If you want to know the future of courtroom technology, look at today’s smartphones. They started with audio and have increasingly incorporated all sorts of other digital technologies, including voice recognition, photography and even high-definition video. Courts have started to integrate technologies, but convergence isn’t happening as smoothly as it has on an iPhone. In fact, far from it. Bound by tradition, historically uncomfortable with technology, and by definition slow and deliberative, U.S. courts are adopting technology in fits and starts. It’s a painful process as courts try to bend digital recording technology to fit their processes and procedures while realizing that, by its very nature, technology can transform those same processes and procedures.

The impact of digital recording technology on both audio and video is already changing how at least two key players approach their jobs: court reporters and trial attorneys.

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