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Join one lawyer’s journey to digitally transform his legal practice. Learn how to separate the signal from the noise and smartly deploy value-add LegalTech tools to streamline your legal work. { Hosted by Kaj Rozga | Music by Brett Ryback | Views my own }
Join one lawyer’s journey to digitally transform his legal practice. Learn how to separate the signal from the noise and smartly deploy value-add LegalTech tools to streamline your legal work. { Hosted by Kaj Rozga | Music by Brett Ryback | Views my own }
Episodes
3 days ago
3 days ago
The iPhone didn’t just improve mobile phone, it reshaped entire industries around it. That’s the opportunity law firms have with AI, according to Scott Kveton, CEO and co-founder of CaseMark.
From Y2K to GenAI, Scott has been a witness to a lot of change in tech. With that experience, he brings to the conversation some powerful insights on how AI forces law firms to rethink how work is produced, who produces it, and how value is captured.
These lessons informed his founding of Casemark, which provides enterprises a secure environment for developing their own applications using AI. The goal is to empower legal to untap the potential of internallly built solutions to the everyday needs of practitioners. This frees law firms from dependencies on third party vendors and false starts that end with zombie software lurking across an enterprise.
Going back to the iPhone analogy, this is the app store moment for legal, and Scott is positioning his services at the center of a movement for enterprises to build point solutions.
CaseMark - AI for Legal Teams | Professional Class AI
case.dev | API Platform for Legal Tech Developers
Scott Kveton | LinkedIn
Tuesday Mar 03, 2026
Legal Quants: the Elite Legal Practitioners of the AI Era
Tuesday Mar 03, 2026
Tuesday Mar 03, 2026
What is a "legal quant"? According to Jamie Tso, who coined the term, it describes a new breed of elite legal practitioners operating at the frontier of tech who will be the rainmakers of the AI era.
Jamie, who is a practicing lawyer, is not a software engineer. But he does identify as a "legal quant". It's a term he coined to describe a small but growing group of lawyers who use the latest in AI to build small and usable -- and sometimes disposable -- solutions to everyday problems they encounter in their practice.
But this isn't a hobby. Jamie believes legal quants will transform what it means to be an elite practitioner by leveraging AI to design their own weapons for achieving the best outcome for clients. So he's created a community of like-minded practitioners to meet, exchange ideas, problem solve, and ... most importantly... build things.
The driver for this is curiosity and growth. But it's also market realities. AI sets a new baseline. Lawyers who generate work product that is no better than AI-generated output will lag behind. Lawyers who use AI to make better, quicker decisions for their clients will race ahead of those who do not. Organizations who build out the internal capacity and structures needed to translate lawyer ideas and needs into tailored tech solutions will take business from those who do not. Legal quants and other lawyers who are AI-fluent will be the fulcrums for this transformation, and they'll gain professionally (and be rewarded financially) for it.
It's a fascinating vision of the future of AI in the practice and business of law. I had a great time talking to Jamie about this moment, and his movement, in AI.
Lawyers, students, and professionals alike can learn a lot from how he views the intersection of technology and knowledge work, and what he thinks it will take to reach the top echelons of the legal industry in the AI era.
Jamie Tso | LinkedIn
LegalQuants
Tuesday Feb 24, 2026
AI is Your Superpower, and Other Lessons That Lawyers Can Learn From Coders
Tuesday Feb 24, 2026
Tuesday Feb 24, 2026
As the technical co-founder of Version Story, Jordan Bryan draws from his experience as a developer seeing how technology solved a major industry pain point: collaborating on coding projects (the solution there was GitHub). He and his co-founder found an analog to a pain point that every lawyer knows well: version control over documents and contracts. This was the genesis for the idea to develop the "git" for lawyers.
Jordan's journey provides some great lessons for both founders and lawyers.
Lesson for founders? Good solutions come from the marriage of technical prowess and deep domain expertise.
Lesson for lawyers? Start using AI in your practice, as often as your workflow suits. It's not just about keeping up, it's about leveling up. Embrace the superpower potential of AI.
It was a fascinating conversation about AI's impact on coding, product development, and legal practice.
**views express my own**
Jordan Bryan | LinkedIn
Version Story: Legal Redlining and Version Control
Wednesday Feb 18, 2026
The Building Blocks for Achieving a Digital Transformation at a Law Firm
Wednesday Feb 18, 2026
Wednesday Feb 18, 2026
The good news for law firms? Most already have the building blocks needed to innovate on their operating model for the AI era. Rok Popov Ledinski explains why. Rok is a developer turned strategic thinker and tech implementor for law firms. So I put on my BigLaw hat and ask him to walk me through the steps of planning, deploying, and driving adoption of technology in a business of law.
Quick bottom-line? Taking incremental steps towards incremental gains by leveraging existing capabilities and empowering experimentation anchored in the law firm's strategic positioning.
For those with a slightly longer attention span, check out the episode!
