Needham (@Breanna_Needham), the Great DAUBER vs. DABBER Debate, and Dad Jokes (again). Music credit: Nick Fowler, composition and performance (teknologyproductions.wixsite.com/teknology) Please rate, review, subscribe and comment. We would so appreciate your feedback (I mean, we're just two lawyers trying to podcast).
In this episode with Cat Moon, we talk about how to achieve basic design competence, some lessons Cat has learned about innovation and design, and what role law schools can or should have in solving problems like access to justice.
In this episode with Cat Moon, we talk about how to achieve basic design competence, some lessons Cat has learned about innovation and design, and what role law schools can or should have in solving problems like access to justice.
Vanderbilt Law School Professor, Cat Moon, doesn't just have one of the coolest names in the legal industry, she also brings insights and a perspective on the human element of legal project management. Human centered design thinking is a core function of her teaching. It all goes back to the fact that you can teach law students, lawyers, and legal managers all the concepts in the world, but it's all for naught if you leave out the human element. Professor Moon also gives a brutally honest view of why women in the legal field tend to leave law firms in order to pursue their creative and life passions outside the firms. Marlene and Greg are recently back from Legalweek in New York. While there, they went around to a number of vendors to ask a simple, but relevant question, "what are you doing to change the legal industry?" This week, we get the perspective of four vendors: Christina Rosas - Reorg Research Shmuli Goldberg - Lawgeex Matt Kroll and Andrew Moeller - PwC David Kamien - Mind Alliance It is a fairly easy question, but one company that had a hard time answering? Thomson Reuters. Information Inspirations James Goodnow interviews American Lawyer Editor Gina Passarella Fennemore Craig, PC Managing Partner, James Goodnow asks AmLaw Editor Gina Passerella what she observed from the panels at Legalweek. Passerella notes that clients are craving data analytics, but that law firms are not producing them. Perhaps because it is not in the firm's best interest to do so?? Legalweek had a KM Managers' Day Legalweek isn't just for e-discovery (although, there's a lot of that!) There was an entire day, and multiple discussions on the value of knowledge management in the legal industry. SALI Releases Version 1 of Legal Matters Standards The mission of SALI (Standards Advancement for the Legal Industry) is to help define exactly what services the legal industry provides by creating a standard language surrounding legal matter types. It's an ambitious, but important step in helping law firms and clients to have a common language to speak so that they understand each other. Alternative Legal Service Providers have a distinct advantage over law firms... Capital investment in tech. Marlene listened to a recent episode of Legal Speak called "Move Over Big Law. It's Time for an Alternative." Once again, Jae Um discusses how lawyer's value isn't defined in six-minute increments. . Even the New York Times wants Free PACER - but what would that mean for the courts? The call for FREE PACER even reaches the pages of the New York Times. We all want it to be free, but Greg puts on his Devil's Advocate hat (complete with horns) and takes a view from the unpopular side of what does FREE PACER mean for the courts and its technology? Who is actually benefiting from FREE PACER? Don't forget to subscribe, rate, and comment to The Geek in Review on your favorite podcast platform. If you comments, compliments, or suggestions, you can tweet @gebauerm and/or @glambert to reach out. Thanks to Jerry David DiCicca for his original music.
In this episode, Caitlin "Cat" Moon, Director of Innovation Design for the Program in Law and Innovation (PoLI) at Vanderbilt Law School, discusses her approach to pedagogy and teaching legal problem solving. Among other things, Moon addresses the role of mindfulness, creativity, and poetry in lawyering. And she provides practical advice about how law students can learn to become better lawyers. Moon is on Twitter at @inspiredcat.Keywords: Human Centered Design, legal services, technology See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
How is curiosity a tool for innovation in law? In this On The Road report from the Clio Cloud Conference 2018, host Jason Tashea talks to Cat Moon about a human-centered design for law and the power of curiosity to drive innovation in the legal profession. She shares why thinking like a lawyer isn’t always the most effective way to solve problems and how lawyers can better cultivate their own curiosity. Cat Moon works with law firms, legal departments, and law schools across the U.S. to bring a human-centered design perspective to firms and legal services companies as they re-imagine the delivery of legal services and education. Sign up to attend the Clio Cloud Conference next year!
Caitlin "Cat" Moon is Director of Innovation Design for the Program in Law and Innovation (PoLI) at the Vanderbilt University Law School and an entrepreneur, creating Ledger.Law, a consultancy from blockchain related advice to regulation, policy, and legal structure. Professor Moon also is a co-organizer of the Music City Legal Hackathon, sponsored by PoLI and part of the global Legal Hackers community, which brings together legal professionals, technologists, designers and other professionals to create technology solutions serving access to justice and legal services. Lawyers on Fire spoke with Cat at design.legal, Europe’s coziest conference on legal design, tech and innovation.
