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How The Web Ruined The Encyclopedia Business

prostoalex writes "Don't remember an encyclopedia salesman knocking at your door lately? Turns out, fewer Americans are purchasing layaway plans for heavy-bound multiple-volume sets (once sold at $1,400) and turning to the Web for answers, according to AP/Miami Herald. What's more interesting is that even the software encyclopedias are not selling as well, with Google changing the landscape of finding good reference information. 'Microsoft's $70 Encarta is the best seller but industrywide sales for encyclopedia software fell 7.3 percent in 2003 from 2002,' says Associated Press article."

18 of 623 comments (clear)

  1. Or maybe by SpaceCadetTrav · · Score: 5, Funny

    Maybe people just stopped looking things up!

    1. Re:Or maybe by freeze128 · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's because nobody wants to RTF Encyclopedia.

    2. Re:Or maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Maybe people just stopped looking things up!

      Yep. My ex-wife has to be one of them. Coz she surely thinks she know everything :)

    3. Re:Or maybe by prockcore · · Score: 4, Funny

      Maybe people just stopped looking things up!

      I find that completely colorable. Kids' dilatoriness cause them to be parsimonious.

  2. Lobbying by funny-jack · · Score: 5, Funny

    The Encylopedia Industry just needs a lobby. How about EIAA? Sue and whine when your business model fails to make money. It's the American Way.

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  3. in other news... by Roger+Keith+Barrett · · Score: 5, Funny

    Candle sales down... candlemakers blame the electric light bulb.

    the candlemaker lobby are asking for sanctions to keep the vital candle market afloat.

    --

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    1. Re:in other news... by cgenman · · Score: 3, Funny

      I see all kinds of information about printing presses and scribes in my encyclopedia, but for some reason I can't find anything on this "internet" thingie.

      Does anyone know of a way we could keep information up-to-date, remotely, without... say... mailing a new book every year? I bet such an invention would revolutionize the encyclopedia business.

  4. Safe-for-work encyclopedias are still valuable by mfivis · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'd pay money for an encyclopedia that didn't have an entry about goatse.

  5. Re:Suprising? by Frymaster · · Score: 5, Funny
    what's surprising is that even faced with this new competition, britannica still refuses to publish poorly-spelt and grossly ill-informed posts from my blog!

    the web has my blog. britannica doesn't. the web is winning. isn't it obvious what people want?

  6. Your results may vary by sdcharle · · Score: 5, Funny

    A friend's kid turned in a report on General Lee full of references to a 'Boss Hogg', a guy named 'Roscoe P. Coltrane', and some woman named 'Daisy', and it turns out that wasn't what the teacher had in mind.

  7. decline in sales (Encarta) by yagu · · Score: 3, Funny


    RIAA claims decrease in Encarta due to illegal downloading and swapping.

  8. The saddest thing of all by Raul654 · · Score: 4, Funny

    The Goatse article was Wikipedia's 7th most active article in February, with 24,425 hits.

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  9. Re:Obvious news tidbit of the day... by mapmaker · · Score: 3, Funny
    Of course, rote memorization does have its usefulness.

    Such as remembering the proper spellings of homonyms. :)

  10. A sad day... by Chibi · · Score: 4, Funny

    Encyclopedias hold a special place in my heart. When I was entering college, some of my older relatives decided to dump, excuse me, bless me with their collection of encyclopedias from the early 80s. Ah, yes, these 15 year old fountains of knowledge would really be a blessing for me to get the most out of my college education.

    Years later, as I was cleaning out the house, I came across a dusty pile of now 20-year old encyclopedias. I was going to throw them out, but then said relatives looked on me with disdain, at how I was throwing away their precious gifts. They said they would take them, rather than allow them to be thrown away. 2 months later, when they never came to pick them up, I threw them out. And they've never asked about them again. Although, knowing these relatives, they'd probably demand I pay them the "fair" value of the books. So, not what they'd be worth to someone who lives in the real world (absolutely nothing), but the price they paid for the books + interest + inflation. Gotta love family...

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  11. Re:Encyclopedia salesmen by hackstraw · · Score: 3, Funny

    still feel bad for causing someone to lose their job.

    Don't worry about it. He's probably the CEO of a company like SCO right now.

  12. Re:Obvious news tidbit of the day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... apparant ... wrote memorized knowledge ... has wrote memorized ... i love the internet ... fricken star

    I'm not a super genius

    Clearly.

    Having access to information is a wonderful thing, but that access doesn't make the user somehow any more able to use those facts than they otherwise would have been. It simply means that you can copy-paste some text from a web site, not that you actually learn anything from doing so.

    If you "look like a fricken star" then I'd have to say that your peers and employer are clearly sad ignoramuses who can't tell the difference between someone who can find information and someone who understands the information they've found.

  13. On educating teachers by onyxruby · · Score: 4, Funny

    My experience that weened me from using encyclopedias. It was 95 or 96 and my teacher for an international business class in college wanted us to do research on a country of our choise using only the Internet. This was a several day assignment, and part way through the first class I got called out by the teacher in front of the students because I was photoshopping game pieces for one of the civ games. Conversation went roughly like this:

    Teacher. Onyxruby, are you done already?
    Me. Yup
    Teacher. Really? Just where did you get all information?
    Me. CIA
    Classroom. Laughter breaks out.
    Teacher. Your telling me you got information from the CIA?
    Me. That's what I just said.
    Teacher. Care to share this treasure trove with the class.
    Me. Sure.

    Teacher gets back there expecting to see that I'm bullshitting her. I show her:

    http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/

    Everything she wanted from per capita income to the number of tv's was in there. Look on her face went from sheer disbelief to righteous indignation as she started writing it on the white board for the whole class to read. I haven't looked back at encyclopedias since.

  14. Re:Same thing... by M.+Silver · · Score: 5, Funny

    Being the nerd that I was, I would randomly pick a volume and then random turn to a page and read an article about something.

    I used to do that. Drove my younger sister nuts.

    "What are you reading?"

    "M."

    "You're just *reading* the whole thing?"

    "Yep. I really liked 'L'. This is the sequel."

    "You are SO WEIRD!"

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