(Note: I started writing this on my birthday in late October. Then things became…A LOT. I planned on working on it and publishing while I was on vacation in early November, then my dad had…| Sarah Glassmeyer (dot) com
I have recently returned from hashtag ILTACON 2024. This was my third ILTACON, second as an exhibiting vendor, and first as a active ILTA volunteer. All three of the personas that I inhibit within ILTA could use some internal unpacking and will probably inform quite a lot of my thinking in the next few weeks and months. But, short answer: it was great! | Sarah Glassmeyer
If you’ve been aware of my existence for awhile, you probably have noticed I love thinking about the history of technology and using it to look for parallels in my modern professional life. Partly so as to not repeat past mistakes and party because there’s only so many tunes in life – shout out Damian Riehl – and we just play them at different tempos or with a new stylistic overlay.| Sarah Glassmeyer
Earlier this morning, while waiting to take a phone call about some of my volunteer work <sigh>, I was perusing LinkedIn. Someone (1) posted about the concerns they have about posting about A2J stuff and how that might affect their business relationships. | Sarah Glassmeyer
And when Alexander saw the breadth of his domain, he wept, for there were no more worlds to conquer.”| sarahglassmeyer.com
Answer: I don’t. Welp, thank you very much for coming out tonight! Don’t forget to tip your waitress, have your pets spayed and neutered, and please don’t drink and drive. Okay, that’s not entirely true. It’s just that I used to be like this: And now I try to be like this: I’ve worked really… Continue reading How I Argue on the Internet| Sarah Glassmeyer
I am a classifier by nature. For instance, whenever I eat a bag of M&Ms or Skittles (or Smarties, for my Canadian friends), I generally dump the bag out, sort the candy by color, and then start eating first by most numerous and then when they’re all an even number, one at a time from each color until they’re gone.| Sarah Glassmeyer
I’ve been thinking a lot about the posts Bob Ambrogi has written this year about the silos in the legal world and specifically how these silos are holding back progress in improving Access to Justice. See: Legal tech and A2J; Free law and A2J If I have anything to offer to the professional world, maybe… Continue reading What (Tech?) Does A2J Need?| Sarah Glassmeyer
(Ed. Note: Later this week I am doing a presentation to a law school class on the other side of the ocean. This talk ended up being a pretty good encapsulation of everything I believe/think/know, so I thought I’d memorialize it here. A few of my slides will be peppered throughout. If you’re a longtime… Continue reading The Legal Future Puzzle Box| Sarah Glassmeyer
I was very happy to see Bob Ambrogi recently highlight the disparities between the A2J and LegalTech worlds. My career lets me keep a foot in both worlds so this is a topic for which I Have Many Thoughts. There are few things that I love more than telling people what to do, so here… Continue reading How the Legal Tech and Innovation World Can Help Improve Access to Justice| Sarah Glassmeyer