• Une bibliothèque (presque) complète pour travailler très efficacement (elle peut être complétée avantageusement par certains "pack-clé"). Il est par contre utile (avec le temps) de comprendre comment est fait l'outil pour l'utiliser de manière correcte (par exemple les timelines sont basées sur les différents livres de leurs collections. Il est donc parfois utile de lire les sources utilisées derrière les dates pour établir la pertinence de celles-ci). Logos, au niveau de ses données, est un agrégat des différentes sources qu'ils possèdent et non une validation de ces sources ! Par contre, les outils pour passer d'un livre à une carte, à une traduction, puis à une timeline ou pour retrouver des textes similaires sont vraiment très agréables et pratiques (les autres outils aussi sont très pratiques). Quant à la quantité de données disponibles, cela assure d'avoir une bonne couverture des différentes compréhensions de la Bible. Aucun regret quant à cet achat
    1. + a list of events with a recap for each of them that can be useful to start a study + a chronologic manner to present events - some dates seems strange (in general too precise for events that occurs more than 2000 years ago) -- no reference on the documents used to establish dates. We never know if this is based on archeological documents, on calculation or whatever else. This is really confusing because if some dates are based on calculations, they cannot be used to calculate other events from this one. It is also unclear if these are dates based on a literal reading of the Bible or not. Then the lack of references is really annoying to use safely these dates for sermons (however we read the Bible, literally or not)
      1. I believe they needed to insert precise dates to function better with Logos' timeline tool.
      2. Hello Stephen, I'm pretty sure not. - First because the book was made independently of Logos - Secondly because I don't believe Logos changes the content of the book (except to put the reference tag, but not the content itself) - Thirdly because doing that would mean to modify what is described in the Bible and if Logos plays with these kind of things, I would never be able to trust Logos anymore after. But I'm convinced they don't do this and will never do it The easiest way to check this is to check a printed sample and I'm pretty sure (in fact 100% sure) that dates will be the same in the printed book
    2. I've perhaps wrongly used the tool, but I was a bit disappointed. Some maps have roads and important places, but some are very very light. For example the map "Jesus Resumes His Ministry in Galilee" is covering more than 20 events, but when you click on them, only 2 show where it was ("Sermon on the Mount" & "Jesus raises a widow's son"), all others have no effect on the map. And the map itself is poor : 4 flags (3 very close) and around 10 cities, no road Would be very happy if it is just me who is not able to use it correctly, but if this is not the case, it is really too poor