Rok Popov Ledinski | LinkedIn
https://www.mpladvisors.com/
Thursday Feb 12, 2026
Why This Is A Transformational Moment in AI for Lawyers
Thursday Feb 12, 2026
Thursday Feb 12, 2026
I confess I didn't fully "get it" about Claude Code-Cowork-Skills-Plugins until legal engineer Antoine Louis explained it on this episode. It is a must-listen for anyone who wants to understand why it all means that we are crossing the Rubicon in AI for lawyers.
An engineer by trade and a researcher by training, Antoine provides just the right level of detail needed to understand why the last few months have seen a transformational shift in the use of AI in legal (and other verticals). As a start-up founder, he also understands what it means for lawyers, technologists, and anyone working in the business of law.
The interview is, IMHO, the clearest explanation I've heard of where we are and where we are headed when it comes to using AI to develop tailored tools that support lawyers in their day-to-day practice. Developments in the tech have already taken our industry into uncharted waters. We are at the start of an era during which AI will be used to quickly develop and deploy customizable, personalized legal solutions that address the specific needs of lawyers in their day-to-day practice.
Antoine Louis | LinkedIn
Lawvable Skills | AI Agent Skills for Legal Experts | Lawvable
Monday Feb 09, 2026
Lawyering in the Internet Era, From Dot-Com Bubble to AI Boom
Monday Feb 09, 2026
Monday Feb 09, 2026
Joined by Kevin Keller. Kevin has done it all -- from product counsel to General Counsel, developer to inventor, from advisor to investor. And he's done it through the formative years of the internet era. The secret to his success? I doubt it can be summed up in one sentence, but one thing that stood out to me is how Kevin has continually invested in himself by developing the skills that position him to take advantage of opportunities as they arise. In today's era of rapid tech transformation, I think both aspiring and practicing lawyers can learn something valuable from Kevin's journey.
Kevin Keller | LinkedIn
Monday Feb 02, 2026
The Agentic AI Era: a Transformation in Legal Practice
Monday Feb 02, 2026
Monday Feb 02, 2026
I talk to Matt Pollins, a former BigLaw partner turned LegalTech founder. Matt spent many years practicing tech law before transitioning to building LegalTech products. Matt and I talk lawyer-to-lawyer about the practical implications of agentic AI on the practice and business of law. We also explore what it means in the market for legal software when lawyers, law firms, and corporate legal departments start to build more of their solutions internally.Matt Pollins | Lupl | vibecode.law
Tuesday Jan 20, 2026
Tuesday Jan 20, 2026
What does innovation at a law firm look like? How do you match client/lawyer needs to the internal resources that can address them? I explore this with Benjamin Llinas, Matter Optimization Manager at Linklaters, a global law firm.
Ben is that unicorn in the law firm org structure sitting at the intersection of supporting lawyers, servicing clients, and deploying technology. His work is part art, part science. Part technologist, part psychologist.
His work requires not only technical acumen, creative thinking and problem solving, but also the emotional intelligence to connect with lawyers to ensure they are using and benefitting from the tech being deployed.
Ben and I talk about how AI is impacting the business of law firms, the day-to-day work of its lawyers, and the demands of its clients. But Ben reminds me that AI is just one out of the many ways that technology can streamline legal practice. If you know how to look for it, you will find a lot in the existing arsenal for streamlining legal operations at a law firm.
The bigger challenge, in some ways, is identifying the specific needs of a lawyer/project/client. And so much of our conversation is about the process of un-packing a workflow and finding the right bits and pieces that can be automated -- whether it's using the latest snazzy AI-powered solution or an Excel macro.
Because what you don't want to do is jump to a conclusion and buy an expensive end-to-end, out-of-the-box solution that does too much and too little all at once. You will have served your internal client better by putting in the effort up-front to parse the workflow, break it down into its distinct parts, and come up with the right plug-and-play mix mix of buy/build solutions that achieve the best outcome overall.
Tuesday Jan 06, 2026
Productized AI Solutions for Lawyers, by Lawyers -- M&A / Antitrust Practice
Tuesday Jan 06, 2026
Tuesday Jan 06, 2026
I talk with Gwendolyn Lindsay Cooley, founder of Taimet, about productized AI solutions for lawyers, by lawyers. Her product seeks to solve a specific problem set that comes up in the day-to-day practice of every antitrust deal lawyer: screening M&A transactions for regulatory risk. We talk about how she came up with her solution, how it works, and what it means for lawyers and the clients they support. Along the way, we also explore the way that AI products are impacting not only the practice but also the business of law in an evolving business climate in which clients expect more, for less, and quicker. We also talk about the unique strengths that practicing lawyers have in identifying user needs and developing legaltech solutions to address them.
https://www.taimet.com/https://www.linkedin.com/in/gwendolyncooley
Thursday Dec 18, 2025
An Antitrust Case Study on Bespoke AI ... and Why the Cyborgs Are Coming (sort of)
Thursday Dec 18, 2025
Thursday Dec 18, 2025
I talk with Daniel Schwarz, co-founder of CompetitionAI, about bespoke AI tools for subject matter experts. We discuss what it means to build AI tools tailored to the specific needs of lawyers practicing in a specific area of law. We also explore what AI means for law firms, the lawyers working in them, and the law students aspiring to enter the profession.







