Tag Archive for Encyclopaedia Britannica

Bing signs Britannica for search

Encyclopaedia Britannica

Microsoft has signed a deal with Encyclopaedia Britannica to add entries from the reference work to Bing.

The tie-up means summaries of topics using data from the Encyclopaedia will be added to some search results.

The deal builds on Britannica’s decision in March to stop producing a print edition.

It is also seen as a response to Google’s “knowledge graph” that consolidates search information about specific subjects.

Microsoft announced the deal via a blogpost and said when information from Britannica was relevant to a search, Bing users would see a small box summarising salient facts about a topic or subject.

At the same time it would also provide links to other sources of reference information such as Wikipedia, Qwiki and Freebase.

In a test drive of Bing with added Britannica, Search Engine Land blogger Matt McGee said the encyclopaedia results were not popping up on every search.

Instead, he said, a Britannica summary box turned up only when a link to the encyclopaedia would ordinarily appear in a list of results.

By contrast, he said, Google was adding information gathered by its knowledge graph project to many more results.

Announced in mid-May, the knowledge graph is work Google has done behind-the-scenes on its vast index of web data to cluster together relevant information about a topic or subject.

The most visible result of the work is a summary box that sits alongside lists of results and gives basic information plus suggestions of places to find out more in-depth data.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-18365767#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

VIDEO: Encyclopaedia ends print run

After 244 years, the Encyclopaedia Britannica is going out of print.

When its current stock runs out, it will no longer be available in book form.

Facing competition from the internet, the encyclopaedia’s publisher is focusing instead on its digital editions.

The BBC’s Michelle Fleury reports.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/business-17362512

VIDEO: A ‘handy’ robot and other tech news

Dextre, a Canadian-built robot has competed a satellite refuelling trial on the International Space Station.

Currently, once they run out of fuel satellites become space junk, and nearly 200 of them are orbiting the planet, posing a risk of collisions.

In other news, Yahoo sues Facebook over disputed patents and Encyclopaedia Britannica goes paperless.

Dan Simmons presents these and other technology news stories.

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Article source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/1/hi/programmes/click_online/9706131.stm

Britannica ends its print edition


Encyclopaedia Britannica

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Encyclopaedia Britannica ends print run

After 244 years reference book firm Encyclopaedia Britannica has decided to stop publishing its famous and weighty 32-volume print edition.

It will now focus on digital expansion amid rising competition from websites such as Wikipedia.

The firm, which used to sell its encyclopaedias door-to-door, now generates almost 85% its revenue from online sales.

It recently launched a digital version of its encyclopaedias for tablet PCs.

“The sales of printed encyclopaedias have been negligible for several years,” said Jorge Cauz president of Encyclopaedia Britannica.

“We knew this was going to come.”

‘A lot faster’

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

In many instances doing a keyword search in an online resource is simply a lot faster then standing up looking at the index of the Britannica and then finding the appropriate volume”

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Richard Reyes-Gavilan
Brooklyn Public Library

Companies across the globe have been trying to boost their online presence in a bid to cash in on the fast-growing market.

Various newspapers, magazines and even book publishers have been coming up with online versions of their products as an increasing number of readers access information on high-tech gadgets such as tablet PCs and smartphones.

Britannica said while its decision to focus on online editions was influenced by the shift in consumer pattern, the ability to update content at a short notice also played a big role.

“A printed encyclopaedia is obsolete the minute that you print it,” Mr Cauz said.

“Whereas our online edition is updated continuously.”

At the same time, frequent users of the encyclopaedia said they preferred using the online version more than the print one.

“We have to answer thousands of questions each month through chat, through telephone, through email and we have to do that as quickly as humanly possible,” Richard Reyes-Gavilan of Brooklyn Public Library told the BBC.

“In many instances doing a keyword search in an online resource is simply a lot faster than standing up looking at the index of the Britannica and then finding the appropriate volume.”

Encyclopaedia Britannica, the company, has largely moved away from its encyclopaedia work focusing most of its energies in recent years on educational software.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/business-17362698

Homework helpers, right in your phone

Some applications actually help kids do their homework rather than avoid it. Here are a few that put the  smart in a smartphone:

Math, from YourTeacher.com, is free for the first five lessons on an iPhone. To keep going, though, it requires a one-time $9.99 payment. The company makes instructional apps for Apple and Android.

From the opening screen in Math, type a keyword, such as “equations,” to see a list of lessons that include word problems and real-world uses for the knowledge, such as figuring sales taxes, discounts, and interest. Each lesson has examples, problems, and printable practice and review sheets.

Wolfram Algebra Course, by Wolfram Alpha L.L.C., is $1.99. Titles for calculus, music theory, and other subjects are also available at various prices for Android and Apple. The algebra course provides opportunities to view examples or to plug in an equation to examine its parts, calculate a solution, plot the results, and . . . do more math stuff than I was ready for.

The Wolfram courses are an extension of the brilliant “computational knowledge engine” at Wolframalpha.com, which handles a lot of the inquiries that iPhone4S users put to the “personal assistant” app, Siri.

HowStuffWorks, by HowStuffWorks.com, is a free, advertising-supported app version of the popular website, for Apple and Android. It has a search screen, podcasts such as “Stuff You Missed in History Class” and “Car Stuff,” and chat and tweet functions. Share or save your findings.

Homeworkhelp.com makes dozens of subject-specific apps for learning and review. They include instruction for SAT and ACT preparation. Titles in the App Store, some free, some not, include lessons in various levels of math, the state capitals, grammar, and vocabulary.

I looked at Homeworkhelp.com’s $2.99 Probability and Statistics app. Lessons begin simply by explaining the practical uses for knowing probability, and progress through frequency tables, exponential distributions, and linear regression. Some reviewers complain about there being no practice problems.

Encyclopaedia Britannica is $1.99 a month for iPhone. I grew up in a house with a sagging bookshelf of encyclopedia volumes, including the massive Britannica. It’s still authoritative, but now it fits in your pocket, has more features, and costs way less.

In an article, tap the “link map” icon to see a chart of related topics and articles for easy browsing. You can turn off your subscription renewals in iPhone settings.

 


Contact staff writer Reid Kanaley at rkanaley@phillynews.com, 215-854-5114, or @ReidKan on Twitter.

Article source: http://www.philly.com/philly/business/140090633.html