There is a cross reference in the Cornerstone Commentary on Joshua to Wood. When I click, it says resource not found. When I go to logos.com, it say sit is not there. I have attached a couple of screen shots.
I am failing to understand what you are saying or asking. At first glance, you are telling us that you don't own a resource. What is the problem?
If you are asking why it has a Logos link but doesn't appear to exist on Logos.com, this is usually because the resource is available only as part of a collection.
Josh, that resource id (LLS:SC_BSBR1602) is for Bible Review Volume 16, Number 2 (April 2000) -- I found that out by typing LLS:SC_BSBR1602 into my command bar, and I do happen to own the resource so it worked for me. If you don't have a resource that a book in your library links to, it is normal to see the "You don't have a license to view this resource" page. I believe it is a known issue that clicking on the "Visit Logos.com" link does not take you to the proper page to buy the resource, and there's no way to look up resource IDS like LLS:SC_BSBR1602 on logos.com to find what resource it was supposed to be taking you to. But that's a moot point in this case, because Bible Review is not something they sell anymore, so you wouldn't have been able to get to that page on logos.com anyway. It was a magazine/journal that came with the Ultimate Archaeology Collection, which was discontinued. They now have the Master Journal Bundle, but it doesn't include Bible Review.
I believe it is a known issue that clicking on the "Visit Logos.com" link does not take you to the proper page to buy the resource, and there's no way to look up resource IDS like LLS:SC_BSBR1602 on logos.com to find what resource it was supposed to be taking you to.
I think that known issue has been fixed, and if the "visit Logos.com" link doesn't find a product, it is trying to get you to the resource page which often will give details even on discontinued resources (technically it may even retrieve the resource page first and then go on to a product page if there is one).
However, it seems Josh has hit on one of the few examples of products where no trace whatsoever is on logos.com, as Faithlife didn't create resource pages for some of the discontinued 3rd-party-produced things (maybe they just issued a range to the publisher, say "build your stuff and name it SC_BSBRxxxx, we leave that open for you" and have no content to fill the resource page with).
this was what I was trying to communicate. the link in logos went to a resource not found. it sent me to logos.com which said resource not found. It would be nice if it would send me to a page that said, "this resource is no longer available on logos.com" Or, update the link in the Cornerstone commentary so that it is not sending me on a path that ends nowhere.
Or, update the link in the Cornerstone commentary so that it is not sending me on a path that ends nowhere.
Updating links in thousands of resources that point to other hundreds of resources which are no longer sold... isn't feasible. I agree the situation is awkward, but I don't know if there is a great solution. Perhaps the generic page can be updated to say something like: "This resource may not be available for several reasons..."
Or, update the link in the Cornerstone commentary so that it is not sending me on a path that ends nowhere. Updating links in thousands of resources that point to other hundreds of resources which are no longer sold... isn't feasible. I agree the situation is awkward, but I don't know if there is a great solution. Perhaps the generic page can be updated to say something like: "This resource may not be available for several reasons..."
It isn't possible to do a "search and replace"? So that every occurrence in an logos resource that points to resource xzy that no longer exists now points to a page that says, "this resource no longer exists on logos."
Or, update the link in the Cornerstone commentary so that it is not sending me on a path that ends nowhere. Updating links in thousands of resources that point to other hundreds of resources which are no longer sold... isn't feasible. I agree the situation is awkward, but I don't know if there is a great solution. Perhaps the generic page can be updated to say something like: "This resource may not be available for several reasons..." It isn't possible to do a "search and replace"? So that every occurrence in an logos resource that points to resource xzy that no longer exists now points to a page that says, "this resource no longer exists on logos."
It's neither reasonable nor necessary to change the links in the resources, in this case your Cornerstone commentary - after all, there are lots of users who own the resource in question (if it never was in Logos, they wouldn't have made the link in the firstplace - which is a much larger issue). Actually the page you saw conveys the same message: "this resource no longer exists on logos." but of course it would be nice to see which one.
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