VoxOrion wrote:Trent Steele wrote:VoxOrion wrote:lethal wrote:BigEd76 wrote:...which is why I'm a "Developer" and not a "Programmer". Outsource this!
Developers are replacing lawyers though. Thanks Ed. I hate you.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/05/scien ... wanted=all
This hits even closer to home for me. And I like it. Sorry.
To date, my experience with the legal data mining software has been that it uniformly blows in all respects.
Cool.
The Dude wrote:you'll be a good addition
lethal wrote:VoxOrion wrote:Trent Steele wrote:VoxOrion wrote:lethal wrote:BigEd76 wrote:...which is why I'm a "Developer" and not a "Programmer". Outsource this!
Developers are replacing lawyers though. Thanks Ed. I hate you.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/05/scien ... wanted=all
This hits even closer to home for me. And I like it. Sorry.
To date, my experience with the legal data mining software has been that it uniformly blows in all respects.
Cool.
Its time for me to get a new profession. I don't think I'm too old yet.
jerseyhoya wrote:My hatred of quote boxes in signatures has reached a new high
VoxOrion wrote:lethal wrote:VoxOrion wrote:Trent Steele wrote:VoxOrion wrote:lethal wrote:BigEd76 wrote:...which is why I'm a "Developer" and not a "Programmer". Outsource this!
Developers are replacing lawyers though. Thanks Ed. I hate you.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/05/scien ... wanted=all
This hits even closer to home for me. And I like it. Sorry.
To date, my experience with the legal data mining software has been that it uniformly blows in all respects.
Cool.
Its time for me to get a new profession. I don't think I'm too old yet.
You could always become one of those attorneys that work for legal software companies who exist to replace attorneys. Aside from the bloated and commoditized eDiscovery market, the legal IT/software market is deep, still very "new" thanks to the old guard's reluctance to embrace technology, and has a lot of opportunities in it. Aside from Lexis-Nexus and maybe CT Tymetrix, there aren't any market leaders out there and none of them are unbeatable. I bet in a matter of days you could identify a number of holes in your legal day-to-day that no software or technology exists to fill. There is so much opportunity for legal technology it isn't funny - all the way down to process and efficiency (the latter of which is a death knell for firms still wedded to hourly rates). The GC's for Cisco and DuPont are pretty awesome on this.