![]() The Pro version of the app tags the GPS location and date/time stamp in the metadata of the PDF when it’s saved. I can then add text, signatures, fill in a check box, add radio buttons or add the date. For example, if someone emails me a form, I save it as a PDF and open it up in SignMyPad. It allows me to sign any document from my iPad. SignMyPad Pro (by Autriv Software Development) – I was really impressed with this app. It’s that risk/benefit analysis that constantly changes as the technology and software evolves.Īfter several months of working the iPad into my daily grind, here are the apps I’m currently using: Responsible balance between security and cost and time savings. I’m probably more conservative in my use of the iPad than most, but then again, the majority of my communications with my clients online are handled through a system with end-to-end encryption of the data. Security on mobile devices is still a concern of mine. So I’m using the iPad primarily for the portability and the applications. Most of the keyboards I’ve seen that work with it are too flimsy for what I would put them through daily. I still type faster on a traditional, solid keyboard so I’m not at the point where I can generate a lot of written content using my iPad and the touch screen. (Dual monitors are awesome for multitasking.) I have a little 4G Verizon hotspot that I carry around to keep me online wherever I go and for backup Internet when the DSL is down. ![]() Most of my hardware is mobile except for a larger monitor in my home office which I hook up to my laptop when I work at night. After co-presenting a cloud computing session at ABA TECHSHOW with Tom Mighell, author of iPad for Lawyers, I was finally convinced to integrate a tablet into my virtual law practice.
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