the fork in the road

Logos and Verum seem to be diverging. Consider that the shopping cart on logos.com is not the same as on verbum.com . What I infer here, is that if I search Logos.com for a book, and do not find it, I then have to search verbum.com to see if it is there. They seem to be two completely different stores.
Shouldnt you have one database of products and one cart?
Is this fork intentional?
Dave
Comments
-
Can you give some examples
As far as I was aware - and the last I checked - books should be available on both platforms.
But I could be wrong!
0 -
Will gather some this evening. Any idea on why they have seperate carts as well?
Thanks!
0 -
There is a group of Protestants who created an uproar when Logos tried to implement a choice of canon; there is a group of Catholics who are just as determined that their tools not be contaminated by Protestants. Making the split between Logos and Verbum allows the appearance of non-contamination while allowing Logos as a company to serve both communities.
is an mild example of this pressure. I can't provide an example of the pressure in the opposite side but it exists. This is where I normally would use an Irish term of affectionate negative evaluation, but I have learned my lesson.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
0