Favorites II: Get Organized with Research Folders

Last week I answered the question "Can I save searches in Logos?" by taking a look at Favorites, one of the new features in Logos 3.

If you looked carefully at the screenshot I used to illustrate Favorites you may have noticed some interesting things in the "Crowds" folder. Take another look…

Notice that the Crowds folder contains not only searches, but also dictionary articles, notes, and even a Bible Word Study report.

Follow the Crowds

In college, I took part in a manuscript study of the book of Mark. We dug deep into the text using little more than a double-spaced printout of the gospel, lots of colored pencils, and hours of poring over the text and group discussion. (To read about the manuscript study method, check out the PDFs on StudentJourney.org, a cool new site from InterVarsity Christian Fellowship).

When reading through Mark's gospel this way, one thing you can't miss are the crowds. Everywhere you look, Jesus seems to be surrounded by a mob. At the time, we made a number of interesting observations concerning the ebb and flow of these crowds, and the Savior's interaction with them...and now I'm doing some research into the topic using Logos Bible Software.

Playing Favorites

The Favorites feature in Logos 3 enables me to save and organize each step of my research by placing Favorites in my "Crowds" folder. As my study progresses (or is interrupted and resumed later), I can refer back to this folder to pull up and review any component of my research.

Just about any resource, report, or document within Logos Bible Software can be saved as a Favorite. Resources are Bibles, books or journals; reports are things like Bible Word Study, Exegetical Guide, or Compare Parallel Bible Versions; documents include notes, sentence diagrams, lists (word/vocabulary/reference/verse), or even remote library searches.

So next time you're investigating a particular research topic or Bible passage, organize your work using Favorites folders.

Another great use of Favorites: flag stuff for later investigation. Instead of following a rabbit trail right now, make a Later folder and pop that juicy tidbit in there with a descriptive title so you can stay on track. Or when you see something that relates to a different project or research interest, pause only long enough to bookmark it to that folder. If you often find yourself wandering in your digital library, Favorites can help you stay focused.

Just think about all that Favorites can do to assist your study, and you'll want to start using them right now!

  • Save time and frustration trying to recall later what you did
  • Instantly get back to that key resource or note file
  • Keep a commonly-used text or search at your fingertips
  • Defer your bunny trails and keep focused on the task at hand

Next in series: Favorites vs. Workspaces

If you have other ways you're using Favorites, leave a comment here or drop me a line at daniel@logos.com...I'd love to hear about it and, who knows, it might make for an interesting follow-up blog post!

3 Comments

Wow! Thanks for this information. This just made collecting Word Studies and research for my coming Thesis about ten times more manageable!

Thanks, Daniel. Where is this stored at on the hard drive (in case I want to take it with me to a new laptop)?

The file is "Favorites.xml" stored in My Documents\Libronix DLS.

I imagine you could even include the file in your Briefcase to keep it synchronized between machines.

Leave a comment

Subscribe

Enter your email address:

Bible.Logos.com

Bible Search

Verse:
John 3:16; Jn 3:16; John 3

Keyword:
Salvation, Jesus, Gospel

With Operators:
AND, OR, NOT, “ ”

Add this to your site!

Social Networking

RefTagger

Bible Options

Add this to your site!

Recent Comments

  • Daniel Foster: The file is "Favorites.xml" stored in My Documents\Libronix DLS. I read more
  • Khoi To: Thanks, Daniel. Where is this stored at on the hard read more
  • Martin Burch: Wow! Thanks for this information. This just made collecting Word read more

September 2009

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30      

Archives

Employee Blogs

Bob Pritchett
RSS FireSomeoneToday
RSS BobPritchett.com
Rick Brannan
RSS Ricoblog
RSS PastoralEpistles.com
Mike Heiser
RSS The Naked Bible
RSS Scribal Practices
RSS PaleoBabble
Steve Runge
RSS NT Discourse
Bill Nienhuis
RSS OriginalExpression
Sean Boisen
RSS Blogos
Phil Gons
RSS PhilGons.com
Ryan Burns
RSS Going to Seminary
John Barry
RSS The Infinite in Everything

Poll

  • What’s your favorite kind of blog post?