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Halo Recruit for apple instal free7/7/2023 ![]() ![]() Why solos and small firms? I suppose because they are more flexible in choosing the equipment they want to run their practice. The biggest chunk of those Mac users were solo practitioners (15.5 percent), and small firms (2-9 attorneys) were next. That’s a noteworthy jump from only 5.8 percent in the 2014 survey. We’re not completely sure of the total number of Mac-using lawyers, but in the 2015 Legal Tech Survey conducted by the ABA’s Legal Technology Resource Center, 8.1 percent of respondents reported that they use a Mac in their practice. They’ve become enamored with the “it just works” dependability and yearn for the same experience on their work computer. The second is that many lawyers have a Mac at home either for their own use or a family member’s (e.g., for offspring attending college). ![]() One is because they’re already using an iPhone or iPad and a Mac would complete their Apple-y experience. There are two reasons lawyers contemplate using a Macintosh in their practice. You can read their full replies in Part 2, here: “Lawyers Who Use Macs: Why They Do It and How.” How Many Lawyers Are Using Macs? For this updated two-part series, in addition to updating that earlier article here, I’ve reached out to four Mac-using lawyers - Victor Medina, David Sparks, Ben Stevens and Jeremy Worley - for their insight and advice. Three years ago, I wrote a primer for Attorney at Work on setting up an all-Mac law office. And for those who wonder about bringing a little Apple into your workspace? Come on in, the water’s fine! - The Editors Brett Burney tells how you can set up Mac law office: hardware, software, using Microsoft and PDFs, and cloud-based services.īrett Burney’s primer on what you’ll need to go “all Mac” is an Attorney at Work classic must-read.
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