https://www.logos.com/product/187017/2000-years-of-christs-power
I confirm. Clicked 1 page per book. All say 404 error.
Hi Rosie, this has been updated.
https://www.logos.com/product/187017/2000-years-of-christs-power Hi Rosie, this has been updated.
Thanks, Mitch.
In checking that this is indeed fixed (which it is), I noticed that each click on a page opens up a new tab. This is kind of annoying because it's not the default behavior when clicking on a link. You can always open something in a new tab if you want to, by right clicking on it and choosing "Open link in a new tab" but if it's the default behavior, then you have to close the extra tab when you're done looking at it. I suppose it's not that huge a deal, because there is a keyboard shortcut for closing a tab (Ctrl+w) which doesn't take any longer to execute than the keyboard shortcut for going back to the page you came from (Alt+LeftArrow). But it still doesn't feel as "clean" to me as opening the image in the same tab would. So take it as a minor suggestion.
In checking that this is indeed fixed (which it is), I noticed that each click on a page opens up a new tab. This is kind of annoying because it's not the default behavior when clicking on a link.
I don't think this is true, I may be wrong. There are two types of links, internal and external. Internal links "by loose convention" among browsers, do stay on the same page; external links go to a new tab or window. If you hover over a link, you can see its URL at the bottom; if it goes to the same domain as you are currently on, then it is an internal link. If it goes to a different domain, then it is an external link. This convention is used as sites want to keep some presence of their site in your browser if you are clicking a link that will take you to another domain. Modern browsers have made this a little more friendly -- one of the big disadvantages of being on another tab is getting back to where you were - but I think most if not all browsers today will take a 'back' button/keystroke, close the tab, and go back to the prior tab - I know Safari does that. YMMV.
In this case, the page's URL is the logos.com domain, but the links to sample pages are logoscdn.com, where they keep all their files. So technically it's a different domain - it's working per "convention". That said, we know Logoscdn.com is a "Logos" domain ... also, many sites don't follow conventions lol. So there you are :-)
In checking that this is indeed fixed (which it is), I noticed that each click on a page opens up a new tab. This is kind of annoying because it's not the default behavior when clicking on a link. I don't think this is true, I may be wrong. There are two types of links, internal and external. Internal links "by loose convention" among browsers, do stay on the same page; external links go to a new tab or window. If you hover over a link, you can see its URL at the bottom; if it goes to the same domain as you are currently on, then it is an internal link. If it goes to a different domain, then it is an external link. This convention is used as sites want to keep some presence of their site in your browser if you are clicking a link that will take you to another domain. Modern browsers have made this a little more friendly -- one of the big disadvantages of being on another tab is getting back to where you were - but I think most if not all browsers today will take a 'back' button/keystroke, close the tab, and go back to the prior tab - I know Safari does that. YMMV. In this case, the page's URL is the logos.com domain, but the links to sample pages are logoscdn.com, where they keep all their files. So technically it's a different domain - it's working per "convention". That said, we know Logoscdn.com is a "Logos" domain ... also, many sites don't follow conventions lol. So there you are :-)
OK, thanks for that explanation. It satisfies me.