What is the name of your state? OH
The court does not have a printer for public use. So it seems litigants must anticipate all documents that will be needed and print them in advance. Normally a copy is needed for the court plus 1 for each party. My local court is relaxed enough that if I have only one copy of something the court will copy it on the spot.
However, I cannot always anticipate the direction things will go. The other party brought up something for which I had counter evidence for. But the document was on my laptop. The laptop was with me and I also had a USB stick, but this was useless. The court would not print docs off my USB stick (which is fair enough, they shouldn't trust it). The judge half-seriously said "would you like to submit your laptop as evidence?" At the same time, I printed hundreds of pages that didn't even get distributed.
I would think this would not be an issue in 2020. I hate to kill trees, but the system seems set up such that we have to print documents for everything that might arise.
So I started looking at portable thermal printers. Thermal printers make sense because there is no risk of running out of ink/toner and fewer moving parts means it's more quiet and less likely to break. Yet only Brother seems to be making portable thermal printers for standard sizes of paper (as opposed to receipt printers). If all lawyers are encountering the same problem as me, surely there would be high demand for these printers, and there would be more makes and models than just a couple Brother printers. I don't have a problem with Brother, but I must be missing something. How are most lawyers dealing with this?
The court does not have a printer for public use. So it seems litigants must anticipate all documents that will be needed and print them in advance. Normally a copy is needed for the court plus 1 for each party. My local court is relaxed enough that if I have only one copy of something the court will copy it on the spot.
However, I cannot always anticipate the direction things will go. The other party brought up something for which I had counter evidence for. But the document was on my laptop. The laptop was with me and I also had a USB stick, but this was useless. The court would not print docs off my USB stick (which is fair enough, they shouldn't trust it). The judge half-seriously said "would you like to submit your laptop as evidence?" At the same time, I printed hundreds of pages that didn't even get distributed.
I would think this would not be an issue in 2020. I hate to kill trees, but the system seems set up such that we have to print documents for everything that might arise.
So I started looking at portable thermal printers. Thermal printers make sense because there is no risk of running out of ink/toner and fewer moving parts means it's more quiet and less likely to break. Yet only Brother seems to be making portable thermal printers for standard sizes of paper (as opposed to receipt printers). If all lawyers are encountering the same problem as me, surely there would be high demand for these printers, and there would be more makes and models than just a couple Brother printers. I don't have a problem with Brother, but I must be missing something. How are most lawyers dealing with this?