

You also have control of where on the screen you want the split to take place - it doesn't have to be directly down the middle. You can keep your secondary book open in the second panel, but keep it hidden until the moments you need it. This is also nice in case you want the split screen, but not the entire time. If you don't want the split screen, you can simply slide the one you don't want off the the screen. Or maybe the Bible is the main book you want open, and you want to have easy access to a reference book. You want to read another book, like a devotional, while having your Bible open to reference at the same time.You want to compare two different versions of the Bible side-by-side - basically converting BibleReader into a parallel Bible.You can use one panel for the main passage, and the other to browse to the other verses. While at church, your pastor has one main passage that he's covering, but also references other verses.Here's a few different situations that one may find the split screen to be useful: In each panel, you can have any of the books you have in your Olive Tree Library. If you're using BibleReader in portrait, the screen will split horizontally, and when in landscape, it will split vertically. One of the really neat features of BibleReader is that you can split your screen into two panels.
