kata ta biblia

a blog exploring Christian origins, biblical studies, social/cultural history, method, education and the journey through academia

Category: iPod Touch

Best iPod Touch (or iPhone) Apps for Academics?

I am thrilled that one of the items I’m receiving for this holiday season is an iPod Touch. Since I found out, I have been quite distracted imagining how my new toy can be a force for good in my research (productivity enhancing) rather than a pure time waster (productivity killing).

I already have a bunch of classes that I am working through in iTunes U, but the iPod Touch adds new possibilities for technologically-assisted learning: namely, apps. I would like to send out a request to iPod Touch/iPhone academics to send their favorite apps. I’m interested in anything related to biblical studies, Christian origins, classics, Roman history, etc., as well as language learning, especially German and/or French (though anything neat with Hebrew or or Latin or Greek to practice). And with German/French, not just the cheesy learn-how-to-order-pancakes conversational vocab flashcard apps, but something that will go through verb conjugations and more robust vocab building (perhaps even being able to add your own lists of, say, theological terms).

I have noticed that some bibliobloggers have discussed the iPhone/iPod Touch and apps: Chris Brady, Michael Whitenton, Rick Mansfield (his old blog’s location, mostly on OliveTree), Karyn Traphagen. These are a few apps that I gather may be helpful (though I haven’t tested them yet):

If you have comments on how these apps have been for you or other apps that you’d suggest as well, please let us know in the comments! App recommendations that are productivity killing, but still fun, are welcome too. :)

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Logos for iPhone/iPod: Not Quite the Dream Yet

When I heard about the Logos 4 app for the iPhone and iPod Touch, I imagined that it was my dream fulfilled. The full realization of my dream is yet deferred, however, as both Chris and Danny pointed out on my previous post. Chris says:

Also, I can use all of my Accordance modules and Bible Reader (for iPhone) modules without an Internet connection—that’s not true for the Logos iPhone application (I don’t have direct personal experience with the desktop version of Logos 4).

Danny chimes in:

Chris made the point I wanted to make about the iPhone version. I think the Logos iPhone app is a great thing- but you are not going to be syncing your library to your iPhone. You will be syncing your library to a cloud, and your iPhone will be able to use and access anything in your cloud. If you can’t connect to the cloud (internet connection) then you got nothing.

I verified on the Logos website in response to FAQ’s:

Do I need to be connected to internet for the app to work?

Yes. The Logos Bible Software app does not store any Bibles or books on your device. You will need to be connected to the internet via your cell phone service provider or Wi-Fi.

Bob Pritchett responds by saying “But did we mention it’s free? :-) ”. Okay, it’s free, but it’s also being cited as a reason that Logos is better than other programs and thus should be purchased. If I’m making a decision to upgrade based in part upon this feature, then I want to make sure this is a feature that is worth the extra cash.

So, Bob also gives us a little glimmer of hope:

No rest for the weary… :-)

Yes, we did realize this would be the first question. And offline access is in our plans.

But a combination of issues — the amount of content, the desire to not have to charge you twice (at the behest of either the publisher or Apple), and some technical concerns — caused us to put this off.

(It’s not hard to store your books on the iPhone. It’s hard to implement our search engine, data type comparison system, data type parsing/rendering, cross-library searching for Guides, text comparison algorithm, etc. on the iPhone. We’ll get there, but we thought you’d be happy to get some basic reading and searching going first. By offloading to the server — where we can share code we built for the desktop app — we can offer a lot more power.)

Also, keep in mind that some users have literally gigabytes of content, and this Internet-based solution allows you to work with every bit of it that publishers allow (we’re still securing rights — the list will change constantly) without having to explicitly download or manage the resources.

I’m glad my actual dream (though it was originally about the Kindle) is in the works.

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