-
Background: The “Swipe to highlight” option on the iPad/iPhone is nice for minimizing taps needed, but only if you’re wanting to apply the same style as used on the last highlight. Selecting a different style takes 3 or 4 taps plus possibly scrolling in dropdown lists (depending on whether the desired style is on the “most recently used” list). Note
-
Actually, on reading that suggestion more carefully, I'm not so sure that it would do what I was looking for. I was only interested in eliminating (or preferably being able to set the width of) the wasted white space at the far left and far right of a resource's window.
-
Andrew, thanks for calling my attention to that item, I was not aware of it. I just placed my vote.
-
Bernhard, I posted that almost 3 years ago and you're the first one to express a similar wish. Which is probably why it is still not available. I'd still love to have it in Logos for Windows. The screen on my current laptop is even smaller than the one I had back then.
-
[quote user="Scott (Sanjay) Hayes"] Kevin, The built-in read aloud feature on Apple iOS only reads the text that's already "on the screen" so you can hear it if you are blind or see poorly. I'm suggesting an automated feature that would keep reading the book "whether the text is on the screen yet or not". I've tried the Apple iOS feature, and it doesn
-
[quote user="Kevin Byford (Faithlife)"] This is already supported on iOS mobile devices. If you are saying it doesn't work for you please post detailed instructions for reproducing the issue. [/quote] Yes, I just tried it and it works great with Logos under iOS 8. So glad to find this out, I was not aware that this capability was available in iOS.
-
Scott, one thing I’ve done for a couple of resources is to play the audio on my Windows laptop using Logos’ built-in Read Aloud capability (Ctrl-R), and capture the audio to a file with Windows Sound Recorder or another app. (This can take hours for a large book.) Then I copied the audio file to my iPod where I could listen to the resource while jogging
-
I do my outline/notes in Word, then when done I save it to a PDF and view the PDF on the iPad in Goodreader when presenting. Goodreader would also be able to show the Word docx file but pdf has some advantages. Goodreader's ability to crop the pages is very helpful--eliminating the white border space makes the text larger and much easier to read on
-
For each seminary course I had, the first thing I'd do was see how many of the textbooks I could get in Logos. For textual courses requiring commentaries, a high % were available (although occasionally only in sets, not for individual purchase). But for theology courses, very few were available. Also sometimes Logos did not have the latest version
-
The Columns option, in which a resource is displayed in multiple columns, is a great feature for readability, especially on wide-screen laptops. However, unlike when Columns are set to None, it adds wasted white space in the form of borders on all four sides of the text. This was probably done for cosmetics (or to look like Kindle), but it would really
-
Steve, For me, I never even look at the list of past snapshots in the right column. My only interest is in the left column, the list of named layouts I have created. Perhaps it is the snapshots which are the source of the delay.
-
[quote user="DMB"] I'd assume anyone that does a decent amount of programming has wondered exactly would could take an i7 that long to do. [/quote] I do and I have.
-
The first thing I noticed when upgrading from L4 to L5 (Windows) was the increased and excruciatingly long time it takes from clicking on the "Layouts" button until the dropdown list of layouts appears. And I have a fast i7 CPU and SSD. Seems like the programmer should be holding the list of layouts (47 in my case) in memory so that the list could be
-
Item 14 from Ted's original list is now available: http://www.logos.com/product/25039/headship-submission-and-the-bible-gender-roles-in-the-home
-
Thanks to all for those suggestions. Fortunately, I am now up and running. I did a complete uninstall of Logos 5 then reinstalled it from the website. After 12 hours of downloading and indexing, Logos was going again. Since two other programs on my laptop experienced corrupted files around the same time, I am suspecting that my 3-year old SSD is starting
-
Mark, According to the link you provided, holding down the Ctrl key during startup will produce the log files (which I did). However, I have now enabled permanent debugging as you suggested. I tried to start Logos again and got the same crash. However, I searched my entire drive and there is no file named logos.log.
-
Logos 5 (latest version) has just started crashing on startup. When I try to start it, with or without Ctrl depressed, the Logos logo comes up for a few seconds then just disappears. Log files are attached. I deleted all files in the LibraryIndex and Bible index folders but it had no effect. Also I have run a virus scan (Kaspersky), registry cleaners
-
G=Genitive case, D=Dative case. Some prepositions have different meanings depending on the case.
-
It is especially useful when you want to highlight a section which continues just a line or two past the text on the current screen. Previously you had to create two separate highlights.
-
It just now downloaded fine onto my iPad.