The Future of the Britannica - Interview with Tom Panelas
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The Future of the Britannica - Interview with Tom Panelas
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
Tom Panelas is the Director of Corporate Communications of the
Encyclopaedia Britannica
Q: Would you agree that the Britannica and the Encarta cater to
different market segments and that the Britannica provides more in-
depth coverage of its topics while the Encarta is a more complete,
PC-orientated reference experience? If so, what is the market
positioning of the Britannica's Elementary and Student Encyclopedias?
TP: The most important thing about Britannica's Ultimate Reference
Suite is that is has three encyclopedias -- one for every reading
level - and therefore can be used profitably by the whole family.
So, yes, the Encyclopaedia Britannica itself is the more
comprehensive encyclopedia, but realize also that the Ultimate
Reference Suite also has Britannica Student Encyclopedia, created
for the same age range as Encarta, and Britannica Elementary
Encyclopedia, for younger readers.
So our positioning is that Britannica serves you from grade school
to graduate school and beyond.
Q: Both encyclopedias offer an embarrassment of riches. Users find
the wealth and breadth of information daunting and data mining is
fast becoming an art form. Encarta introduced the Visual (Virtual)
Browser and Britannica introduced the BrainStormer to cope with this
predicament. Are there any improvements - or alternative solutions -
planned in future editions?
TP: The 2006 edition will include search enhancements to
BrainStormer. They're under development right now, so I don't have
too many details. We also have some unique indexing systems that
underlie the structure of the Britannica database, which our
indexers have been at work on for years. We expect these to be the
basis of some powerful search and
browse applications in the years ahead.
Q: How does your product strike a balance between browsing and
research? Is one activity encouraged over the other?
TP: Most people like to do keyword searching, so we try to keep that
working sharply, but we have also tried to introduce as many other
ways to access information as possible, such as subject browse,
index browse, atlas, timelines, and BrainStormer. People have
different learning styles and different preferences for how to find
information. We try to indulge all of them.
Q: The Encarta and the Britannica offer competing models for
interacting with the Internet. Both offer updates - the Encarta
weekly or bi-weekly and the Britannica 2-4 times a year. Both
provide additional and timely content and revisions on dedicated Web
sites. But the Encarta conditions some of its functions - notably
its research tools and updates - on registration with its Plus Club.
The Britannica doesn't. Are you considering a change in your
approach?
TP: We're not.
Q: The Encarta incorporates numerous third-party texts and visuals
(including dozens of Discovery Channel videos, hundreds of newspaper
articles, and a plethora of Scientific American features). The
Encarta's multimedia offerings are also impressive with thousands of
video and audio clips, maps, tables, and animations. The Britannica
provides considerably more text. Is the Britannica planning to
follow suit or will it remain mainly text based?
TP: Well, I wouldn't say we're "mainly" text based - we have added a
lot of multimedia over the years, and we've won some awards for our
multimedia - but we will continue to offer comprehensive information
for all ages. When you come down to it, the information that really
matters in reference works is words. We'll continue to add
multimedia as well, space permitting, but covering a topic
thoroughly and properly comes first.
Q: Will the Encarta/Britannica integrate with new desktop search
tools from Google, Microsoft, and others?
TP: Yes, that's a priority for 2006.
Q: In the editorial process, how do you cope with contemporary and
recent developments, minority-sensitive issues, and controversial
topics (such as abortion and gay rights)?
TP: This question calls for a treatise of its own. We have advisers
all over the world consisting of the top scholars and experts in all
fields, and with their help we try to bring reason and evidence to
bear on developing the best approximation of truth that is humanly
possible. Yes, it's hard work, because people disagree on many
things, but it can be done reasonably well if you're determined. We
strive to the extent possible for coverage that are universal - that
is, it takes all major perspectives around the world into account
and does not favor one "civilization" over another. One thing we
insist on in all of our encyclopedias, regardless of language or
what country they are published in, and that is that coverage of a
topic be consistent everywhere. Like our eighteenth-century
forebears, we believe that there is such a thing as truth and it is
possible for humans to know it. Creating an encyclopedia is one of
the ways humans do that. So we don't have different "truths,"
plural, for different countries or markets. We don't pander to local
sensitivities or myths by covering a topic one way in one country
and a different way in another.
Q: What features cater to the needs of challenged users, such as the
visually-impaired?
TP: Most of the navigational features for which most people use the
mouse have keyboard equivalents. We plan to do more in this area. We
have concentrated in recent years on making our school and library
products compliant with the U.S. Americans With Disabilities Act
because the demand for this in that area is so strong. We are now
turning to doing similar things with our consumer products.
Q: The atlas, dictionary, and thesaurus incorporated in both
products are outdated. Why not use a more current - and dynamically
updated - offering? What about dictionaries for specialty terms
(medical or computer glossaries, for instance)?
TP: Sam, Can you give me examples of outdated dictionary
information? We haven't seen much demand from our customers in
specialized dictionaries.
Q: Both encyclopedias consume (not to say) hog computer resource far
in excess of the official specifications. This makes them less
suitable for installation on older PCs and on many laptops. The
Mackintosh interfaces are also clunky. How can and will these
limitations be tackled?
TP: We plan to improve speed and performance in 2006, especially for
Mac, since we seem to be the only ones these days with a Mac
version.
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( 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.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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