The National Law Journal 1996 Wayne J. Lovett - Abstracts

The National Law Journal 1996 Wayne J. Lovett
TitleSubjectAuthors
Aspiring giants equip; would-be megafirms are using technology to link far-flung offices and woo bigger clients.LawWayne J. Lovett
Corporate counsel can track costs via computer: programs use powerful engines to help general counsel monitor and budget outside legal costs.LawWayne J. Lovett
Data bases that help win cases: to evaluate the automation that assists in litigation, six support programs were placed on trial.LawWayne J. Lovett
Demonstrative evidence displays a broader appeal; falling prices and the ability to convey complex issues to juries give visual aids a higher profile.(Juries and Evidence)LawWayne J. Lovett
Free online information proliferates; Web sites set up by publishers, students and associations offer legal resources that include much more than cases or statutes.(Internet Law)LawWayne J. Lovett
Online services can ease company filing burdens; corporate secretaries now can access libraries containing the most up-to-date state forms.(Corporate Secretaries)LawWayne J. Lovett
Practitioners make perfect in a simulated courtroom; for CLE credit or just for entertainment, interactive training programs can help practitioners hone their trial techniques. (continuing legal education)LawWayne J. Lovett
Present perfect persuasion: computer-generated graphics need not be expensive to pack a punch at trial. Here are seven leading programs for review.LawWayne J. Lovett
Products compete to find law firms' suite spot; with word processors as their flagships, elaborate software suites vie for the legal market.(Legal Tech)LawWayne J. Lovett
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