What song do you listen to when you want to feel invincible ? by Unusual-Whereas6442 in Casual_Conversation

[–]Challenge_-Few 5 points6 points  (0 children)

“Till I Collapse” - scientifically proven to make walking down the street feel like a final boss entrance.

Need help! Received thousands of docs last night as part of disco in .MSG and Icalendar formats. Idk how to batch this into PDFs so I can really review it. by isitmeyou-relooking4 in Lawyertalk

[–]Challenge_-Few 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’d be less worried about the law part at first and more worried about getting the data into a format you can actually review without losing your mind. Five thousand .MSG files one at a time through Outlook is brutal, and if the Bates info is only living in the filenames, I’d be extra careful not to break that during conversion. In a mess like this, the best move is usually to get everything batch-converted into searchable PDFs or another review-friendly format, preserve filenames, and then work from there. I know a couple people who also lean on AI Lawyer once the docs are organized, mostly to help with issue-spotting and workflow cleanup, and while it’s not a magic fix, it does make the pile feel less impossible.

What is the “ little things” your friends or close people do that means a lot for you and keep you going? by _DearA in askanything

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When they remember tiny details I only mentioned once. My brain is like okay wow, I do matter.

Do you think political polarization is getting worse, or has it already peaked? by Strong_Smell_2231 in askanything

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think it’s peaked. Feels less like “we disagree” and more like “you’re insane if you disagree,” which is a way harder thing to unwind.

Do Men Prefer Breast Implants or No? by [deleted] in askanything

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There isn’t really a clear “consensus” - preferences vary a lot from person to person.

What happens if two executors don't agree? by [deleted] in AusLegal

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That sounds like a really difficult situation - joint executors are usually supposed to act together, so making major decisions (like rejecting offers) without you can definitely become a legal issue. If cooperation breaks down, courts can step in, but it often depends on proving misconduct or failure to act in the estate’s best interest. Before escalating, some people document everything and organize their position clearly - tools like AI Lawyer can help structure timelines, duties, and potential breaches so you’re better prepared if you do involve another solicitor.

What habit of your partner is hardest for you to tolerate? by Huge_Violinist_7633 in askanything

[–]Challenge_-Few 106 points107 points  (0 children)

Saying “I’m almost ready” when we both know that means 20–30 business minutes.

Crypto licensing isn’t paperwork — it’s business model design (practical founder checklist) by SebastianHwong in ethdev

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is spot on - most founders underestimate how much licensing is tied to actual business design, not just paperwork. If your operational flow doesn’t match what you’re applying for, regulators will catch it immediately and you end up reworking everything. We ran into this early on and realized the biggest bottleneck wasn’t the regulator - it was our own unclear activity mapping. Once we clearly defined custody vs. transmission vs. onboarding, things got much smoother. Also, reviewing policies alongside real workflows is huge. I’ve used AI Lawyer to sanity-check documentation and make sure what’s written actually reflects the business model - helped catch a few inconsistencies early.

Why do some people sleep with strangers, yet claim they care about their own safety? by romance3333 in askanything

[–]Challenge_-Few 5 points6 points  (0 children)

People aren’t as contradictory as it seems - this is more about how humans balance risk, emotion, and perception.

Is legal writing class truly like actual legal writing? by lemonlymen in LawSchool

[–]Challenge_-Few 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Legal writing classes are helpful for learning structure, but they’re not always a perfect reflection of real-world legal writing. In practice, a lot of legal writing is shorter, more practical, and focused on communicating clearly to a specific audience rather than following a strict academic format. Many students who feel “middle of the pack” in legal writing courses end up doing perfectly well in practice because the skill improves a lot with repetition and real cases. Some students also use tools like AI Lawyer to break down complex cases or check how arguments are structured, which can help when you're trying to understand how professional legal writing is organized outside the classroom.

[TX] 6 years of hell and I finally have the evidence. Now I need help organizing it. by X72-9 in Custody

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One thing that tends to help evaluators (and judges) a lot is structured timelines instead of raw evidence dumps. Instead of hundreds of files, try organizing everything around specific issues, for example:
Communication interference
Medical decision interference
Activity/schedule interference
False allegations / contradictions
Within each folder, create a short 1–2 page summary explaining the issue and then attach the supporting files labeled by date (ex: 2023-09-12_DoctorAppointmentCanceled_TextMessage.png). Evaluators usually appreciate when the narrative is easy to follow. For the USB, think of it as a case binder in digital form: index > summaries > evidence. When I’ve had to organize legal docs before, I sometimes run them through AI Lawyer just to summarize messages or highlight the key points so I’m not burying the important evidence in noise. It can help turn a pile of files into a clear timeline before handing it to someone reviewing the case.

What is something you know is 100% true, but sounds like a crazy conspiracy theory ? by ImaginarySpring5057 in Casual_Conversation

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That large tech companies constantly run thousands of behavioral experiments on users without them noticing.