A Mindset of Curiosity and Empathy Today’s guest is Cat Moon a practicing lawyer, educator and business leader with more than 20 years of experience in human-centered design, agile project management, strategic communication, and the practice of law. Human-centered design is a process, a set of tools, a mindset of curiosity and empathy. It’s putting you in the shoes of the client; asking excellent questions and listening intently before offering solutions. Human-centered design is reorienting how you work and delivery service by putting the client in the center. Along with human-centered design, Cat and her colleagues at Vanderbilt University Law School are teaching and practicing collaborative skills with cognitively diverse teams. Cognitively diverse teams are both efficient and effective in solving today’s business problems, serving client more broadly and with stronger conclusions than non-diverse teams. Reflecting on her own experience as a practicing lawyer, Cat’s advice to others includes going above and beyond for clients and seeing feedback as affirming and valuable. She also encourages embracing ambiguity, asking questions and gaining insight before presenting a solution. Cat Moon is the Director of Innovation Design, Program in Law and Innovation at Vanderbilt University Law School; where she is also an adjunct professor. Cat is the Chief Operating Officer, Chief Design Officer and Co-founder at Legal Alignment – a company focused on creating alignment in legal workflow through legal process management training and global certification.
The goal of the Summit on Law and Innovation (SoLi) is to bring together leaders from every aspect of law in order to drive legal innovation forward. In this report from On The Road, host Aileen Schultz talks to one of the co-organizers of SoLi Cat Moon about how the conference is encouraging legal problem solving, their plans for SoLi next year, and how changes in Vanderbilt’s curriculum is pushing innovation with a new program. Cat Moon works with law firms, legal departments, and law schools across the U.S. to bring a human-centered design perspective to firms and legal services companies as they re-imagine the delivery of legal services and education.
In this episode we empathically unpack an article from Law.com - 10 Predictions for Legal Tech in 2018 - we interview adjunct professor at Vanderbilt Law, Cat Moon, about human-centered design, and learn how lawyers and law firms can update their practice. NEWS - https://www.law.com/legaltechnews/sites/legaltechnews/2017/12/22/10-predictions-for-what-2018-will-bring-for-legal-tech/ GUEST - http://www.legalproblemsolving.org/ ©2018 Consultwebs www.thelawsomepodcast.com
Cat Moon joins me, again, as we discuss our favorite applications for the iPhone. As usual, we skip over some of the more common apps you may already use and try to find you something you haven't yet discovered. Give us a listen and subscribe on iTunes. If you enjoy this episode, or others, please leave a quick, review on iTunes. It helps others discover the show. These are the iPhone apps discussed on the program – 1. Do/If 2. Soundever 3. Workflowy 4. Pocket 5. Asana 6. Launcher with Notification Center Widget 7. Podcasts 8. Overcast 9. Scannable 10. Better Bonus: Buddhify Shyp And, finally, some inside scoop on the apps used to record this show and the previous show with Cat. Podclear RINGR
Cat Moon joins me, again, as we discuss our favorite applications for the iPhone. As usual, we skip over some of the more common apps you may already use and try to find you something you haven't yet discovered. Give us a listen and subscribe on iTunes. If you enjoy this episode, or others, please leave a quick, review on iTunes. It helps others discover the show. These are the iPhone apps discussed on the program – 1. Do/If 2. Soundever 3. Workflowy 4. Pocket 5. Asana 6. Launcher with Notification Center Widget 7. Podcasts 8. Overcast 9. Scannable 10. Better Bonus: Buddhify Shyp And, finally, some inside scoop on the apps used to record this show and the previous show with Cat. Podclear RINGR
Cat Moon joins me as we discuss our favorite applications for the Mac. It's a good discussion of a bunch of apps you may not yet be using. Give us a listen and subscribe on iTunes. If you enjoy this episode, or others, please leave a quick, review on iTunes. It helps others discover the show. These are the Mac apps discussed on the program - 1. Alfred 2. PopClip 3. Found 4. TextExpander 5. iBooks Author 6. Byword 7. iDisplay 8. Reeder 9. BillingsPro 10. Hermes And two bonus apps - 1. beQUIET 2. Autograph And, finally, we mention PodClear at the very end of the show. PodClear was not without issues, but we ended up with something we could publish so it's good enough for an early release.
Cat Moon joins me as we discuss our favorite applications for the Mac. It's a good discussion of a bunch of apps you may not yet be using. Give us a listen and subscribe on iTunes. If you enjoy this episode, or others, please leave a quick, review on iTunes. It helps others discover the show. These are the Mac apps discussed on the program - 1. Alfred 2. PopClip 3. Found 4. TextExpander 5. iBooks Author 6. Byword 7. iDisplay 8. Reeder 9. BillingsPro 10. Hermes And two bonus apps - 1. beQUIET 2. Autograph And, finally, we mention PodClear at the very end of the show. PodClear was not without issues, but we ended up with something we could publish so it's good enough for an early release.