(On wide monitors I would often use the fourth panel, which became available a few versions back. You’ve got 1) search results on the left, 2) a “text comparison” window in the middle, and 3) the “auto-info” window providing lexical and parsing information on the right. It makes eminent sense because it represents the most basic Bible study workflow. I still love the basic three-panel BibleWorks layout. We at Faithlife/Logos are working to help you with Bibleworks closing. Those of you who have taken lots of notes in BibleWorks, in particular, will want to read on. Here are some ways that I have made Logos work like BibleWorks.
I brought my BibleWorks sensibilities to Logos when, before I came to the company, I began replacing the former with the latter in my workflows. I’m genuinely sad to find out that BibleWorks is closing up shop. Everyone I knew from the company was a true Christian brother and a class act. I still use BibleWorks for one ongoing project. I taught multiple whole-Saturday sessions on the software. I persuaded dozens of others to get it, and I even became an unofficial BibleWorks trainer for about ten years. My first serious Bible software program (December, 2002) was BibleWorks, and as soon as I got it I was hooked.
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