
NB.Mick
- One thing Tripp gets wrong in his short introduction - and the Overview here on the page as well - which may become relevant for some users in the current calendar year: the devotional actually contains 366 devotions, you won't run empty on Feb 29th. Leaving that aside, from what I've read so far, this book contains not fluff, but meaningful insights - not short quips but lengthy texts per day that deserve thinking and praying over.
- This resource is an even-handed, thoughtful and winsome discussion of the role of women - it exegetes the usual passages and interacts with the respective arguments from complementarian and egalitarian sides. I like the style and the presentation - heavily footnoted to dozens of commentaries and topical books. Here's the point where I debated internally over my rating and decided to deduct (only) one star: this book does not meet the quality objectives of Logos Research Editions in terms of linking. Running the concordance tool will reveal that it only has seven links to two other resources, although there are over five hundred such links which could and should be there (treated as non-functional "bibliographic citation" even though page numbers are clearly present). I wonder if somebody simply didn't do their work and this got missd in the QA process - after all, the "Message of Holiness" resource in the same series is linked throughout.
- Anytime I have seen this in Logos it has been due to lack of resources. If I don't own the resource, I can't link to it. Just a thought.
- No, in this case the links really aren't there. My library is quite large - and the concordance tool will give linked resources even when locked (it can differentiate between those, which is neat).
- , We have opened up a ticket for this problem you have reported with the citations, so that this resource can be improved in a future update. Thank you for bringing this to our attention.
- What makes me scratch my head a bit are the several references to Fraktur (gothic black letter) typeface in other users' comments. Logos resources don't copy the font of the printed works, we decide over the font in the program settings, so this will show in Arial, Times New Romans or even Comic Sans, if you want it.
- These two resources have different copyrights, different titles, and different citation information. They are two different editions of the same work.
- Okay, I can understand that. On the other hand I personally don't care for the copyright, the citation or the slightly different title when the content is the same. I nearly pre-ordered it (coming from the sliced-up chapter-as-book resources), but don't see any additional value for me who owns the other edition.