These resources may only be available via the campus network. If you are searching via 3G, you may not be able to access items found in these mobile searches. We recommend using the campus wireless network for best results.
- PRIMO Mobile Search
- Primo is a one-stop solution for discovering and accessing local and remote resources, such as books, journal articles, and digital media, including much of the material in the various mobile search options listed below. Primo exposes patrons to the richness of the collection at James P. Boyce Centennial Library while providing a simple, streamlined interface for an optimal mobile research experience.
- EBSCO Mobile Search
- A mobile search interface to search the ATLA Religion Database, Academic Search Premiere, Christian Periodicals Index, E-Journals, Old Testament Abstracts, and New Testament Abstracts.
- WorldCat Mobile
- SBTS WorldCat Local Quickstart is an online union catalog of over 49 million records representing books, journals, dissertations, audio-visual materials, and manuscripts in libraries and repositories worldwide and automatically checks for holdings at the SBTS James P. Boyce Centennial Library.
- JSTOR Mobile
- JSTOR Mobile is best used for searching JSTOR while you’re on the go, and then emailing the citations to yourself so you can read the articles later on a computer. You can zoom in to see pages if you are on the SBTS network and if your phone supports zooming. An excellent FAQ about using JSTOR Mobile is available: JSTOR Mobile Help.
- Cambridge Journals Online Mobile (CJOm)
- CJO Mobile (CJOm) is an alternative version of Cambridge Journals Online (CJO) that has been optimised for smartphones and other small mobile devices. The design has been streamlined to speed up access and make navigation easier on a small screen. If CJOm users sign up for content alerts, or save searches or articles, these will be available on the main CJO and vice versa. So if you find an article while browsing on your mobile and apply a bookmark, you will quickly be able to find and read the article when you return to your desktop PC or Mac.
- Oxford Journals Online
- All of Oxford journal websites have been optimized for mobile devices, thereby enhancing the reader experience. If you access the journal website on a mobile device, you will be automatically redirected to the mobile version.