![]() ![]() Dropbox and SignMyPad (as also recommended by Stephanie Kimbro and already described above).Keynote – Apple’s version of PowerPoint.It combines the features of keynote with a robust filing interface to make organizing and presenting a trial binder more effective in court. TrialPad – app for trial preparation and presentation.Chase – a bank app which uses your iPad or iPhone’s camera, so that you can take a picture, front and back, of a check, and make an instant deposit.Square – which (together with a device) lets you take credit card payments from clients and it can email them receipts immediately.It lets you create multiple note folders, multi-page, and most importantly, it has the ability to shrink your handwriting down to a readable type that saves space on the iPad screen.” This will essentially replace your old yellow legal pad. Note Taker HD – which is “a notepad on steroids.Skype for iPad – for basic web conferencing.įurther iPad apps recommendations are provided by Gabriel Cheong in the article “Going Paperless (Out of the Office)”, who suggests that the apps listed below “will entirely change the way you conduct client meetings and also take your paperless office out in the real world”:. ![]() – lets you attend desktop sharing and conferences started by others.Zite – allows you to share easily with your Twitter account and customizes your social media likes and dislikes into an online newspaper based on your interests.DropBox – can be used for storing documents, but due to security issues you should not store confidential information here.LogMeIn – usable when you are traveling and have forgotten to upload something from your laptop to any online resource.QuickOffice – which is an app that allows you to “jot down ideas or notes” in an easy way.The Pro version of the app tags the GPS location and date/time stamp in the metadata of the PDF when it’s saved. SignMyPad Pro – which allows you to sign any document from your iPad.Here is Stephanie Kimbro’s list of usable apps: ![]() As most lawyers, she thinks that the iPad is still not comparable to a traditional keybord when it comes to typing, but that the iPad has a lot to offer by its portability and applications. In “Using the iPad with My Virtual Law Practice” Stephanie Kimbro reveals which iPad apps she is using in her virtual legal practice. ![]()
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