BUG: My Account on different computers
I went onto Vyrso.com on my computer last night and placed some books in my cart. This morning I signed in on my wifes computer to have her select some $.99 books and the cart was empty. She added about 5 books to her cart. I then went onto my computer and they showed the books I had placed in the cart but not the books she had placed in the cart. We ordered her books from her computer and my books from my computer. Both purchases showed up under my account on Logos.com
I would expect to have the cart to reflect the additions I had made from other computers.
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The Vyrso cart is stored as a cookie which means that you don't have to be logged into Vyrso to use it. And as you noticed it is ignorant of the contents of your other computer's cart.
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Tom Reynolds said:
The Vyrso cart is stored as a cookie which means that you don't have to be logged into Vyrso to use it. And as you noticed it is ignorant of the contents of your other computer's cart.
Which is (if I understand this right) exactly the same way as the logos.com cart works. If I put something into it on one computer and go to another computer, the cart there will be empty. And when I then put these things into my cart on PC 2 and buy them, they will still be in the cart on PC 1.
Unfortunately the Vyrso account does not fully work like the Logos one in terms of remembering books bought (no grey out of ressources bought). But I think it is good that the Vyrso purchase show up on the Logos account, but not vice versa.
Mick
Have joy in the Lord!
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Tom Reynolds said:
The Vyrso cart is stored as a cookie which means that you don't have to be logged into Vyrso to use it. And as you noticed it is ignorant of the contents of your other computer's cart.
Hummm...not crazy about it. But I'm sure that Logos has looked a the pluses and minuses and sees a view I don't. Is this the way most sites do it? I've never thought to test it.
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As far as the sites I shop, I believe all of them use cookies to track shopping carts - the sole exception is Amazon; and that is a major exception!Halo Hound said:Hummm...not crazy about it. But I'm sure that Logos has looked a the pluses and minuses and sees a view I don't. Is this the way most sites do it? I've never thought to test it.
That said, cookies are a very common way of doing this.
Sarcasm is my love language. Obviously I love you.
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Halo Hound said:alabama24 said:
How bout some beggin strips?
Forget Greek and Hebrew. Now your speaking MY language!!!!!!
Beef or Lamb ? Costco has Beef strips with red lid on container while Lamb has blue lid.
By the way, searching Logos library for begging finds lots of articles, changing search to beggar found:
A Fellowship of Beggars
The year 1983 marked the five-hundredth anniversary of the great reformer, Martin Luther, whose stature increases with time. Found by his deathbed, scrawled in German and Latin, was this declaration: “We are beggars: That is true.”
This statement may have inspired D. T. Niles to say, “Evangelism is one beggar telling another beggar where he can find a piece of bread.” Not a sweet roll and a cup of coffee, but a bite of the staff of life—bread!
The church is a fellowship of beggars, receiving and offering love, support, and hope. Committed Christians acknowledge their dependence upon God and their interdependence on one another. They are always in the bread line, if not receiving, then giving.
Jones, G. C. (1986). 1000 illustrations for preaching and teaching (74–75). Nashville, TN: Broadman Press.
Keep Smiling [:)]
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