The Electronic Edition Has Arrived — Concordia: The Lutheran Confessions

I’m very pleased to inform you that the electronic edition of Concordia: The Lutheran Confessions is now in stock and ready for immediate delivery. It is a stand alone product, not requiring additional software to run on computers that fall within the specs listed below. It uses the Logos Digital Library System (Libronix). If you already have this software on your computer, this will be added to your Libronix library. If you don’t have it, it will install the Logos Digital Library System. The price is: $29.99. The 20% professional church worker discount applies. Place your order on line or, call: 800-325-3040 and request item number 53-1163. It will work on any PC or any Mac using the Windows XP operating system, in either Bootcamp or under Parallels.
Here are the specs:
Minimum PC requirements:
500MHZ Pentium III
(1 GHZ Pentium III recommended)
CD/DVD-ROM drive
Windows 98 or later.
Will run on 98/98SE/Me/NT 4.0 (SP 6a)/2000/Windows XP/Vista
192 MB Ram minimum
512 recommended
Hard drive space: 550 MB
Screen resolution: 800×600 (1024×768 recommended)
Obviously…the faster your processor and the more memory you have installed the better. Remember: in life there are some things that one should never say: "I have too much memory in my computer. My hard drive is too large. I have too much bookshelf space."
Macintosh
Using any Mac with the Intel dual core processor and running Windows XP natively in Bootcamp, or via virtualization software like Parallels, it works great (This is what I’m using).


Will it work with the Mac version of Libronix just released?
Is there any way we could get the 1st Edition in electronic format?
Interesting…may have to put this on the birthday list. Thanks!
Looking forward to checking this out! I know you aren’t totally responsible (if at all) for pricing, but it would be great if it wasn’t essentially paying twice in order to get the print and electronic versions. Most of the stuff Logos offers is typically less than the print version because of the ultimate savings in materials, production, etc. Perhaps bundling the Libronix version with the book itself (ala Fortress) or providing an “upgrade” version that could be purchased along with the book or with proof of ownership?