Commentaries Guide?

Hopefully I can explain this well enough to explain. The old Logos web site had a guide to commentaries. On that web page it gave a brief overview of the commentaries and had a symbol for various levels that it was intended for such as scholars, ministers, students and laypersons.
On the new site, I go to Products > Product Guides and then the type of commentary that I am interested in learning more about (specifically, is it designed for the lay person or scholar) and all that it shows me is a list of commentaries.
Hopefully, someone will remember what I am talking about, I know the description is not all that good
Comments
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Here's the old page: http://web.archive.org/web/20080324020653/http://www.logos.com/commentaries/multivolume.
Mac Pro (late 2013) OS 12.6.2
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That is it. Thanks a bunch!
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Ah, thanks for pointing to that archived page. I was just looking for it yesterday when someone was asking for a recommendation for a homiletic commentary set, and I was disappointed that it's now gone from the Logos website. Glad it's still available on the web archive.
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fgh said:
Here's the old page: http://web.archive.org/web/20080324020653/http://www.logos.com/commentaries/multivolume.
It would be desirable if Logos were to reinstitute this in the new website. Of course, it would require some updating. I was thinking about this just the other day.
george
gfsomselיְמֵי־שְׁנוֹתֵינוּ בָהֶם שִׁבְעִים שָׁנָה וְאִם בִּגְבוּרֹת שְׁמוֹנִים שָׁנָה וְרָהְבָּם עָמָל וָאָוֶן
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As much as I liked having it in Logos's site structure, I think BestCommentaries does approximately the same thing does it not?
Sarcasm is my love language. Obviously I love you.
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Thomas Black said:
As much as I liked having it in Logos's site structure, I think BestCommentaries does approximately the same thing does it not?
Not
really. First of all, the Logos Product Guide to Multi-Volume Commentary Sets was customized to just the products
that Logos offers. It helped you see them all side-by-side and
compare them as to which were for Scholars, Pastors, or Laypeople, which ones covered the entire Bible and which didn't. And there were descriptive comments about each set. Those were succinct and helpful in distinguishing the differences between theological emphasis or quickly determining what era a set was from. There is no such summary of
each set on BestCommentaries, though the
reviews and ratings for individual volumes in each set there are
helpful and go beyond what Logos's Product Guide offered.0 -
You could also pose the question on here for a particular commentary you're interested in...although I understand the desire to 'window shop' by scanning a list of all commentaries in a particular category.
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