Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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61 of 64 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Encarta just got worse., October 31, 2005
Encarta is a great product. If you have never owned it before and are thinking about buying it, do so. It is worth your money. However, if you already own the 2003, 2004, or 2005 version and are thinking of upgrading, forget about it. You will not be impressed.
I judge how easy software is to explore by how many clicks it takes to get somewhere or by how fast I can scroll through a list to get to relevant information. Encarta 2006 is harder and slower to navigate. For example, there used to be a button for the atlas on the header bar over every page. That is now gone and you have to click Tools -> World Atlas to access it. There used to be a scrollable list to change map views (comprehensive, political, physical features, etc.). That has been replaced with large icons that are displayed three at a time. To get to the bottom of the list takes 17 clicks. You can't even hold the mouse button down to get there.
Obviously, the changes were made in an attempt to simplify and refine the layout of the program. I find that they complicate matters instead. Search results are displayed in larger boxes, revealing less information at a time and making it more difficult to scan through them quicly. The only available buttons on the header bar are back, forward, and home. I miss the one-click access to the atlas and the dictionary.
The program runs slower than previous versions and takes up an extraordinarily greater amount of disk space without having added measurably to the content. (It still has 64,000 articles.)
With all that said, I still love Encarta and find it indispensably useful (it just used to be nicer). I first got Encarta when I was starting college, and I used it constantly for almost every course I took. I found the articles to be well-written, interesting, and appropriately in-depth without being too technical or abstract. It fit my needs just perfectly. I remember studying for Humanities and getting completely absorbed in Encarta, clicking link after link as one article would lead to another. It was the same with U.S. History. I would just type in the names of all those people and events I was supposed to know, Encarta would bring them up, and gradually, everything started fitting together.
I felt like I could always count on the subject being included. There was almost never a time when I needed to know about a subject, typed it into Encarta, and came up with no results. I could trust it. Occasionally I felt it showed too much of a liberal political bias, but I forgive it, because Encarta stimulated my interest in learning in a big way.
The pictures and interactivities are numerous and engaging. The atlas is FUN to explore. You spin the world around, zoom in to a surprisingly detailed level (I saw my street), drag to a different spot on the map, and repeat the process. The geography quiz is excellent. My knowledge of geography jumped about 500% just from mere exploration of the map, and then it jumped further when I started using the quiz.
I use the dictionary and thesaurus just about every day. It is much faster and more convenient than visiting a dictionary web site. I have learned the meaning of a bunch of new words, too.
To sum up, Encarta is a useful, powerful tool. I just wish they didn't weaken it this year.
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40 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Microsoft Embraces the Web, August 7, 2005
Microsoft was long derided by its critics for having failed to fully grasp the Internet revolution. It was late in developing Net technologies such as a proprietary search engine and in coping with security threats propagated through the Web.
Not any more. Earlier this year MSN rolled out a great search engine and now Microsoft has fundamentally revamped its reference products. By committing itself to this overhaul, Microsoft embraced reality: nine out of ten children (between the ages of 5 and 17) use computers (USA figures) - and 85% of these get their information online.
The Microsoft Encarta Premium 2006 is a breathtaking resource. It caters effectively (and, at $50, affordably) to the educational needs of everyone in the family, from children as young as 7 or 8 years old to adults who seek concise answers to their queries. It is fun-filled, interactive, and colorful.
The 2006 Encarta's User Interface is far less cluttered than in previous editions. Content is arranged by topics and then by relevancy and medium. Add to this the Encarta's Visual Browser and you get only relevant data in response to your queries. The Encarta Search Bar, which was integrated into the product two years ago, and is resident in the Task Pane even when Encarta is closed, enables users to search any part of the Encarta application (encyclopedia, dictionary, thesaurus, etc).
The Encarta's new Web Companion is a (giant) step in the right direction. It obtains search results from all the major search engines without launching any additional applications (like a browser). Content from both the Encarta and the Web is presented side by side. This augmentation explicitly adopts the Internet and incorporates it as an important source of reference.
