Encyclopedia Britannica to stop printing

by Bella15 8 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • Bella15
    Bella15

    NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- After 244 years, Encyclopedia Britannica will cease production of its iconic multi-volume book sets.

    Britannica usually prints a new set of the tomes every two years, but 2010's 32-volume set will be its last. Instead, the company will focus solely on its digital encyclopedia and education tools.

    The news is sure to sadden champions of the printed word, but Britannica president Jorge Cauz said the move is a natural part of his company's evolution.

    "Everyone will want to call this the end of an era, and I understand that," Cauz says. "But there's no sad moment for us. I think outsiders are more nostalgic about the books than I am."

    In truth, Cauz says, the death knell sounded long ago. Though the name "Britannica" calls the print sets to mind, Cauz says they represent less than 1% of the company's total sales.

    "The print set is an icon. But it's an icon that doesn't do justice to how much we've changed over the years," Cauz says.

    The online version of the encyclopedia, which was first published in 1994, represents only 15% of Britannica's revenue. The other 85% is sales of education products: online learning tools, curriculum products and more.

    That's not surprising to Michael Norris, a senior trade books analyst at Simba Information, who says reference books have taken the worst hit with the rise of digital.

    "People still buy, read and love print books. But the relationship they have with a novel is very different than what they have with a piece of information they need," Norris says.

    "This has been the reality of reference texts for years now," Cauz says. "Updating dozens of books every two years now seems so pedestrian. The younger generation consumes data differently now, and we want to be there."

    Will people pay for Britannica? That younger generation is accustomed to finding content for free via Google ( GOOG , Fortune 500) or that other online encyclopedia: Wikipedia. It's unclear whether people will be willing to pay for a household subscription, which costs $70 per year, or an app version for $1.99 per month.

    "Google's algorithm doesn't know what's fact or what's fiction," Cauz concedes. "So Wikipedia is often the No. 1 or No. 2 result on search. But I'd bet a lot of money that most people would rather use Britannica than Wikipedia."

    Britannica will start offering more free content to entice potential subscribers. But Cauz doesn't expect Britannica to replace or even overtake Wikipedia. He sees the situation as "different senses of responsibility."

    He adds: "Wikipedia is a wonderful technology for collecting everything from great insights to lies and innuendos. It's not all bad or all good, just uneven. It's the murmur of society, a million voices rather than a single informed one."

    As a result, Cauz says, consumers are craving accuracy and are willing to pay for it.

    "We have an important role to play," Cauz says. "I think Wikipedia sees us as a relic of an old era. But facts always matter, no matter what form they take. Our mission hasn't changed, just the method."

    In a nod to those changes, Britannica is relaunching its site in three weeks to add more social connections and interactivity.

    Cauz says he celebrates those changes, as well as the end of the print set -- which was first published in Scotland in 1768. In fact, Britannica is throwing itself a party on Wednesday.

    "We're going to have a cake in the shape of a print set to celebrate," Cauz says, laughing. "Is that morbid?"

    http://money.cnn.com/2012/03/13/technology/encyclopedia-britannica-books/index.htm?hpt=hp_t3

  • Broken Promises
    Broken Promises

    In my town we have bi-annual second-hand book sales where the proceeds are donated to charity. The books are donated to be sold to other book lovers.

    At these book sales, you'll see complete sets of Enc Britannica, sets that once would have cost thousands of dollars.

    No one buys them. Why buy bulky old books that quickly are now out of date when you can have all that information at the click of a mouse for free?

    It's a shame to see the printed sets go, but it's a sign of how the world has changed.

    BP, who remembers when having a set of EB was a sign of prestige.

  • Phizzy
    Phizzy

    The problem with EB was that they did not really update the printed version, as I understand it, not properly in the last 50 years !

    So it long ceased to be the authority that it used to be, it lost the respect it once had.

    They had better do a good job of keeping the on-line version bang up to date, or people simply will ignore it.

  • james_woods
    james_woods

    Do they still have The Great Books in print?

    Those would never go out of date...I still value my set.

  • Larsinger58
    Larsinger58

    I have a set as well. And, yes, if you read it, it will point out to you where the revisions were made during the Greco-Persian Period.

    Because of the EB, we can't assume that the British Museum and other high-level scholars don't know about the Greco-Persian Period revisions. Instead, we must assume they know but still feel it is not worth it to correct. Correcting it would outdate tens of thousands of books and force the re-writing of the history of the Classical Greek Period. For instance, when the Gree Period is reduced, Aristotle and Socrates overlap and you learn they were lovers. It would expose icons like Plato and Xenophon as the masterminds behind the revised history. All just so the 1st olf Cyrus falls in 455 BCE is not worth it. The world doesn't need truth, it needs illusioln and excuses, so the fake timeline is still serving its purpose.

    LS

  • james_woods
    james_woods

    Well, if they are all wrong - maybe you can sell them at half-price books.

  • botchtowersociety
    botchtowersociety

    I'm waiting on the Encyclopedia Galactica.

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt

    "If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?"

  • botchtowersociety
    botchtowersociety

    I just searched the online version of EB for a term I recently had to research.....

    No entries.

    Wikipedia has it though, with an excellent entry and list of references.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C-Met

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