Greek Fonts – If you are using Greek at all, it will save you much time and many headaches to install a good Unicode, Polytonic Greek font on your computer. This will allow you to read and produce Greek characters and diacritical marks. Bowdoin has a site license for the GreekKeys family of fonts, which work especially well on both the Macintosh and PC systems. Contact Carmen Greenlee for help on installation. A useful introduction to Unicode Greek can be found here, and an exhaustive and up-to-date page detailing the various options for both Mac and PC can be found here.
Perseus – A massive, online resource, which provides texts in Greek, Latin, Arabic, German, French, Italian, and others. It also has an extensive library of photographed and catalogued objects, inscriptions, and papyri. Perseus is impossible to categorize, but a great place to explore. A more streamlined, efficient portal can be found through the University of Chicago’s Department of Classics, which provides a mirror site to Perseus here.
TLG – {B} – The Thesaurus Linguae Graecae represents the first effort in the humanities to produce a large digital corpus of literary texts. Since its inception, the project has collected and digitized most texts written in Greek from Homer (8 c. BC) to the fall of Byzantium in AD 1453 and beyond. Its goal is to create a comprehensive digital library of Greek literature from antiquity to the present era. TLG research activities combine the traditional methodologies of philological and literary study with the most advanced features of information technology.
PHI-Latin – The Packard Humanities Institute has created a website that contains essentially all Latin literary texts written before AD 200, as well as some texts selected from later antiquity. These texts were previously available on The Packard Humanities Institute's CD ROM 5.3. You can find a complete listing in the Canon of Latin Authors.
The Latin Library – Basic, easy to use, and useful.