The estimable Ron
Friedman
, who’s been covering legal technology since 1989, has
done a nice recap of
the past 25 years of legal technology for The
American Lawyer
.  Two messages here:

  • No matter how much you may bitch and moan at technology today,
    it’s useful to be reminded how far we’ve come. I personally recall
    when Davis-Polk used vi for word-processing.  (Count yourself
    fortunate if you’ve never heard of "vi"; it’s a UNIX text editing
    program [with apologies to the Slashdot crowd].)
  • Predictions of where technology will go are utterly useless;
    the only meaningful rule is to be ever-vigilant, flexible, and
    to adapt.

Sometimes in reading articles like Ron’s I am momentarily seized
by the desire to be 10 years old again, just so I could live to see
another generation of technological innovation.  But then I
remember the purgatory that was adolescence and come to my senses.

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