Since the pandemic, we have formed new relationships with existing technology. We attend streaming worship services, help our children with school assignments on their iPads, and order our burritos by app before we arrive at the restaurant. These technologies all existed before the pandemic, but we have been forced to reevaluate them.

This rapid technological shift has affected the legal industry as much as any other. Regardless of practice area, lawyers and judges have been forced to adopt technologies that had been overlooked for years. The practicalities of providing legal services under pandemic conditions have required re-evaluation of tools and techniques that would have been inconceivable two years ago.

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