Wednesday "How to . . . ": Did You Know You Can Convert a PDF Table Into a Workable Spreadsheet?
/Converting a table on a PDF to a Excel spreadsheet is easy!
Read MoreConverting a table on a PDF to a Excel spreadsheet is easy!
Read MoreIn this episode, I talk with Dan Culhane, the owner of Discovery Genie. Dan and I discuss how his computer product helps attorneys of any firm size save time and money with discovery production for small- and mid-size cases. I think the listener will enjoy learning how to advance and simplify discovery production and case preparation while saving time and money. Both are recouped from having to manually create pdfs of files, notes, e-mails (and their attachments) and having to indexing their contents without the need for the larger and more expensive document production software. Enjoy!
Dan can be found at Dan@DiscoveryGenie.com, or 303-872-2410 and followed on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/discoverygenie/
(Note to the listener: My apologies for not dropping this on Tuesday. I got bogged down with some deadlines before the Holiday. Hopefully you can enjoy this episode as your recover from your family Thanksgiving dinner perhaps on the drive/flight home!
Now that Taxes are Filed (and I caught up on some work)!
Getting ready for our tax deadline, we all had to deal with little pieces of paper, receipts, invoices, etc. We had to then hand them over to our tax preparer. But we also had to make copies for our clients, our bookkeepers and for our own records. That can add up to a lot of paper, cost and a mess on your desk.
Same thing too when it comes to client files. Various records and letters come to us in paper form (ever handle Veterans claim folder from the VA - 1000s of pages!). It can be a little overwhelming, consume space we really don’t have available (home office practitioners) and be a challenge to organize. That is where scanning comes in handy.
Both Windows and Macs can scan a file with a scanner and convert the file into a “pdf” file. PDF stands for “Portable Document Format (PDF). According to Wikipedia “It is a file format developed by Adobe in the 1990s to present documents, including text formatting and images, in a manner independent of application software, hardware, and operating systems.”
PDF files are universal and can easily be shared between Mac OS and Windows OS. The files and pages within can easily be manipulated with various pdf readers. Rearranging pages, redaction, word searching the file (after you run an Optical Character Recognition “OCR” program on the file) are just the start of what you can do.
The gold standard program for pdf files is Acrobat. Acrobat is created by Adobe - the creator of the pdf format. Acrobat is universal on both Mac and Windows. Acrobat Reader is the free version of Acrobat and allows you to read the file and do some minor manipulation to file. In order to get into some of the more advance features, you then have to buy the program or go with a subscription. There are many alternatives at a lower cost, some better, some not so good.
I’ll discuss some of these in future postings along with different types of scanners. But in the meantime, I'd love to read your thoughts if you have a great pdf program.
MICHAEL D.J. EISENBERG IS A WASHINGTON, DC ATTORNEY WHO LOVES HIS TECH.
Over the years I have found myself helping others (especially lawyers) young and old with their tech questions. With this blog, I hope to share my knowledge on a broader scale. My postings are based on the questions I have been asked in the past and trends I see for the future.
I hope my postings can be used by lawyers of any tech skill. And, in the end, provide the readers valuable insight on how lawyers can better their legal practice and their own personal life with the use of technology.
DISCLAIMER: I cannot and do not offer any guarantee of computer hardware, software, services, practice, etc. discussed in this blog. Use at your own risk. Further, I am not offering any legal advice nor do the discussions in this blog create an attorney-client relationship.