Showing posts with label Other Bible Study Tools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Other Bible Study Tools. Show all posts

11 August 2011

Selecting Bible Study Software

Since I've been asked twice in the last week why I don't use Bible Study Program X, it seems appropriate to blog once more about selecting Biblical Software.

Criteria Set One:
  • Biblical Canon Supported;
  • Software license permits one to use it for what one intends to use the software for;
Criteria Set Two:
  • Data Portability;
  • Future Proofing;
  • Currently Available Resources;
  • User Created Resources;
  • Cross Platform Support;

Criteria Set Three: Bible Study Methods:
I'm aware of roughly 500 different ways to study the Bible. Most of them fall into one of the following six categories:
  • Book, chapter, verse orientated;
  • Chronologically orientated;
  • Creed/Catechism orientated;
  • Original Language orientated;
  • Topically orientated;
  • Who/where orientated;
How many of those points of departure are supported out of the box by the software?

Criteria Set Four: Accessibility:

What functionality is lost by removing:
  • The keyboard;
  • The mouse;
  • The monitor;
  • The monitor and the mouse;
  • The monitor and the keyboard;
  • The keyboard and the mouse;
  • The monitor, mouse, and keyboard;
Criteria Set Five: The 2009 SBL Bible Software Shootout:

These were the five challenges each presenter had to address:
1. Give the parsing of a word and its meaning from a standard source.
2. Show all the occurrences of a word in the NT and LXX and show the Hebrew word which corresponds with the Greek in the LXX (if there is a correspondence).
3. Find all the occurrences of oi de in Matthew’s gospel followed by a finite verb within the clause.
4. I want to study a part of speech, e. g., demonstrative pronouns or interjections. How do I get all of the lemmas for that part of speech, get all the occurrences of those lemmas, and the results organized in such a way that I could write an article/monograph on that part of speech from the data?
5. I want to study the inflections of the Hebrew middle weak verb, and I want to see what the range of possible variations is for each of the conjugations (perfect, imperative, etc.) person, number, gender, and stem. This means I need to find all the middle weak verbs, find all their occurrences, and organize them in such a way that the variation of their inflections are immediately apparent. The goal of the data organization would be to allow me to write an article about the variations of the Hebrew middle weak verb


In future posts, I'll expand upon each point in the first four sets of criteria.

14 April 2010

I don't think so.

"NOTE 14 – RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES

Our future operating results may be affected by a number of factors. We are dependent upon a number of major inventory and intellectual property suppliers. If a critical supplier had operational problems or ceased making material available to us, operations could be adversely affected."

That quote is from a 10K filed in December 2009, of a firm that claims "
it is currently believed by us to be the market leader in its category".

I don't remember seeing any representatives from that company at BibleTech 2008, BibleTech 2009, or BibleTech 2010. Maybe I missed them. Maybe I forgot about them. More to the point, they did not participate in the SBL Bible Software Shootout.

After using their software, I can understand why they would want to give the
SBL Bible Software Shootout a miss.

There were 2.5 million downloads of e-Sword in 2009. That is more than double the number of programs that this company (under both current management and ownership, and previous management and ownership) claims to have sold in its entire history --- circa 1990 to 2009.)

Their bigger risk is that they don't clearly explain the differences between the products they offer. (US$13.99 or US$69.95 for what appears to be the same item, depending upon which page you order it on. Either way, the US$39.95 product is a lost sale.

The issue with intellectual property suppliers withdrawing permission to distribute their content is one that all Bible Study Software developers have to face. It doesn't matter if you are Logos Bible Software, The Crosswire Bible Society, Laridian, Inc, or any other developer. Content providers can be whimsical, and request/demand that one cease distributing their copyrighted product.

13 February 2010

On Selecting Bible Study Software

This is an addendum to the blog post at http://www.bibletechconference.com/blog/selecting-bible-study-software/ .

Bible Study Software can be reasonably divided by:
  • Platform;
  • License;
  • Number of resources;
  • Type of resources;
  • Functionality;
To make a distinction on the basis of commercial/non-commercial is nonsense:
Additionally, there is the issue of how "non-commercial" is defined. And, contrary to the press blurb, the Creative Commons Foundation does not have a functional, viable definition of "Non-Commercial".

Platform: No additional comments.

License

For users, the issue is what the license permits, and prohibits. It is all too easy to click through a license, when installing new software. US Courts have consistently upheld that click-through licenses are legally binding.

