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I would love to make greater use of the iPad app for sermon prep but the limitations of iOS and/or the app prohibit that.
I do a lot of reading, some highlighting, and a few word look-ups on the iPad. I don't do much in the way of searches. I don't try to study the original languages. I don't create many notes. I don't use the iPad to type my sermon notes/manuscript; that is a full-size keyboard and fully functioning word processor job.
The more research I could do on the iPad - i.e. the closer it came to being the full desktop app, the more I'll use if for sermon prep. Right now it is mostly a reader. But that is really what the iOS Logos app is at the present.
For me, adding the ability to make clippings in the iOS app would be one of the most beneficial developments to encourage me to do more sermon prep on my iPad.
I agree. If the app were more capable, especially with Clippings, I'd probably use it more.
I still can't believe that i had to buy bible versions in tecarta bible because my all powerful logos 'bible' software is incapable on copying and pasting scriptures without including all kinds of extraneous letters mixed in the passage be ause of notations in logos done with superscripts and subscripts that come iver as regular text in the passage making copy and paste if 'bible' passages unuseable in my multithousand dollar program. It's absurd.
John, this is frustrating. In the desktop app we can use Copy Bible Verses to copy and paste text without all that extraneous info. Not so with iOS. The whole process of getting Logos info into a word processing document on the iPad is not worth the effort to me. Much of that is the limitations of the operating system.
Yes, but there is room for a lot of improvements for sermon prep and delivery: the ability to use a stylus and effective word processing with interactive features such as verse and note pop-up functions to name just a few.
No Copy Bible Verses is a hindrance to sermon prep. Please add this feature!
My sermon prep and Bible Study Lessons prep are done on my large screen iMac. I find both my iPad and iPhone too limiting for sermon prep primarily because of their screen size and difficulty of doing research. I do know one fellow minister who preaches from his iPad. I guess I'm old fashioned because I like to keep my Bible open and prepared sermon notes in front of me while I preach.
In Christ,
Charles
I do know one fellow minister who preaches from his iPad. I guess I'm old fashioned because I like to keep my Bible open and prepared sermon notes in front of me while I preach.
I use my iPad instead of paper notes for both my order of service and my sermon. Since I use a mind-mapping app for my sermon notes, the iPad makes moving about the page a breeze and allows me to have bigger print than a single-page printed mind map could possibly allow. After about 2 years of doing this this way, I'd be reluctant to return to a printed sheet.
That said, I still use a print Bible for the scripture reading because the iPad Logos app is far too unstable to be relied upon.
Every blessing
Alan