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As a student of the Gospels, I am not really interested in packages that focus on particular theological traditions (Anglican, SDA, Baptist, etc.), but if you came out with a Gospels Base Package that combined a lot of the Gospel Studies collections put out by different publishers, I imagine I would be going with the Portfolio on that one. Why not come
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I also got the $0 deal. I assume since the price was advertised as $0 Logos is obligated to honor it and it was not "stealing." But I agree, if I have stolen something I will give it back.
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[quote user="MJ. Smith"] I would like two additional features, however: a "parallel set" icon distinguishing that the parallel set is "part of the same book" a way to open the set automatically linked rather than opening 3 resources then linking them - this could be in a floating window with a layout similar to what is shown below [/quote]
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I found that I am able to search the Babylonian Talmud here . It worked well for the search I was doing. I don't know if there are options for searching the Jerusalem Talmud and the Tosephta elsewhere. (Again, Logos, we sure would love for you to provide us this service.)
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I would like to see some more Old Testament introductions in Logos. We're missing some of the most highly respected volumes, including those by Soggin and Eissfeldt and the more recent one by Birch, Brueggemann, Fretheim , and Peterson .
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For a few days after posting this I was still seeing the problem. Today everything is back to normal. The last entry I remember reading was May 8, and I check blog.logos.com daily, so it appears that for about 2-1/2 weeks there was a problem for me. SineNomine's post tells me this wasn't happening to everyone, so I don't know why me. Fortunately it
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For the last couple weeks I have been unable to access blog.logos.com. My browser always redirects to http://marketing.logos.com/wp-signup.php?new=blog.logos.com . Why is that?
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It would be nice to have the following standard Hebrew editions of talmudic literature in Logos: 1. P. Blackman, Mishnah , 7 vols. (Gateshead: Judaica Press, 1990) 2. M. S. Zuckermandel, Tosephta: Based on the Erfurt and Vienna Codices , 2nd ed. (Jerusalem: Bamberger & Wahrmann, 1937) - we also need this in English (Neusner)! 3. Talmud Yerushalmi ,
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In his Handbook on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament, Greg Beale lists "the most important 'background' commentaries" for seeing how other Jewish sources interpreted a text that is being interpreted in the New Testament, but Logos carries only a couple of these. Can we get the others in the works? Boring, M. E., K. Berger, and C. Colpe, eds
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The same thing is true of the standard base packages / upgrades. I cannot upgrade my Logos 5 Silver to Logos 5 Portfolio for anything less than the academic price that I see when I just look at the Logos 5 Portfolio page. I could upgrade to Gold for less, but only because my dynamic pricing exceeds my academic pricing. So if I go to the Logos 5 Gold
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[quote user="Randy W. Sims"] I haven't been following this closely, but it's unclear to me how you could combine the discount and dynamic pricing. Not saying I agree or disagree, just that I can't figure out how they could be combined. If you have a bundle of products A, B, and C. For academic pricing, you take a look and say I can discount product
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[quote user="Dylan Rondeau"] My Library Added “Last Accessed” and “Most Used” columns to the Library Details view. They show the last date a resource was opened and order your resources by most frequently used, respectively. [/quote] The changes are great, but how does Most Used figure out what I use most? The majority of my resources say I have used
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[quote user="Mark Barnes"] I'm still not clear how we know for certain that you can't get academic pricing with dynamic pricing. Can someone help me out? [/quote] If I browse all base packages, they all show the same percentage discount except for SDA, which has a 15% discount. The others are all what I have come to expect base packages to be for us
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I understand that academic pricing is a tremendous discount for those of us who qualify. But honestly I have trouble seeing why you wouldn't put dynamic pricing on top of academic pricing. Looking at the Anglican Diamond package, I see no dynamic pricing discount (my academic discount is greater), even though I have spent hundreds of dollars working
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When I have done this I have chosen one place to put the note, and then I have added a note to the other places: "See my note on Matt 1:1." By doing this, "Matt 1:1" is hyperlinked, I can click on it, and then I can get to the note from there easily. I have chosen to do this rather than copy-paste the entire note to multiple passages, because I will
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What's the latest on this? Is Microsoft Word 2013 the best route? Calibre? I have a number of pdfs that I would like to convert to personal books, but I have yet to discover a good way of doing the conversion, especially with Greek fonts and footnotes.
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[quote user="Randy W. Sims"] Maybe it refers to the older 3 vol collection? http://web.archive.org/web/20130501224016/http://www.logos.com/product/5223/christian-origins-and-the-question-of-god-series [/quote] This is a huge difference. Can anyone verify whether the package is supposed to include all 4 volumes of Wright? And all the volumes of ICC or
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Any idea why NICOT/NICNT is not on the list? It appears to me that dynamic pricing is activated for subsets of NICOT/NICNT, but not for the whole 44-volume set, as my price on the latter didn't change when I just purchased a volume.
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The problem is that all the subsets add up to about $700 more than the academic pricing for the whole set. So I haven't bought any volumes yet (even though I use the hard copies of this set extensively!), thinking, "Why pay full price for a volume I need, when eventually I'll be able to buy all the volumes at a good discount." Now I can get individual