Diogenes Tlg Software

Software for TLG and PHI CD-ROMs

by Darl J. Dumont and Randall M. Smith

NEWS:
We now can accept MasterCard, Visa, and American Express. See Musaios: Ordering and Payment Information for information on credit card payments.
27 May 2010 - Musaios 2010 Release A is now available. All registered users of Musaios can now download the upgrade from this website. [Musaios 2010 is installed alongside any pre-existing installation of Musaios 2002A without disturbing it. The two versions can coexist on the same computer.]Download Musaios 2010 from this link.

Almost all of Ancient Greek and Latin literature are available on CD-ROM -- Thesaurus Linguae Graecae's CD-ROM #E (ancient Greek texts) contains 1823 authors and collections from the 8th century BC to the 1453 AD. The Packard Humanities Institute's CD-ROM 5.3 contains Latin authors, and also seven versions of the Bible. Packard Humanities Institute also provides a third CD-ROM with collections of Greek Papyri and Inscriptions (CD-ROM 'PHI 7').

None of these CD-ROMs comes equipped with software for viewing and searching; They simply contain the files in 'ISO 9660' format, further encoded in a format known as 'Beta Code'. MUSAIOS provides a means to view the texts in a format similar to the printed page, and to perform searches.

MUSAIOS 2010 will run on Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7, both 32-bit and 64-bit versions. MUSAIOS 2010 uses the Unicode fonts included with Windows that support Polytonic Greek. The WinGreek font is no longer necessary.

  • Musaios: Ordering and Payment Information
    New - we now can accept Visa and MasterCard

For further information send E-mail to: ddumont@musaios.com or: rsmith1@rpprog.com

You may send purchase orders, write inquiries or send E-mail in English, French, German, Italian, or Spanish. We will respond in English.

Musaios c/o Darl J. Dumont
840 Oneonta Drive
Los Angeles, California U.S.A. 90065-4125
FAX +323 417-4792





Bibliographer for Classics, the Ancient Near East, & General Humanities Joseph Regenstein Library, Room 471 Office: 773-702-2783 Cell: 773-820-2842. After finding the entry, I can either i. Hit ⌘⏎ to open the text online or ii. Hit ⌃⏎ to open it offline (in case you have Diogenes installed). There are also some functions related to a software called DEVONthink. I highly recommend checking it out. I have written about how I use it here. There is no mystery to these functions.












Diogenes Software


2007-10-09 16:59:19 UTC
Announcing the release of version 3.1 of Diogenes, a free program for
reading the databases of Latin and Greek texts published on CD-Rom by

Diogenes Tlg Software Free

the Packard Humanities Institute and the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae.
http://www.dur.ac.uk/p.j.heslin/Software/Diogenes/
The major new feature in this version is that, thanks to the
generosity of the Perseus project, morphological data and dictionaries
for Latin (Lewis-Short) and Greek (LSJ) and are built-in. This means
that you can:
* Click on a word in the texts and get a morphological analysis and
the corresponding dictionary entry instantly, even if you are not
connected to the Internet.
* Click to analyze words in the dictionary entries themselves, or
click on the citation information of a passage cited in the
dictionary to jump to the context of the passage in the Latin or
Greek database.
* Do morphologically intelligent searching, i.e. search for all of the
inflected forms of a given dictionary headword.
* Look up words in the dictionaries.
In addition, version 3 of Diogenes is newly based on the Firefox
browser and should be very easy to install, much more so than
previously. Easy-to-install packages are provided for Mac OS X,
Windows, and Linux. Installation just takes a couple of clicks.
Version 3.1 also includes a number of new features that had long been
requested:
* Unicode input (now the default).
* Saving user-defined subsets of the databases for repeated searching.
* Running marginal numeration when browsing through a text.Diogenes tlg software free
* Improved Unicode output.
* For network installations, individual user settings (via cookies).
--
Peter Heslin (http://www.dur.ac.uk/p.j.heslin)