The magazine of the Melbourne PC User Group
Microsoft Encarta 98 Encyclopaedia
Deluxe Edition
Ash Nallawalla
ash@melbpc.org.au |
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My previous encounter with Microsoft Encarta was its 1995 edition and I have
not had the chance to review competing products. Hence this is not a comparative review. I have admired other
people's bound copies of the Encyclopaedia Britannica (EB) but I had resolved never to buy a paper
encyclopaedia. While I know the EB is now available on CD-ROM and the Web, I have not needed to seek them for
closer inspection.
Microsoft has released Encarta 98 with an alternative, Deluxe Edition, which is reviewed here. It is the
"World English" (not US English) version.
What is Encarta?
Encarta is a multimedia product, which means that it adds still and moving images, and sound to text.
Hypertext links make it easy to explore related topics. This encourages the user to be immersed in the
subject matter. A search tool makes it easy to find something.
Encarta has more than 30,000 articles, or 10.5 million words. Topics range from Cosmic Strings to Chinese
Mythology, Botany to Botany Bay, Zebra to Zymurgy. They are supported by 12,000 images, 4000 audio and music
clips, and 140 videos and animations, 1400 maps, charts and tables. Thirty-five panoramic (360 degree) still
images help to put you in the picture, so to speak.
Two hundred and fifty new commentaries, known as Sidebars, have been contributed by experts in their fields
or are verbatim extracts from famous documents.
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Figure 1. A 360-degree look at Westminster Abbey
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Figure 2. A functional calculator supplements an article on Compound
Interest
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Some of this content is packaged as multimedia Collages, which could be
described as a "contextual envelope". A similar concept is a Virtual Tour, which is a collection of journeys
on Earth and in the Space Shuttle. The detailed links lead to the familiar, textual material.
Encarta has an update mechanism for those with Internet access. I was able (in early November) to have my
copy updated with the July, August, and September issues. Topics are also linked to third-party Web sites
that appear to complement the subject matter.
If you are using Encarta for research, then the new Research Organizer will help you. It enables you to
organise the material you have collected from CD-ROM and online sources into one collection. You can create
an outline and then mould it into a report. The accompanying tutorial and help files serve to teach good
research habits.
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Figure 3. The Olympics collage
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Figure 4. A virtual tour of the Space Shuttle
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Why British?
If I have a tiny problem with this edition, it is that Australia is somehow connected with the UK and I don't
mean in the historic sense. When I clicked on the Encarta home page (http://www.encarta.eng.msn.com) through a link in the software, it
turned out to be the UK site, with prices in Pounds.
Dictionary
The dictionary in Encarta is very British in content, favouring the "ize" verb endings that are preferred by
the Oxford camp, whereas our Macquarie dictionary (and the PC Update style guide) prefers the "ise" endings.
Oddly, the UK Encarta Web site itself prefers the "ise" spelling and mentions "45 full time in house editors,
fact checkers and proofers" who helped to create this version. Those experts need to visit the Encarta UK
site and give it a badly needed once-over.
Some entries appear to have made a toehold in Encarta seemingly at random. The dictionary has some
abbreviations, for example, DTI (UK Department of Trade and Industry) that has little relevance to an
Australian reader. If you are interested in quality management systems, then you would be disappointed to
find that QMS refers to a Quartermaster Sergeant. While Christ merits a noun and an adjective, Mohammed and
Zoroaster rate only as adjectives.
In balance, the British team has made a very good job of changing the US spellings in articles to British
English, which is closer to the flavour we use here. In my attempts to catch them out, I found not one errant
"color", "diarrhea", or "encyclopedia". You can click on any word in the articles to call up its entry in the
dictionary.
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Figure 5. The Concise Oxford Dictionary within Encarta
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Figure 6. You can update the Yearbook through the Internet
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How up-to-date?
The Australian content is much more respectable than in the first edition, which I criticised for some very
dodgy population figures for our main cities. Prime Minister Howard's name is mentioned briefly in a
reference to February 1997, but his photograph and sound clip have not yet made their way here, as did his
predecessor. Another entry is as recent as April 1997, which makes the product quite up-to-date in my book.
The online options help to keep it more current.
Recommendation
I recommend Encarta 98, particularly its Deluxe Edition. It is a polished work, and will make an excellent
addition to the Christmas stocking.
Reprinted from the December 1997 issue of PC Update, the
magazine of Melbourne PC User Group, Australia
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