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Hear, hear.
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Quite right. Which is why one has to be very careful in their research of first century texts. Its easy to succumb to the temptation to over simplify things. Generalisations are a dead giveaway every time.
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Might I suggest that these two books would make worthy additions to the Logos ouevre? Nanos, M (1996) The Mystery of Romans: The Jewish Context of Paul's Letters. Fortress Press. Nanos, M (2009) The Irony of Galatians: Paul's Letter in First-Century Context . Fortress Press.
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With the future release of Windows Phone 8 being based on C++, surely this decision is likely to overturned?
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Windows 8 has got me excited because it means that the possibility of a Logiest app for Windows Phone looks much more likely since C++ development is supported.
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Thanks for the tip! ---- Handwritten with a Lenovo X60 Tablet
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This is terrific. By setting this up as a template, it can be updated for succeeding years, allowing for changes that are specific to that year. Thanks muchly.
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After reading the reviews on Amazon, I think this would certainly be a worthy contribution to the Logos oeuvre.
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But surely technological benefits such as the internet, the pc which have led to useful tools such as Logos, and made so many writers and thinkers much more accessible to a wider audience; and archaeological discoveries such as the DSS and the insights that have arisen from an examination of such findings The continuing but gradual reapprochment between
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Please bear with me but why buy ISBE 1915, when it won't have the benefit of the last 90-something years of theological development?
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[quote user="Mark"] I wish I could have my own cloud in my house...with only my content on it, and I can travel the world with a tablet and access my cloud, my material, in my possession, not material stored on someone else's servers. The reason for this is that it is a known fact that cloud companies do disappear, and the content that people had on
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[quote user="Bradley Grainger (Logos)"] Logos 4.x is currently using the .NET Framework v3.5, which doesn't provide built-in touch support. We plan to migrate to .NET 4 (at which point adding touch support should be fairly easy), but there are some significant text rendering problems that are currently delaying that move. (It's also possible we could
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[quote user="J. Jackson"] I use the stylus for handwritten notes, not navigating windows. Win7 is actually fairly touch friendly. I'm not saying it's perfect, and there is the odd program, Logos4 being the chief among them, that somehow manage to not be compatible with touch, but by and large, touch is a fiarly pleasant experience on Win7. [/quote]
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[quote user="Bob Pritchett"] Otherwise we risk being like the MS-DOS Bible software company executive who passed up a chance to acquire Logos v1.0 in 1991 because he had enough experience (from GEM, TopView, GeOS, etc.) to know that graphical windowing interfaces were a UI fad that wouldn't make it, making it unnecessary for him to invest in building
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[quote user="David Meyer"] I have been for the last 12 years a Linux user (gentoo), Three months ago I switched back to windows. I purchased a Samsung Series 7 slate. Two months ago I switched from the Bible Soft program to Logos. Both moves have been excellent. I have played the game of trying to get all the apps I use to work well on all my devices
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[quote user="Russ White"] Do we want "Bible 2.0," a replacement for the Bible we already carry in our hands, or a research tool that takes us to new depths of study, and new heights in our understanding? Are we asking for an overgrown app, or a real application level tool? Russ [/quote] I don't see why Logos can't be both. I use it as Bible 2.0 for
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[Quote]: "We don't need another iPad wannabe." I hear you ; but I worked in the market research industry for many years and I can tell you that its surprising how many people will purchase something for a different reason than yourself. The bulk of computer users today have grown up with what we have and the proficient ones take for granted the overhead
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Convertible netbooks and laptops running x86 CPUs will run Win 8 and offer support for both Metro and traditional Windows apps. I'm using Logos 4 on a Tablet PC and thoroughly enjoying the experience. Its nice to be handwriting on it and interacting with the program by pointing and dragging with the stylus. I'm getting better than 99% accuracy.
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This also happened to me too, same error message. I also tried the same fixes without success. The problem went away on deleting the original Personal Book entry and starting over.
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Looks like EKS has withdrawn their books from Logos! A pity because I have been recommending the Primer to friends because it is very good. It gets users doing productive things quickly without getting bogged down in linquistic technical language. Almost makes biblical Hebrew conversational!