From what I remember, the kerfuffle was over the use of gender inclusive language (human instead of man / brothers and sisters instead of brothers) thus pushing it closer to dynamic rather equivalent.
To refresh my memory I picked through the interweb and came across this interesting article. http://evangelicaltextualcriticism.blogspot.com/2020/05/more-on-translation-draft.html?m=1
I for one am excited about it But I am no expert by any means. I like the translation of YHWH and slave instead of LORD and servant. I usually float between the Nasb/esv and nlt in my reading.
This site has all the 2020 changes: https://biblewebapp.com/nasb2020-changes/#books
https://www.logos.com/product/225544/legacy-standard-bible
You have to add a space after a hyperlink to activate it:
macOS, iOS & iPadOS | Logs | Install
Thanks JT never knew how to do that...Blessings
JT (alabama24): Joseph Luna: Will the LSB have the same platform (non-paragraph version) like the NAS95? I assume that it will come in the same format that the print version does. LSB Customer Service told me that the file they provide to digital platforms can be changed back and forth from paragraph to verse-by-verse format. I'm hoping Logos puts it out in paragraph format so we have an option to go back and forth (using the "one verse per line" feature). It appears that the Accordance version can do that too.
JT (alabama24): Joseph Luna: Will the LSB have the same platform (non-paragraph version) like the NAS95? I assume that it will come in the same format that the print version does.
Joseph Luna: Will the LSB have the same platform (non-paragraph version) like the NAS95?
Will the LSB have the same platform (non-paragraph version) like the NAS95?
I assume that it will come in the same format that the print version does.
Gavin Murphy:LSB Customer Service told me that the file they provide to digital platforms can be changed back and forth from paragraph to verse-by-verse format. I'm hoping Logos puts it out in paragraph format so we have an option to go back and forth (using the "one verse per line" feature). It appears that the Accordance version can do that too.
If you ever had done one time a Personal Book Bible, then you know this is the easiest thing to do. So I'm sure Logos is able too.