Building for Lawyers Starts with the Boring Problems
Sandeep Gokhale
2 mins
July 17th, 2026
There are two kinds of chambers appearing before the Karnataka High Court.
The first walks in knowing exactly where they stand. Court hall number, cause list number, serial number. All settled on time so that you can reach home before dinner time.
The second is still assembling the day at 11 PM.
The Karnataka HC publishes the daily cause list every evening between 7 to 8 PM every working day. It’s about 600 pages of PDF and somewhere in it are the cases you’re in court for tomorrow.
Right now that job falls to a junior. They open the portal, scroll, search, map cases to clients, consolidate, verify because they know a mistake here is not a small mistake.
They’re good at it. That’s the problem. It takes someone sharp to do it reliably, and sharp people should be reading the file, not scrolling a PDF.
Unknowingly, the law chamber pays twice. Once for the hours. Once for what those hours could have been.
Here’s what the other law chamber does.
Their matters arrive on WhatsApp. Court hall number. Cause list number. Serial number, every single night without needing anyone to ask for it.
The junior then spends that time on the Arguments matter instead. The senior stops asking “did you check?” Nobody needs to panic at 10 AM that something got missed.
We (Techvito) spent the last few months with advocates across India working out where AI actually helps in law versus where it just adds noise.
This is the first thing we’ve shipped, because it’s the most boring, most daily, most fixable gap we found.
Contact Us to get more details