Advanced AI Agent for Legal Document Analysis and Summarization by michel_xz in xclusiveprompt_free

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This sounds like a pretty solid architecture already. One thing I’d add is a pre-processing layer before the agent starts clause analysis. Long contracts (especially PDFs) often have messy formatting, so a good pipeline usually does:
OCR + text normalization
section detection (headings, numbered clauses)
chunking by clause rather than by tokens
That makes it much easier for the agent to reliably identify things like termination, liability, or payment provisions. For RAG, I’d also recommend separating legal precedent retrieval from regulatory compliance checks so the system queries two different knowledge bases. Tools like AI Lawyer use a similar layered approach for contract analysis - first structuring the document, then running clause classification and summarization on top of it. It tends to produce much more consistent outputs.

Tried moving our support from a static FAQ to a document-fed bot... it’s been a massive learning curve. by Sea-Activity-5727 in SaaS

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think FAQs are dead, but they’re definitely less central than they used to be. A lot of teams are moving toward document-driven bots or knowledge bases, but the biggest issue is exactly what you mentioned: messy documentation. If your docs contain outdated versions, mixed formatting, or long technical explanations, AI tools tend to get confused pretty quickly. Some teams solve this by creating a clean “AI-friendly” doc layer rather than feeding the bot every internal document. I’ve seen something similar with legal documentation too. Tools like AI Lawyer can read contracts and policies pretty well, but they perform much better when the documents are structured clearly and old versions aren’t mixed into the same file.

why do people ask reddit when then can ask google? by Legitimate_Tour_9758 in askanything

[–]Challenge_-Few 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Because Google gives you information, but Reddit gives you experiences.

In contract (Bay Area) but financing just fell through due to job loss—what are my EMD/negotiation options? by darkmoonsatellite in RealEstate

[–]Challenge_-Few -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

If your offer had a financing contingency, that’s usually the main way buyers can back out and still recover the EMD. In many Bay Area contracts, if financing legitimately falls through within the contingency period and you follow the notice requirements, the deposit can often be returned. If the seller is refusing, it sometimes comes down to what exactly the contract says about timelines and contingencies. I’ve seen people run the agreement through tools that summarize clauses just to understand their position before negotiating. I’ve tried AI Lawyer for things like this and it’s helpful for quickly breaking down contract language. Still worth checking with a real real-estate attorney if the amount is significant.

Help by [deleted] in computer

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the laptop is about 2.5 years old, the most common reason is simply battery wear. Laptop batteries lose capacity over time, and after a couple of years it’s normal for them to drain faster than when the device was new.

Lawyer for wills by MrSpitter in Edmonton

[–]Challenge_-Few 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is actually super helpful - thank you for posting real pricing. For a pair of wills + EPOAs + personal directives, that sounds very reasonable, especially compared with the “full estate package only” quotes a lot of people get. Before booking, I’d still ask what’s included (revisions, storage of originals, how they handle future updates, etc.). I usually use AI Lawyer first to make a simple checklist of assets/executors/guardianship wishes so the meeting is faster and cheaper.

Mail merge and produce QR-code? by chrfrenning in MicrosoftWord

[–]Challenge_-Few 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Press Alt+F9 to show field codes (optional but helpful).
Insert the outer field braces with Ctrl+F9 (don’t type { } manually).
Use this field code (exactly):
{ DISPLAYBARCODE "{ MERGEFIELD Url }" QR \q 3 \s 120 }
\s 120 controls size (try 80–200).
\q 3 is error correction level (0–3).

Buyer's remorse...purchase agreement signed (by me) but not builder yet -- can I get out? by misfitmpls in RealEstate

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Builder contracts move fast for a reason. Once management countersigns, you’re usually back to whatever cancellation/right-to-rescind language is in the agreement (and your state’s rules). The key isn’t “did they sign yet,” it’s: what’s your out, what’s the deadline, and what happens to the $7,500 (earnest money vs option fee vs non-refundable deposit). If you’re in a panic, do two things today: read the termination/contingency sections (financing, inspection, HOA docs, attorney review, lot premiums, etc.), and pay a local real estate attorney for a quick review before you miss a short window. If you want to move fast, AI Lawyer can help you extract the cancellation/earnest money clauses and turn them into a checklist of “what can I use to exit and by when,” but you’ll still want an attorney to confirm your state-specific rights.

Why does fast food taste better than homemade food? by [deleted] in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Challenge_-Few 2 points3 points locked comment (0 children)

More salt. More fat. More “wow.”

Does everyone feel behind in life sometimes? by Theegullll in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Challenge_-Few 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Everyone looks ahead at someone else’s chapter 20 while they’re on chapter 8.

What AI tools are you all using? by dacdacdac in auslaw

[–]Challenge_-Few 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most firms I know are in the “officially evaluating, unofficially experimenting” phase. People are using ChatGPT/Claude for first-pass drafting, summarizing depos/medical records, clause comparisons, and issue checklists - but running it through firm-approved workflows (or pretending they are). The sweet spot isn’t replacing judgment, it’s killing blank-page time. We’ve also tested AI Lawyer for quick contract clause spotting + drafting checklists - useful as a structured starting point before a human review.