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[quote user="Adam Cooper"] But if you're looking for something that hides the mind map structure from the audience and simply displays a traditional Powerpoint-like slide view while giving you the ability to navigate your slide deck via the mind map, it's not that advanced.[/quote] I used FreeMind for years for preparing presentations. It was pretty
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[quote user="Tony Walker"] any update on this visual glitch? thanks [/quote] I just saw this thread and just bought it. My Google Chrome browser shows the front cover just fine.
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I just put in a pre-order.
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[quote user="Philana R. Crouch"] [quote user="Obihan"] Hi Bruce, I can't even open the program. I remember that (I presume before the update) there was the window that opens when starting the program with the option "work offline". Now I can't even open the program without login in to the Faithlife account. And since I still don't have internet I can
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Thanks for the heads up. This matches my current reading interests, so I picked it up.
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One more feature related to linked panes: Once you have a Bible and commentary linked, then open up another pane with your preferred Bible. Do not link this pane into the set. Instead, use the three dot menu on the upper right of the panel and choose "Send hyperlinks here". Then when you see a Bible reference in your commentary or Bible footnotes, clicking
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Once you get them linked, then there is a cool feature you can use. Put the commentary pane in focus, then press the right arrow key. It will open the next commentary on your priority list which deals with that scripture. The left arrow will jump back. The only glitch is if the newly opened commentary does not quite address that reference, then it will
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Graham, No, this is my primary Logos computer. But I normally have wifi ability when I use it. I hadn't even considered trying to open Logos without internet access before I left home. Now, I know to run some tests before my upcoming Guatemala trip. Keep Smiling, I see they have offline access tied to "secret key strokes". How helpful! [NOT] I cannot
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Help! I am on a 6 day cruise with very limited Internet access. I depend on using my laptop Logos 8. When I tried to open it, it insisted I log in. When the login fails due to lack of internet access, there is no option to work offline. I know that that option existed in the past. I worked out a way to login based on Sprint roaming from the satellite
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[quote user="Bruce Dunning"] [quote user="Veli Voipio"]In Africa one person may read a book aloud and a group of people is sitting around listening and they comment the reading regularly (often together as a choir). That kind of process might be quite natural for humans and I just wonder how to apply it in our current digital environment.[/quote] I
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[quote user="MJ. Smith"] https://www.logos.com/web-app https://www.logos.com/product/51786/access-to-applogoscom https://blog.logos.com/2017/07/logos-7-now-can-use-web-app-free/ https://community.logos.com/forums/t/169777.aspx Not hidden ... just a perseverance test ... Christian virtue practice? Note: I put a link to it on my shortcut bar to handle
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There does not seem to be a link from logos.com to app.logos.com. The link was hard to find. Why don't they feature it at the bottom of the main web page?
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A "low tech" solution would be to use Favorites. Just create a folder for each subject. Make a subfolder for candidates to be read. Make another subfolder to hold links to the books you have finished. A third subfolder, or the main level of the subject folder, can be used for books currently being read. As you progress through the book replace the link
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I have certainly set up nested folders. But, since you mention it, I do not believe I have had occasion to move an existing folder, with content, into another folder. I'll try this tonight at home.
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Digital libraries may have some risks, but in the meantime I do not have to worry about negotiating over bookshelf space and when my wife talks about "downsizing" for retirement, I don't have to worry about my digital collections!
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Since this thread is already open, I would like someone to explain to me the basic usage case for resources such as HALOT and BDAG. Do people leave a panel open with them synchronized to your Bible or do you call them up using a particular tool? I am in a position similar to Rick's. I am a lay person. I have a rudimentary understanding of Greek, but
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I gave up going through the list 60 items per page. I finally just started adding items that I wanted to my cart. If they weren't included, then I took them back out of the cart. I haven't purchased the cart, yet. So, I am open to better ways to search the list.
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About 15 years ago, I attended a conference called "Finishers". (They seem to have migrated away from that GREAT name.) The theme of the conference was to encourage people in middle age to drop out of their current careers and redirect their energy towards missions. I was there to set up a booth looking for workers at our local working men's shelter
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My observation has been that when God "commissioned" the N.T. to be written, several dialects of Greek were available. The one chosen was Koine Greek. This is also referred to as "street Greek"; i.e., the language of the common man on the street. I don't know about the rest of you, but I do not hang around with many people who speak King James English
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You may be interested in today's forum post on a new Logos offer of packages for Messianic Jewish resources: https://community.logos.com/forums/t/182160.aspx