Do you want to have to parse a clause such as the following, and decide if using the program at a Bible Study at your home is permitted? Or, for those in the emerging church, deciding if it permits usage for a Bible Study at a local bar, or eating establishment?

ADDENDUM. The Software may be used for educational purposes in schools and Churches for teaching and instructional purposes only. (Complete license can be found at http://www.abu.nb.ca/ecm/products/copyrigt.htm.)

I do not know the history of the following clause. It did give me cause to wonder what was purchased that could result in what taxes the State of Washington levied on residents, that would encourage the inclusion of a clause like this.
You are responsible for payment of any taxes, including personal property taxes, resulting from this license. (Complete license can be found at http://www.gramcord.org/ftp/Doc/license.doc.)
Whilst I question the legality of the following clause, it is an example of "unexpected" clauses in Bible Study Software.
The Terms of Use of The Watchtower Library CD states
2. Who may have a copy of Watchtower Library? This is a research tool for Jehovah's Witnesses, not for the public or for institutions such as schools or libraries.
The following clause is an example of an "expected" clause. (This is from the Libronix License.)
I'd question what "trade secrets" an end-user can divine, simply from using the software. Especially due to the existence of Libronix Tools, Libronix Santa Fe Translator, or Theme Discovery Report.
CONFIDENTIALITY
The Software contains trade secrets and proprietary know-how that belong to us and it is being made available to you in strict confidence. ANY USE OR DISCLOSURE OF THE SOFTWARE, OR OF ITS ALGORITHMS, PROTOCOLS OR INTERFACES, OTHER THAN IN STRICT ACCORDANCE WITH THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT, MAY BE ACTIONABLE AS A VIOLATION OF OUR TRADE SECRET RIGHTS.
Virtually every software license that end users have to agree to, that I've read, has contained one more clauses that are either ambiguous, obnoxious, or both obnoxious and ambiguous. Then there are the licenses that are toxic. One example would be a license that turns over your work product, and all intellectual property rights relating to that work product, to the company that developed the software.

http://www.ceskapiratskastrana.cz/wiki/_media/kci:novelaautz.pdf.

Type of Resource:

Two things to pay attention to:
* Does the Bible Study Software offer the type of resources you use?
* Are the resources consistently packaged for the type of resource it is?

For the first question, the resource type can be broken into two parts:
a) The content of the resource matches your interests. If you like using a dozen or more translations of the Bible in your Bible Study, and the program only includes on Bible translation, it does not match your interest. Likewise, if you are an Aramaic primist, and it only offers Latin texts, if doesn't match your interests;
b) The resource types that are offered are appropriate for the way you study: If you primarily do textual analysis, and the majority of the resources are commentaries the program probably is not suitable for your needs;


For the second question, I'll use e-Sword as an example. The Book of Mormon, offered at http://e-sword-users.org/users/node/2107 . e-Sword does not support The Canon of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Using the Scripture search bar for 2 Nephi won't come up with any matches. This content is very inconsistent with the Bible Resource Format Specifications. It was, needless to say, created by a user. AFAIK, that resource, and The Book of Mormon cast as a commentary resource ( http://e-sword-users.org/users/node/2132 ) are the only two resources for e-Sword whose content does not match the e-Sword Resource Format Specifications for the specific resource type. (Oddly enough, e-Sword-users.org does not offer a copy of the Book of Mormon as a topical file, which is the appropriate resource format.) For one or two known resources, one might be able to overlook it. When there is no way to know the content type, until after the resource is opened, such dissonance can be extremely unsettling. Consider the effect of opening a resource that you think is text, say, for example, a history of Egypt, and discovering that it is nothing but images.


Functionality:

If your Bible Study resembles Melissa Scott's Bible study lesson's that are broadcast on late night TV, then does the software package have the tools to do that type of markup?

If your Bible Study resembles the videos from Rick Warren's The Purpose Filled Life, does your Bible Study software enable the creation, and display of audio files, video files, and graphical images?

02 October 2007

Blank Bibles

I read about the "make your own blank Bible" craze on the ESV blog earlier today. Split your Bible into individual pages,then put a blank page between each page, and rebind it.

What happens when you fill up the blank pages?

Using the Study Note component in e-Sword, one can add a note of up to 65,535 characters per verse. Then use Text2DAO to convert the Study Note resource to a Commentary Resource.

There are two downsides here:
* You can't take a laptop to church;
* Converting from Pocket e-Sword to e-Sword is a non-trivial operation.

Maybe one day Pocket e-Sword and e-Sword resources will be sharable.