LegalTech 2009 is over and we’re exhausted. There’s something absolutely draining about all those inputs, all those people talking at you, and all those little plastic toys. It’s enough to make even extroverts like me run screaming from the conference hotel.
It will, undoubtedly, take us a few days to process what we saw and what we learned. We have the quick notes we tweeted from the various sessions to remind us, but we don’t yet know if they will prove to be invaluable or completely ephemeral. In addition, some hardier souls (like David Hobbie and Kelly Talcott) have already published their blogs on various sessions. I’m in awe of their ability to synthesize information so quickly and grateful that we have the benefit of their views.
For me there is something about the learning process that requires a period of quiet reflection in order to consolidate the disparate bits of information I’ve picked up. And when I’ve been drinking from an information firehose as I was at LegalTech, it takes even longer. Starting tomorrow, I’m going to indulge in a little quiet reflection and when I emerge, I hope I’ll have something sensible to say about what I learned at LegalTech.
Before I hibernate, I would like to thank the good folks on the LegalTech Advisory Board and at Incisive Media for organizing a conference rich in possibilities and opportunities. I was glad to have a chance to participate both as a speaker and a blogger. Best of all, LegalTech provided a wonderful lab for demonstrating how we interact with and learn from each other. The multi-layered interchanges that bounced between the conference rooms, the Twittersphere, the Blogosphere and the hallways made for a very rich learning environment. Thank you to everyone in New York and online who made this possible.
[Photo Credit: cobalt123, Creative Commons license]
Thanks for the props Mary–both here and Thursday. It was great to see you.
I’ll be posting some more on the new communication dynamics that Twitter opened up.
David
I call them as I see them, David! It was great to see you.
– Mary