For the plaintiff.
If you ask for the eDiscovery documents, you might eventually get them. Now, what do you do with them?
The answer that FreeEed gives you is "Use the load file as the data source." That is, FreeEed allows you to load the documents you were sent and start reviewing them.
For the researcher
Perhaps not directly related to eDiscovery, but people do you FreeEed for various research purposes. For example, at DARPA they loaded the court documents obtained from the NY Court of Appeals website and added some annotations (tags). Now, to do data analytics on the set, they need to export the documents back, with the new tags. This is provided in the option "Export the load file," which will export either the full set, with the annotations, or the current search results.
For the techie
Sometimes your eDiscovery or other data is in the form of a JSON file. JSON format is popular because it is flexible and allows to define your fields. In fact, you can change the fields from record to record.
This is provided now with selecting "JSON" as an input format, with the option "Use the load file as the data source."
Likewise, you can import any CSV file.
Other improvements include
* Implement extensive continuous testing with Jenkins (http://freeeed.from-tx.com:8000/)
* Review - quick preview now working
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