Litera has launched an iOS mobile app for Litera One, so that lawyers can tap the legal tech company’s AI skills, via its Lito assistant, while on the move.
The company said: ‘Lito [will] be accessible across the web and Outlook, and [provide] a mobile experience with true two-way continuity. Users can ask questions, run workflows, review outputs, compare documents, and even dictate hands-free queries while on the move without losing secure access to firm-specific documents, data, or workflows.’
And here’s a quick overview of what’s possible:
- ‘Conversational AI: Ask questions, launch workflows, and move work forward via text or speech-to-text
- Document Review: Analyze documents and generate structured, actionable outputs
- Document Comparison: Use Litera’s market-leading Compare technology for AI-powered comparison, summarization, and risk analysis
- Business Development: Create client-ready summaries, updates, and insights faster.’
Pasquale Colella, VP, Global SaaS Operations at Litera, commented: ‘Lawyers need to stay productive whether they’re traveling, moving between meetings, or preparing to walk into a client conversation.
‘With Litera One Mobile, that continuity is seamless. Work begun on the web—or in Microsoft Word or Outlook—is instantly available on mobile, and anything started on mobile carries effortlessly back to the desktop. This ensures lawyers can keep momentum between touchpoints without restarting tasks, re-running analyses, or losing context.’
Is this a big deal? Artificial Lawyer has a significant portion of its readership coming to the site via mobile, so, if that’s the same for other more specifically work-related tasks undertaken by lawyers, then it makes sense for legal tech companies to have a powerful mobile version as well.
How many companies will go down this route is unclear. Harvey, for example, has very much got behind the mobile legal tech platform idea already. Either way, more and more of us simply see our phones as a natural part of our lives – in fact, who doesn’t these days…? In which case, multi-platform capabilities is clearly a logical way to go.
More about Litera here.
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