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November 16, 2005

Math in Context

Filed under: britannica, education

Today the Wisconsin Center for Education Research posts a brief history of Britannica’s Mathematics in Context.

November 15, 2005

Britannica Hollywood Handheld Edition

Britannica Hollywood Handheld Edition, a film, actor, and award database for the Palm and Pocket PC platforms has been released. Available from
smartphone.net, palmgear.com, and others.

The product is also available as a Britannica Profiles Hollywood, a CD-ROM for Windows and Macintosh computers.

November 7, 2005

Nathan Kaiser, fact-checker

Filed under: britannica, wikipedia

There’s a brief interview with Jimmy Wales at nPost.com that has this entertaining little tidbit:

Interviewer: Back to the accuracy of the Wikipedia postings. Because it is much more dynamic than other encyclopedias that are out there, it could be more accurate in some areas.

Wales: That is absolutely true. There are quite a few good examples of that. There is a small scandal going on in Germany. One of the questions on the German version of ‘Who Wants to be a Millionaire’ was wrong. The show had referenced an answer on the German version of Brittanica, which was wrong. It was wrong on Wikipedia as well, but we were able to update it immediately.

Piercing insight aside embedded in the “question” aside (it could be more accurate, it could also be less accurate, for the very same reason), one should point out that (a) Britannica is spelled B-r-i-t-a-n-n-i-c-a–it’s just not hard to get it right and that (b) while there are versions of Britannica in Korean, French, Chinese, Japanese and a large number of print translations, there is no “German version of Britannica”. Wales no doubt was refering to Brockhaus.

Shame on you, Nathan Kaiser, for failing to do the least bit of copy-editing or fact checking.

November 3, 2005

More URS 2006 Reviews

Filed under: britannica, for-sale

As Mathias points out, there have been a couple of reviews of the Encyclopaedia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite 2006 CD/DVD published recently–one at CNet and another at MacWorld.

While the URS is given fairly high marks, both reviews ding Britannica for splitting the different encyclopedias (”Encyclopedia Britannica”, “Student Library”, and “Elementary Library”) into different areas of the application (in screenshots, the three colored tabs across the top)–a complaint we’ve heard from user interface consultants as well. Oddly, this has been a feature of the design since 2003, but this is the first year we’ve heard significant complaints about that. In any event, we hear you. I’ve seen prototypes for the 2007 edition that attempt to address the problem in a couple of ways.

The CNet reivew is also a bit harsh on Britannica’s customer service, which suffered some system failures during the recent headquarters move–not that that justifies the problem CNet encountered, but it may help explain it. I’ve talked to the head of customer service personally and I guarantee you they are ready and willing to prove their mettle.

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