Can I Download The Bible On My Laptop

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Nerio Cintron

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Aug 5, 2024, 11:47:30 AM8/5/24
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We specifically require a laptop rather than your choice between a laptop or a desktop because all students are required to purchase a specially priced (greatly reduced from the retail price) package of digital textbooks from Logos Bible Software as part of their textbook package. This software will be used in class in some of your Biblical Studies courses.

There are also a number of computer labs available for student use around the campus that are equipped with useful software for students. The library has a printer that all students can access through the Student Wi-fi network. Students can print to that printer free of charge.


NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS

Emmaus Bible College admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school administered programs.


Im new to this forum and want to buy TEW 2016. My reservation is that I plan to get a new computer in a couple months and have read that transferring the elicense to another computer can be a hassle. Has anyone here transferred to a new computer and was it a hassle? Thank you in advance.


The process of transferring files, whether e-Sword or any other data for that matter is straight forward. Basically, all you need to do is copy all the files onto a removable media, such as a USB pendrive, or what others call, a memory stick, and then from there plug that pendrive into a USB port on the new Computer, and then copy it to the hardrive using Windows File Explorer. Its really as simple as that.


Im new to this forum and want to buy TEW 2016. My reservation is that I plan to get a new computer in a couple months and have read that transferring the elicense to another computer can be a hassle. Has anyone here transferred to a new computer and was it a hassle? Thank you in advance.


Again you will see a line-up of programs, look for the e-Sword folder, grab the folder with your mouse and drag the folder to a flash drive that is big enough to store all your programs on.


When you click on the folder you downloaded from your older computer you should have one long list of modules showing up. Just double-click on each one and follow the instructions on each one.


The nice thing about doing it this way, all the modules you paid for will download without having to enter the Product Key. (If you update those programs you will need the product key then.)


Appreciate your responses/answers. I'm transferring e-sword from an old PC to a new PC. My main goal is to ensure that the highlighted comments in the Bibles & Commentaries are successfully to the new PC. The highlights for the Bibles have been transferred successfully. However, the highlighted comments for the commentaries haven't transferred. Not exactly sure where these commentary files are located on the old PC, either under 'Documents' or 'Program Files (x86)? Also, I see, on the new PC, the file for M. Henry's commentary but when I look on the old PC, I don't find that file...especially interested in that one, as I have years of highlighting in tthere. Certainly would appreciate helping me to find those old commentary files and getting them transferred.


I followed these directions but they did not work for me. I bought a new laptop and copied the files from my old laptop but my Study Notes are not there. The scriptures that I highlighted on my old laptop are highlighted on the new laptop but all the Study Notes are missing.


Did you copy the notes from the e-Sword folder located in the Documents folder? This is where your journal, topic and study notes are saved to. The need to be copied to the same folder on the new computer


The one thing I don't have to worry about transferring e-Sword resources from an old PC to a new one is because all resources are on a separate drive. This means all I need to do is to remove the Data (D:) drive from the old PC into the new one, and then just change the default resource location in e-Sword to that drive.


Here is another way anyone can do this, and its pretty straight forward. Simply have a copy of all your resources on a USB pen drive (memory stick) and then you can bang it on whatever device you want. Alternatively, you just keep you e-Sword resources up on the Cloud, e.g., One Drive, and then just sync e-Sword to the cloud. Not a problem at all!


Anyone is welcome to bookmark and use (without duplication or reproduction) the information in this document and supporting links however like anything else you read online use of this information is at your own risk.




This document is designed for those who prefer to fly Flight Simulator X instead of endlessly tweaking it. It defines a methodology to building and tuning a Flight Simulator system in which that methodology is proven in years of testing and is based on the application itself. After going through this information and following along, and, with a little practice, you should find it fairly easy to deal with Flight Simulator and how to approach tuning it in the future as more addons are introduced to your sim.




If you came here looking for a 'fast-and-dirty' way to make Flight Sim run better with a few silly tweaks (most of the tweaks you see online ARE silly!), you came to the wrong place and you will not find it. Success with Flight Sim starts with the hardware selections at purchase and ends with the user understanding the issues and how to optimize their system, correct issues before or when they appear, and, tune their sim correctly with the right methodology in mind.


I have provided a very comprehensive checklist below of prerequisites that will define success when building a system and optimizing it for high performance. Do not skip the "Preflight Checklist" as it outlines critical areas in a defined sequential order so that users can target many problems that will fix Flight Sim crashes and system performance issues before they ever appear! These are issues users report in forums everyday and who do not know where to start in order to correct them. After the Preflight Checklist you can proceed to the Windows 7 Optimizing Guide below it.


NOTE: The Windows 7 optimizing section of this document does not apply to Windows 8. The optimizing list presented is designed specifically for Windows 7 ONLY. Windows 8 users are welcome to look over this document and focus on the preflight section as that defines building and setting up any system however the specific operating system settings changes outline for the OS for performance were not considered for Windows 8!




This methodology has displayed instant visual results to users in the past decade and they understood immediately on the first flight the benefits of using it. The latest and newer hardware of the last few years masks issues of the past that slowed a system down. That overhead is still there and still influences performance, its just that the hardware and technology are masking users from instantly recognizing the loss.




People assume problems of the past are no longer an issue and in that users assume too much. What this outline provides is removal of that behind-the-scenes overhead and shifts the majority of the resources back to the application in which we all know that Flight Simulator can use all the resources it can muster. That can not be done by simply shutting down services and boot programs, as a matter of fact with Windows 7 shutting down a lot of Windows services is nonsense. Unlike XP, that all changed with Windows 7 and how it works with services.




If you have correctly worked through the Preflight Checklist and followed the advice then you have established the beginning of a strong chain. Now consider each step forward from that point in the order presented another single link in the chain as its made. A chain is only as strong as its weakest link, so with that in that in mind lets move onward and upward...




There is a lot of information in this document, please do not let that influence or deter reviewing it and giving it a try. Think of it as a fun project instead of a lot of reading. I have written this outline in a way that anyone can understand. I avoided the engineering 'tech-speak' and present the information in easy-to-follow-along terms and 1-2-3 sequential list. Once you have done this a few times it will take about a day to install a OS from scratch, set it up and install Flight Sim with 2 or 3 'base' primary addons and have it running smooth.




I will discuss good hardware choices for Flight Simulator X. The same information can be applied to future hardware as it is released to the market. You can then make informed decisions but users will be hard pressed to be satisfied with Flight Simulator X running large payware scenery and payware aircraft on laptops, cheap video cards, cheap memory and all around low budget hardware. Under those conditions you will be far better off running Flight Simulator 9 however you can still obtain results using the methodology outlined here.




With cheaper hardware and unrealistic expectations a user will be constantly spending money to upgrade, in other words you will spend more! with no long term satisfaction or true 'cash-savings' in the long run. Its better to spend a little more now than spend it again and again trying to upgrade cheap hardware over time. If a user selects the right hardware they can expect a 3-4 year minimum useful life with few or no upgrades required and will actually spend far less money over that same period of time since they won't be endlessly looking for replacement upgrade parts. ...and crabbing at the screen!

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