Torah Educational Software Explained
Torah Educational Software (TES) is a distributor of Judaic software based in Jerusalem.[1] Its product Let's Keep Kosher received a rabbinical endorsement.[2]
Software for Jewish texts
- A 1996 followup to a 1994 Davka-vs-TES (Torah Educational Software) comparison of Jewish texts on CD-ROM began by listing the winner: "The competition ... has led to an apparent winner: the consumer!"[3]
- A University of California Press 34 page overview of tools for Talmudic study, especially related to Daf Yomi,[4] gives Artscroll top billing, but in the area of non-print and non-voice, TES is noted for its Gemara Tutor and Talmud Master software.
- Dagesh is the name of their multi-language wordprocessing program, including Hebrew, English, Russian, and Arabic;[5] Dagesh-Pro Translator is bi-directional for Hebrew and English.[6]
See also
External links
Notes and References
- News: . For the Oldest of Lessons, the Newest of Tools . December 31, 1998 . Jon Kalish.
- Web site: Let's Keep Kosher. https://web.archive.org/web/20081216023039/http://www.jewishsoftware.com/default.asp?page=category&id=4 . dead . 2008-12-16 .
- . Spring 1996 . The Virtual Shtender . Barry Simon . Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein.
- Web site: Authoritative and Accessible . 8.
- Jewish Action (OU) . Bytes & PCs Getting Your Words' Worth . Spring 1998 . Rabbi Yitzok Adlerstein . March 22, 2021.
- Web site: TES Dagesh-Pro Translator . March 22, 2021.