If you need a way to turn legal briefs and other dense documents into interactive online guides, Lexum could be the answer. The company's technology, called Interactive Online Manuals (Qweri), converts structured documents into online guides that you can read, search and annotate. Lexum also offers AI tools to index and publish legal information, so it's a good all-purpose tool for lawyers.
Another option is ChatDocuments, an AI chat interface that converts static documents like PDFs and DOCX into conversational interfaces. It works in multiple languages and comes with prebuilt prompts for tasks like summarization and translation, which can be helpful for lawyers who need to understand and translate legal documents.
If you need a more elaborate system for summarizing and translating documents, Review.Legal has a more powerful AI-based system. It can simplify legal documents by rewriting clauses in plain language and translating them into multiple languages, for example, so insurance and real estate agents can understand legal contracts without having to wade through legalese.
Last, ChatPDF is a flexible AI-based information retrieval system that works with PDFs in many languages. You can upload documents and ask questions, and it'll return summaries and answers. That can be useful for lawyers who need to understand and analyze lots of legal contracts and other documents.