Not too long ago, a new version of Apple Inc.’s mobile operating system—iOS—wouldn’t have meant much in the legal community. Lawyers had their BlackBerrys, and law firm tech chiefs had no trouble waving off the occasional hipster attorney who asked for an iPhone. The platform wasn’t secure enough, CIOs said; it lacked enterprise-level features.
Boy, have times changed. According to The American Lawyer ‘s 2011 Technology Survey, 96 percent of responding Am Law 200 firms now say they have attorneys using iPhones [ The American Lawyer , "Drawing the Line," November 2011]. Many firms have iPad users, too, and Apple’s tablet (also powered by iOS) can regularly be spotted in courtrooms, at client meetings, at conferences, and in litigation war rooms.
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