Blue J lets you go beyond surface-level answers by asking detailed questions about a specific source, like a case, ruling, or article.
This helps you quickly understand complex materials without reading everything manually.
When should I use this?
Use this when you want to:
- Understand a specific case or document
- Find where a topic is discussed within a source
- Extract key points from a long or complex document
- Validate or explore a source behind an answer
This is especially useful for deep research and verification workflows.
How to ask questions about a source
- Open a source from your answer
- Ask a question directly about that source
Examples:
- “Summarize this document”
- “Does this source discuss [specific issue]?”
- “Explain this case in three sentences”
- “Where does this ruling address [topic]?”
Blue J will focus only on that source when generating the answer.
Use the “Summarize” feature
You can also:
- Click “Summarize” next to a source
- Instantly generate a structured summary with key points
This is the fastest way to understand long documents.
Tips for better results
- Be specific about what you’re looking for
- Ask about one issue at a time
- Use follow-up questions to go deeper
- Reference exact terms or sections when possible
Build on your research
After reviewing a source, you can:
- Ask follow-up questions
- Compare it with other sources
- Turn insights into drafts (emails, memos, summaries)
Blue J is designed for iterative research, not one-off questions.
Important to know
If you close the window, you’ll need to generate the summary again.
How to save your results
To avoid losing your work, you can:
- Copy and paste the summary into your notes or document
- Print the page to save a copy for reference
- Incorporate the summary into a draft (e.g., email, memo, or notes) before navigating away
Taking a moment to save key outputs can help you build on your research more efficiently without needing to repeat steps.