There's still a "Community Tags" section on the Information panel.
1) Should it have been renamed "Factbook Tags"?
2) I haven't seen this section populated yet so far. Is this left unpopulated by error?
I haven't seen this section populated yet so far. Is this left unpopulated by error?
Where have you been looking for it? I see it most frequently in monographs but that maybe simply because of what I am working on.
Clicking on individual words in Numbers 32:1 in the ESV and CUV Bibles, for example.
Bibles are the least likely to have Factbook tags because they are already fully tagged.
Thanks MJ.
I just clicked thru 7 commentaries (including TOTC, Bible Speaks Today, Preach the Word, etc) and so far have not seen Community Tags coming up yet.
Where are those 1 million tags added by FL really?
Anyway, the title of that section should still be updated to "Factbook Tags"?
Hoping to get a response from FL in due course.
McKim, Donald K., ed. Dictionary of Major Biblical Interpreters. Downers Grove, IL; Nottingham, England: InterVarsity Press, 2007.
I found the same dictionary resource, went to the same page, and clicked on the exact same word Jesus.
1) Still no Community Tags
2) These sections are all showing blank: Translation, Word Info, Literary Typing, Other References, Community Tags, Preaching Themes, Footnotes. Is this correct behavior?
3) In the Definition section, only 1 dictionary definition is given, despite having quite a number of dictionaries prioritized including Merriam Webster.
4) (minor) The sections are ordered like I listed above, different than MJ's section order. (I'm running Logos 10.1 Beta 1.)
Is there something missing or wrong in my setup?
Have you turned on the Factbook tags filter for the resource?
Now I do... I didn't realize that a required step.
It's actually ~50M tags across ~40K resources: ~31M tags are Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic words and transliterations, ~14M are people names, ~4M are theological terms, and ~1M are manuscripts.
The best place to find them is in the Factbook Tags section in Factbook (for a common original language word such as λόγος, historically significant person's name such as Charles Spurgeon, or theological term such as supralapsarianism) or in any lexicon such as BDAG or commentary with Greek or Hebrew such as EEC.
These were mostly done programatically. Here are some examples of tags I manually applied to articles/headings across the library:
This first round of tags was mostly a proof of concept and just the tip of the iceberg. We're now working on building a more robust solution that will allow us to scale into the tens of billions of tags across the library.
Thanks Phil!
Wow!!![8-|] All this stuff makes Logos so cool. [Y]