1971 – Transcribed Leningrad Codex (Francis Andersen).1920 – Yehuda Ridday’s analysis of Isaiah, concluding that there were at least three authors.1963 – Andrew Morton’s use of computational models to challenge Paul’s authorship.1957 – The world’s first computer generated concordance for the RSV by John Ellison.Major Events and Releases Academic Inquiry (1950s onward) I’ve since converted this to a chronological list that should be a bit more complete. UPDATE: Initially this post had a graphic timeline and some commentary on the major waves of development, but it was far too incomplete. Wikipedia, of course, has some of the major applications organized by operating system, but it doesn’t include release dates or offer much commentary on how they fit together. Surprisingly, it’s fairly difficult to find a clear, chronological accounting of Bible software development.
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