[Internet Archive June 23, 2012] Any set of statistics about word frequencies in Latin will inevitably be, in the absence of a survey covering all classical texts (however one might define "classical" or "text"), a function of the specific works and passages chosen for the database. This collection is drawn from two word counts made much earlier in this century...
So the key offering of Logos Bible Software is not simply a collection of electronic resources, but rather it is the network of resources; that is, their key product is Linked Data, which is more than the sum of its parts. This is why Logos has the edge on all of the free resources out there: they have created links between these free resources, and it is these proprietary links that they sell as their product. Each link from a data point becomes a connection, a bridge that opens it up to a network of related information which adds an immeasurable amount of value to the data. So like Logos, the Open Scriptures project seeks to forge links between resources to create a network of data. Our aim diverges from Logos in that we want to make these links openly available for free under the Creative Commons Share-Alike license, and to provide a standardized API with which to develop applications on top of the linked scriptural data. Our goal is not to destroy Logos’ core product of linked data, but to provide a core subset of linked scriptural data that can be used to power applications of scripture, and to do so embracing the Web as the open platform.
The CHS Inventory of Greek: this Text Inventory is the reference inventory for canonical identifiers in the Center for Hellenic Studies' "Greek Literature" namespace
If you need a book metadata management system, try using Google Books XML and a custom CSS to convert a list of ISBNs into a printable list with authors and titles (and ISBNs).
B. McGillivray. Proceedings of the ACL 2010 Student Research Workshop, page 73--78. Stroudsburg, PA, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2010)