September 2011 Openbible Info Blog
March 2011 Openbible Info Blog First you need to understand the shape of the data. i don’t have access to a large repository of bible annotations, but the twitter and facebook bible citations from the realtime bible search section of this website provide a good approximation of how people cite the bible. Isaiah 57:15 59:21 ~ philippians 1:1 26 ~ psalm 71:1 24 ~ proverbs 24:9 10~ click here to read today’s scripture on biblegateway ~ mobile site link~ listen to today’s scripture on oneyearaudiobible.org or dailyaudiobible (podcast) ~ old testament – today in isaiah chapter 57 verses 20 & 21 we have a chance to think about that sometimes….
October 2011 Openbible Info Blog Tuesday, october 25, 2011 openbible analysis a quite interesting analysis openbible.info blog 2011 10 applying sentiment analysis to the bible. I think you'll find that this is definately not your typical bible information search site. for instance, it has a page called bible geocoding which will make it worth the while of those that seriously study their bible. Openbible.info has done just that and posted a nice, circular graphic showing the ebbs and flows of positive and negative vibes in the bible. it’s a pretty vanilla linguistic analysis, and the circle is just for aesthetics (see the author’s comment to the post), but it’s still interesting. The 1985 moody atlas of bible lands by barry j. beitzel has a section at the end that discusses the history of biblical mapmaking. it concludes by showing a landsat 1 image from january 1, 1973. here’s my attempt at recreating the look of that image, alongside a more modern take on the source data.
October 2011 Openbible Info Blog Openbible.info has done just that and posted a nice, circular graphic showing the ebbs and flows of positive and negative vibes in the bible. it’s a pretty vanilla linguistic analysis, and the circle is just for aesthetics (see the author’s comment to the post), but it’s still interesting. The 1985 moody atlas of bible lands by barry j. beitzel has a section at the end that discusses the history of biblical mapmaking. it concludes by showing a landsat 1 image from january 1, 1973. here’s my attempt at recreating the look of that image, alongside a more modern take on the source data. He ‘s also written a blog post that goes into detail about the map. the blog is about technology and the bible, so take a look at his other posts if those topics interest you. By pastor e.a. adeboye memorize: “not every one that saith unto me, lord, lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my father which is in heaven.” (matt. 7:21). re…. Here's a fun bible reserch website openbible.info. it's got: bible geocoding find every place mentioned in the bible on googleearth. topical bible type in a topic, the relevant passages come up. realtime bible verse search "how people are quoting the bible in 38,405,936 posts since april 2009." this is a feature i can't see myself using. The new bible translation personas experiment uses aaron zinman’s personas project to scrape the web for mentions of bible translations and then assigns a list of categories to each one, ultimately resulting in a colored strip that supposedly provides insight into the translation.
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