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- RELIGION, Page 82High-Tech Bible
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- A minicomputer crunches Scripture's 773,692 words
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- There is a Bible for every taste, or lack thereof: Bibles
- bound in denim and hand-tooled leather, translations in street
- slang, Bible comic books, Bible cartoon videos and seventy times
- seven other gimmicky editions. Now, for the parson who has
- everything, here comes the ultimate in modern packaging: the
- Electronic Bible. This is not a new translation but a hand-held
- computer containing the entire scriptural text in either the
- King James or the Revised Standard Version. The item,
- manufactured by New Jersey-based Franklin Computer, will go on
- sale in selected retail outlets next week. Price: $299.
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- Weighing 13 oz., measuring 5 1/2 in. square and powered by
- four AA batteries, the microchip Bible is more portable than
- most published editions. By punching in book, chapter and verse,
- the user can immediately call up any of the 31,173 verses of
- Scripture on the screen's four display lines. From there the
- text can be read continuously, backward or forward.
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- But its other search and concordance functions make the
- machine far more valuable. Want to find every place in the Bible
- where "taxes" appears? Just punch in the word and sit back. The
- computer displays all the books where the exact word is found,
- and a simple added command then brings each text to the screen.
- Taxes turn up but once in the King James, in Daniel 11:20. A
- handy extension of this feature can also search for all variant
- forms, such as taxed or taxation (there are eight in all).
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- Or try this: type in a request to find any place in the
- Bible where the words valley, shadow and death occur in the same
- verse. The machine will obligingly display Psalm 23:4. Can't
- recall the exact words? A built-in thesaurus lets the user
- search through synonyms. The machine also provides
- pronunciations for proper names (Enoch is EE-nuck). A handicap
- for some will be difficulty in reading the enhanced
- liquid-crystal display, whose resolution is still inferior to
- that of larger, more expensive personal computers that can
- process Bible-reference software.
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- Franklin's Bible will soon have to compete with a similar
- product developed by the SelecTronics company of Minneapolis.
- The SelecTronics Bible, also priced at $299, will contain the
- New International Version that is favored by conservative
- Evangelicals. Why the scramble to break into the microchip-Bible
- market? According to II Timothy 3:16, "All Scripture is given
- by inspiration of God and is profitable" for believers.
- Obviously, computer companies are also hoping to turn a profit
- from Holy Writ.
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