Bring older recordings back within reach.
Years of proceedings can be stranded in formats nothing current can open. TRX helps courts make legacy recordings usable again.
Accessing legacy content means making older or proprietary recordings usable again instead of leaving them locked to the system that captured them. TRX approaches this with Morpheus alongside the browser-based record platform.
Why older recordings fall out of reach.
Locked to a single system
When the record only opens in the software that captured it, the court depends on that vendor to use its own history.
Formats that lose support
As systems age, the formats they produced get harder to open, and the risk to older proceedings grows quietly.
History effectively inaccessible
Valuable older proceedings stay out of reach simply because nothing current can read them.
Make the back catalog usable again.
Work past proprietary formats
Morpheus focuses on the formats legacy recording systems leave behind, so older recordings can be used again.
Bring it into one record home
Recovered content lives alongside current proceedings in Asgard, searchable in the browser.
Reduce vendor lock-in
The goal is a record whose value isn't tied to any single recording system, past or present.
Access Legacy Content: common questions
- How does TRX make legacy recordings usable again?
- TRX approaches legacy and proprietary formats with Morpheus, then keeps recovered content alongside current proceedings in the browser-based record platform.
- Why do older recordings become inaccessible?
- When the record only opens in the software that captured it, and that format loses support over time, valuable older proceedings effectively fall out of reach.
- Does this reduce dependence on a single vendor?
- Yes. The goal is a record whose value is not tied to any single recording system, past or present.
A transcript that arrives on time is an appeal heard on time. We measure our work in days returned to the people waiting on the system. That is access to justice, made concrete.