Duplicate Clause...Where?!?

Did Donna ever give you the Duplicate Clause suggestion? Did you also get frustrated that Donna didn't tell you where the other duplicate was. Well, be frustrated no more. Donna will now list the location of the duplicates under related information.

Click. Boom. Click. Boom.

Donna now feels much snappier when snoozing or removing a suggestion.

We did this by instantly updating the UI rather than waiting for our servers to reply. In 99.9% of cases things go fine...which means now you don't have to wait around.

If something goes wrong, then we will always put the original suggestion back in the queue for you.

Duplicate Definitions vs. References

Donna will no longer confuse a reference to a Definition Section with the term actually being defined.

Terms like Services in a document like

In this contract "Services" is defined in section 2.3.
...
Section 2.3. "Services" means any ...

will no longer mistakingly show up as Duplicate Definitions in Donna's list of suggestions.

Highlight at the Speed of Thought

The beautiful highlights in the document now feel a lot snappier. They show up quickly and you should notice less lag when scrolling.

When reviewing suggestions, we've also made it easier to focus on the task at hand. By only highlighting the suggestion that you're currently reviewing it should be much easier to spot where the problem is within your document.

Convert Donna's Suggestions to Word Comments

There's now a new action available for Suggestion cards called Leave a Comment. This automatically turns Donna's suggestion into a Word Comment just like you might have done yourself.

A scenerio where this might be useful is when a paralegal using Donna comes across a complicated suggestion and wants to ask for some input from a associate. They can now easily insert a Comment that copies over all information from Donna's helpful suggestion. Much faster than having to manually rewrite everything Donna just said.

You might be a Donna pro, but you also have to work with others that don't use Donna themselves (maybe give them a tip?). This feature makes it a bit easier to collaborate in those situations, without changing anything about those existing workflows.

Snooze All...Or a Few

You can now more easily pick a few items to snooze instead of having to unselect every item individually. Just unselect the Select All checkbox and only select those which were relevant.

Donna has also learned how to better group similar suggestion. So ironically you will be less likely to use the Select All button, since most suggestions should be relevant.

Donna Learns Speed Reading

Although Donna is simple to use there is a tremendous amount of AI power happening behind the scenes. Our servers have about 10x more memory and CPU power than your top-of-the-line laptop.

Despite all this power, large documents could still take quite some time for Donna to analyze. In some cases more than a minute.

Instead of adding more power, we used our brains this time. We tought Donna all sorts of ways to stop overthinking a particular problem and just speedread on. So now analzying that same document happens in only a few seconds!

We now also compress the data sent between Donna and your computer so that even on slower internet connections results should come in much faster.

Donna's Mistake? No Problem.

Donna makes mistakes but you can now help her learn. Either by removing bad suggestions (instead of Snoozing them) or by sending feedback.

Removing a suggestion will teach your Donna to better understand your documents and make fewer mistakes in the future. It also helps our team to prioritise fixes based on statistics of how frequently a type of suggestion is removed.

If you have a bit more time you can provide some additional feedback. Just a small description of what you think the problem might be can help our team to quickly resolve any underlying problems. You als

o have the option of giving our engineers access to a "nonsensified" sample of your document to further help us identify any issues.

Note: We "nonsensify" a document by replacing every word with another word before sending the document to our bug report system. Our engineers get a limited time-window to access this document and although the structure of the document is intact it looks like complete gibberish!

So "Tesla Motors Inc will sell their company to Apple for $500.000.000.000" might look like "Orange Feet Tower loops ground fever op Grand ish $921.822.111.222" to our team.