![]() ![]() Samsung Android tablet users will be familiar with the S Note app (also available on Windows 8), and they have one for phone users as well called S Memo. Writing Apps: S Note, Moleskine Journal, Bamboo Paper Almost as importantly, sometimes I am not writing notes so much as doodling to keep myself engaged in a discussion which I’m hearing but not actively a part of. I can also keep better eye contact and listen more closely when I’m writing than when I’ve got a screen propped up between me and others. Research that writing is better for information retention and learning than typing also resonates. It is faster for me to quickly capture notes by hand than by keyboard. I like writing on my tablet for a couple of reasons, most of which would hold if I was using paper. Writing on a tablet isn’t for everyone and here are some of the reasons you might not use it in your legal practice. Some interesting notebook and journal apps have appeared recently that can make you feel as though you’re writing on a paper pad. There is one key productivity app that lawyers can use with little effort and no keyboard and that is the notebook. ![]() A keyboard will help but then you are straddling the laptop fence. Voice options may be changing that a bit – for example, if you need help on where to bury a body – but it is challenging to create with a bare tablet. ![]()
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