are the two versions indentical feature wise? Is one more advanced than the other or get new stuff first?
thanks
There is "near" parity.
Can you or someone elaborate on what “near parity” means?
It means they are almost identical in features and functions but there are some differences. They are, as far as I know, minor.
The only difference I know is a feature called handouts. But it was no longer being activlay developed on PC side and it was said it may eventually get removed.
-dan
are the two versions indentical feature wise?
Thankful for 99 % feature parity. Logos Wiki has older Feature Parity list.
Windows has older deprecated Handouts
Windows Installer has custom choice during installation. Mac install allows application bundle to be dragged to desired folder. Logos wiki has => Install in different folder or drive
Windows has Smart Tags for Office while Mac has Text Service replacement => Great new Mac Feature - Get bible verses directly in Pages!
Is one more advanced than the other or get new stuff first?
Notes revamp is being done first using Web Apps, which is being ported to desktop applications (on Mac and Windows) with future porting for mobile apps => New: Beta test the new Notes tool on desktop
Feature parity is substantial enough so can easily switch application platforms as desired.
Keep Smiling [:)]
IMHO major functions are identical as far as I can tell, at least for all that I do, and performance is hugely improved in the Mac version as long as you don't go crazy with Visual Filters, which are a real performance killer. I use a 2017 MacBook Pro and it runs fine for me, performance-wise.
The biggest issue will be annoyance level in the user interface if you are a long-time Mac user. The UI is inconsistent across functions, and in other areas how you do things is not the same as how other Mac programs do things; and the Mac user guidelines are inconsistently followed.
Logos and Verbum user interface is substantially identical on Windows & Mac (so is a bit different than user guidelines on both platforms).
IMHO major functions are identical as far as I can tell, at least for all that I do, and performance is hugely improved in the Mac version as long as you don't go crazy with Visual Filters, which are a real performance killer.
Personally have many Visual Filters so opening a resource (especially a Bible with Reverse Interlinear) can take time on a 2013 MacBook Air with 1.7 GHz i7. Thankful Logos and Verbum can be used at the same time so Logos has my primary library while Verbum has my free library, which is useful for demonstrations plus quicker response for a variety of tasks (free library is substantially smaller).
Sure. Although some bugs are windows only, FL makes up for it by creating mac only ones. [:)]
The apps are "basically" the same and new features are released together at the same time. Sometimes there are platform specific issues that pop up.
On Mac users not being able to set playback speeds for course videos:
https://community.logos.com/forums/p/161603/962426.aspx