The Encyclopedia Britannica 2009
By Sam Vaknin
palma [at] unet . com . mk
http://samvak.tripod.com
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The
Encyclopedia Britannica 2009 (established in 1768), both
in its Ultimate (now also called "Student and Home") and
Deluxe versions, builds on the success of its completely
revamped previous editions in 2006-8. The rate of innovation
in the last three versions was impressive and welcome. It
continues apace in this rendition with Britannica Biographies
(Great Minds and Leaders), Classical Music (500 audio files
arranged by composer), and a great Workspace for Project
Management (a kind of friendly digital den). Generous 6-12
months of free access to the myriad riches of the Britannica
Online complete the package.
The Britannica comes bundled with an atlas
(close to 1800 maps linked to articles and 287 World Data
Profiles of individual countries and territories); the Merriam-Webster
Dictionary and Thesaurus, augmented by a Spanish-English
translation dictionary; classic articles from previous editions;
eleven yearbooks; an Interactive Timeline with 4000+ indexed
timeline entries; a Research Organizer; and a Knowledge
Navigator (called The Brain or BrainStormer). All told,
it offers a directory of more than 166,000 reviewed and
vetted links to online content.
In its new form, the Britannica is as user-friendly
as the Encarta. With a new A to Z Quick Search feature,
monthly updates and the aforementioned 6-12 months of free
access to its impressive powerhouse online Web site, it
is bound to give the former tough competition.
The Britannica's newest interface is even
more intuitive and uncluttered than previously and is great
fun to use. It offers morsels of knowledge, some of it date-specific,
appetizingly presented through a ticker tape of visuals
that leisurely scrolls across the bottom of the screen plus
highly edifying interactive tours of articles and attendant
media.
When you enter even the first few letters
of a term in the search box, it offers various options and
is persistent: no need to click on the toolbar's "search"
button every time you want to find something in this vast
storehouse of knowledge. Moreover, the user can save search
results onto handy "Virtual Notecards". Whole articles can
be copied onto the seemingly inexhaustible Workspace.
The new Britannica's display is tab-based,
avoiding the erstwhile confusing proliferation of windows
with every move. Most importantly, articles appear in full,
not in sections. This major improvement facilitates the
finding of relevant keywords in and the printing of entire
texts. These are only a few of the numerous alterations
and enhancements.
Perhaps the most refreshing change is the
Britannica's Update Center. Dozens of monthly updates and
new, timely articles are made available online (subject
to free registration). A special button alerts the user
when an entry in the base product has been updated.
Regrettably, unlike in the Encarta, the
updates cannot be downloaded to the user's computer or otherwise
incorporated into the vast encyclopedia. Moreover, the product
does not alert its user to the existence of completely new
articles, only to updated ones. It takes a manual scan of
the monthly lists to reveal newly added content.
Speaking of updates, one must not forget
to dwell on the Britannica's unequalled yearbooks. Each
annual volume contains the year in events, scientific developments,
and everything you wanted to know about the latest in any
and every conceivable field of human endeavor or nature.
About 10,500 articles culled from the last 11 editions buttress
and update the Encyclopedia's anyhow impressive offerings.
The Britannica provides considerably more
text than any other extant encyclopedia, print or digital.
But it has noticeably enhanced its non-textual content over
the years (the 1994-7 editions had nothing or very little
but words, words, and more words): it now boasts in excess
of 22-30,000 images and illustrations (depending on the
version) and 900 video and audio clips. This is not to mention
the Britannica Classics: articles from Britannica's most
famous contributors-from Sigmund Freud to Harry Houdini,
Marie Curie to Orville Wright.
The Britannica fully supports serious research.
It is a sober assemblage of first-rate essays, up to date
bibliographies, and relevant multimedia. It is a desktop
university library: thorough, well-researched, comprehensive,
trustworthy.
The Britannica's 84-103,000 articles (depending
on the version) are long and thorough, supported by impressive
bibliographies, and written by the best scholars in their
respective fields. The company's Editorial Board of Advisors
reads like the who's who of the global intellectual and
scientific community.
The Britannica is an embarrassment of riches.
Users often find the wealth and breadth of information daunting
and data mining is fast becoming an art form. This is why
the Britannica incorporated the BrainStormer to cope with
this predicament. But an informal poll I conducted online
shows that few know how to deploy it effectively.
The Britannica also sports Student and
Elementary versions of its venerable flagship product, replete
with a Homework Helpdesk and interactive tutorials, but
it is far better geared to tackle the information needs
of adults and, even more so, professionals. It provides
unequalled coverage of its topics. Ironically, this is precisely
why the market positioning of the Britannica's Elementary
and Student Encyclopedias is problematic: with Wikipedia
and even the Encarta around, the Britannica's brand is distinctly
adult and scholarly.
Still, the 2009 editions of both the Student
and Elementary encyclopedias improve on the past in terms
of both coverage and facilities: the Homework Helpdesk is
a collection of useful homework resources including a video
subject browse, online learning games and activities, online
subject spotlights, and how-to documents on topics such
as writing a book review. There are also Learning Games
and Activities: hundreds of fun and interactive games and
activities to help students with subjects like Math, Science,
and Social Studies.
The current edition is fully integrated
with the Internet. Apart from the updates, it offers additional
and timely content and revisions on a dedicated Web site.
The digital product includes a staggering number of links
(165,808!) to third party content and articles on the Web.
The GeoAnalyzer, which compares national statistical data
and generates charts and graphs, is now Web-based and greatly
enhanced.
The Britannica would do well to offer a
browser add-on search bar and to integrate with desktop
search tools from Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, and others.
Currently it offers search results through Google but this
requires the user to install add-ons or plug-ins and to
go through a convoluted rite of passage. A seamless experience
is in the cards. Users must and will be able to ferret content
from all over - their desktop, their encyclopedias, and
the Web - using a single, intuitive interface.
Some minor gripes:
The atlas, dictionary, and thesaurus incorporated
in the Britannica are still surprisingly outdated. Why not
use a more current - and dynamically updated - offering?
What about dictionaries for specialty terms (medical or
computer glossaries, for instance)?
Despite considerable improvement over the
previous edition, the Britannica still consumes (not to
say hogs) computer resource far in excess of the official
specifications. This makes it less suitable for installation
on older PCs and on many laptops. If you own a machine with
anything earlier than Pentium 3 and less than 4 Gb of really
free space - forget it!
The Britannica uses a new graphic and text
renderer. On some systems, the user needs to modify his
or her desktop settings to get rid of jagged fonts and blurry
photos. The software also seriously conflicts with security
applications (especially anti-virus and firewall products).
This edition, though, is finally compatible with the latest
QuickTime. But that's it. Don't
think twice. Run to the closest retail outlet (or surf to
the Britannica's Web site) and purchase the 2009 edition
now. It offers excellent value for money (less than $40,
with a rebate) and significantly enhances you access to
knowledge and wisdom accumulated over centuries all over
the world.
Sam Vaknin
( http://samvak.tripod.com
) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited
and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served
as a columnist for Global Politician, Central Europe Review,
PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United Press International
(UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor of mental
health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory
and Suite101.
Visit Sam's Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com
Published - October 2008
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