Most Helpful Customer Reviews
|
|
693 of 700 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Attention! Make Sure You Buy the Right Model., March 6, 2004
First of all, let me warn you. There are at least two models of Franklin-Merriam Webster's Dictionary. The cheap one (list price $59.99) is worth less than $20. The expensive one (list price $99.99) is worth $300 or more. The cheap model is a VERY bad deal for two reasons: (1) The display is very difficult to read (even configured with large type size). (2) It is lacking in vocabulary. What is the point of carrying along a dictionary that ignores the meaning of 100,000 words? The expensive model is a wonderful deal for several reasons: (1) The display is excellent even in the small print size. I spend hours playing games and my eyes don't get strained. (2) It has twice the vocabulary of the cheaper model (200,000 words) and it pronounces the words. (3) It has several powerful dictionary and thesaurus tools and a cornucopia of extra features laid out in a very friendly interface. (4) It has several Learning Tools, including the SAT word list, flashcards, speaking spelling bee and a grammar guide. (5) You can add words to the dictionary if you want to. It also accepts book cards. (6) After looking up a word in the dictionary, you can add it to your personal list and review it as a flash card. What a great idea! (7) It has 12 educational vocabulary games that are a lot of fun. Each game has five levels: beginner, intermediate, advanced, expert and wizard. You can also configure the games to use only the SAT vocabulary. (8) It also has a calculator, metric converter, a clock and a databank. Each one of the extras is easy to find and yet do not compete with the dictionary. Every time you turn the machine on it works by default as a dictionary. Perfect! OK folks, now the bad news. While the cheap model is easy to find, you won't find the expensive model in most computer stores, even the large ones. So most customers end up buying the wrong model, like I did. For some reason, most shop owners do not leave expensive electronic products on display. If the machine costs around 100 dollars, they hide it in a secret chamber. I bought the cheap model because it was the only one I could find. Later on I ordered the top Franklin model from Amazon. All Franklin models have a similar name. I noticed that some Amazon reviewers who gave this product a low rating were actually writing about a different model. So don't get yourself confused. Make a note of the full name of the top model: Franklin Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary 11th edition Speaking.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
|
|
224 of 231 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Portable, instant, and lots of definitions- Dictionary!, July 26, 2003
1. Very good LCD. 2. Beautiful keys layouts. 3. Mispelled words are corrected. No need to type the word correctly. This is the best feature I like, because it saves me time and energy. As long as it spelled as it is pronounced, the computer will give you choice of words. 4. Looking for sets of words, just press * plus the starting or ending of the word and you will get list of them. (example: *ile, will give you words from agile to exile! 5. It pronounces the word. 6. Very handy tool and lots of clear, down-to-earth definitions. 7. Very good gift for those who like to read, write, study, or just have fun with words. Remember words have power!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
|
|
282 of 295 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good, but there's better, March 28, 2006
I'm a big electronic dictionary geek - I own four of them. Two of them for languages (Japanese and Chinese) and two for English. I'm a writer and I am constantly reading and looking up words, and I like to be able to do away from my computer because honestly, who wants to lug around a laptop when they just want to take a book out to a coffee shop?
I own both the Merriam-Webster 11th Collegiate Speaking Dictionary (with a Concise Columbia Encyclopedia card) and the Sharp PW-E550. I owned the Merriam-Webster first, then got the Sharp, and actually bought the Seiko Concise Encyclopedia Britannica for a while before I returned that one. Here's a comparison between the MW and the Sharp, with a brief mention of the Seiko:
- Both the MW and the Sharp have a similar range of definitions. There are some words I could find in the MW I couldn't in the Sharp (McGuffin), and there are some I could find in the Sharp but not the MW (phylogenic, the Bowery). I find that the MW tends to have slightly more in-depth definitions and the Sharp one reads a bit more concise and colloquial. The Sharp provides examples of usage while the MW doesn't. Both have good etymologies.
- The MW doesn't have a visual pronounciation key, while the Sharp does. That's because the MW speaks out the words. This to me is kind of silly because you don't always want to hear the words out loud (like, in a library, or just about anywhere public), even if there's a headphone jack. What became problematic was that the speaking gizmo on my MW broke after a few months, and now I can't even hear the pronounciation even if I want to. I just hear a bunch of static when I hit the "pronounce" button.
- The Sharp will list all the words possible with each input of a letter (i.e., if you punch in "a" it'll list all the words that begin with "a," then if you punch in "b" it'll list all the words that begin with "ab" until you get to the word you want. The MW waits until you input all the letters and hit "enter," then it searches until it finds something. It takes about a second or two for it to find something that is in its dictionary, but if you punch in something with the wrong spelling or it just doesn't know, it'll take a while, maybe five seconds, which gets kind of exasperating, especially once you get used to the Sharp.
- The Sharp, when you turn it on, displays exactly what you had when you last had it on. The MW always starts with the same default screen. I love this ability, though there's one slight inconvenience - if you had entered letters before you turned off the Sharp the letters will still be there when you turn it back on, meaning you have to hit "clear" to start a new search. The Sharp has a memory feature, that goes back some forty or so of your last entries, while the MW doesn't.
- The buttons on the MW are hard and they hurt after prolonged usage. The buttons on the Sharp are pretty soft, which ends up with the opposite problem: you may not push hard enough on them at times or you may push more than one button if you do so hurriedly.
- The Concise Encyclopedia that I got with the MW is extremely painful to use. It's slower than the dictionary and when you do page up or page down it often goes straight to the previous or next entry. Otherwise it provides some decent amount of information at your fingertips. I'm just afraid of the tediousness of it all.
- The leather flip cover for the MW is really flimsy, while the Sharp is neatly self-protecting. I also like how you can open the whole thing 180 degrees, which is something the Seiko can't do. The Seiko only opens up to about 135 degrees, which might seem adequate until you get used to the Sharp.
- The games that come with the MW aren't so great. I like the idea of creating your own wordlist, but it barely takes any, maybe 20 maximum. After playing with them a bit my first week with the MW, I stopped using the game function.
- The Sharp has a grammar guide that I hardly ever use. I suppose it could be handy, but it just feels impractical.
For a long while I carried around both the MW and the Sharp, with Sharp being my first resource then, if I have to, the MW, and if I really have to, the Concise Encyclopedia in the MW. After a while I just ditched the MW and now I only use the Sharp. It is a far better experience, and it's become an indispensible tool. I was excited to check out the Seiko when it came out, but for the price I was quite disappointed. The user experience, while better than the MW, pales compared to the Sharp. The entries in the Seiko are great, a lot of information and depth, but most of the terms in there are in the Sharp anyway, just not with as much detail. For $180, I decided I could just stick with the Sharp for basic concepts on the proper nouns, and head to my laptop when I want more in-depth detail.
Overall, Sharp has converted me. The MW now sits on my bookshelf like the real, paper dictionaries it tried to replace.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|