It may raise important and interesting issues of intellectual property, though. Web content copyright-holders may demand royalties from Microsoft for the use it makes of their wares in its commercial products.
Encarta would do well to also integrate with new desktop search tools from Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, and others. Users should be able to seamlessly access content from all over - their desktop, their encyclopedias, and the Web - using a single, intuitive interface.
The Encarta Premium includes a dictionary, thesaurus, chart maker, searchable index of quotations, games, 32 Discovery Channel videos, 25,000 photos and illustrations, 2800 sound and audio clips, hundreds of maps and tables, and 400 videos and animations. It incorporates numerous third-party texts and visuals (including hundreds of newspaper articles and a plethora of Scientific American features).
The Encarta is augmented by weekly or bi-weekly updates and the feature-rich online MSN Encarta Premium with its Homework Help offerings. Unfortunately, the Encarta still conditions some of its functions - notably its research tools and updates - on registration with its Plus Club.
The Encarta is the most comprehensive, PC-orientated reference experience there is. No wonder it has an all-pervasive hold on and ubiquitous penetration of the child-to-young adult markets. Particularly enchanting is the Encarta Kids interface - an area replete with interactive quizzes, pictures, large icons, hundreds of articles, and links to the full version of the Encarta. A veritable and colorful sandbox. Those kids are going to get addicted to the Encarta, that's for sure!
Encarta actively encourages fun-filled browsing. It is a riot of colors, sidebars, videos, audio clips, photos, embedded links, literature, Web resources, and quizzes. It is a product of the age of mass communication, a desktop extension of television and the Internet.
Inevitably, in such a mammoth undertaking, not everything is peachy. A few gripes:
Regrettably, installation is not as easy as before. The Encarta 2006 makes use of Microsoft's .Net technology. As most home computers lack it, the installer insists on adding it to the anyhow bloated Windows Operating System. There is worse to come: the .Net version installed by Encarta 2006 is plagued with security holes and vulnerabilities. Users have to download service packs and patches from Windows Update if they do not wish to run the risk of having their computers compromised by hackers.
Fully installed, the Encarta Premium 2006 gobbles up more than 3.5 Gb. That's a lot - even in an age of ever cheaper storage. Most homesteads still sport PCs with 20-40 Gb hard disks. This makes the Encarta less suitable for installation on older PCs and on many laptops. Despite the hype, relatively few users possess DVD drives (but those who do, find the entire encyclopedia available on one DVD).
The Encarta DVD 3-D tours have improved but they still hog computer resources and are essentially non-interactive. Is it worth the investment and the risk to the stability and performance of the user's computer?
The Encarta tries to cater to the needs of challenged users, such as the visually-impaired - but is still far from doing a good job of it.
The atlas, dictionary, and thesaurus incorporated in the Encarta are outdated. Why not use a more current - and dynamically updated - offering? What about dictionaries for specialty terms (medical or computer glossaries, for instance)? The Encarta's New English Dictionary dropped a glossary of computer terms it used to include back in 2001. All's the pity.
But that's it. Encarta is a must-buy (especially if you have children). The Encarta is the best value for money around and significantly enhances you access to knowledge and wisdom accumulated over centuries all over the world. The amount and quality of content squeezed into a $50 package (before rebate) defies belief. I am a 44 years old adult but when I received my Encarta Premium 2006, I was once more a child in a land of wonders. How much is such an experience worth to you? Sam Vaknin, author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Encarta Premium 2006 CD/DVD is excellent information software, January 31, 2006
I have purchased Microsoft Encarta for at least the last three years. I like several features of the Encarta Premium 2006 CD/DVD software: the new layout which offers choices according to major themes, the fact that I can install the DVD version on my desktop and the CD version on my laptop, the easy access of the Dictionary/Thesaurus from the taskbar, and the great way that search results are presented. I also like the inclusion again this year of the Encarta for Kids, which is a wonderful way for adults to have a second look at the basic information they really should know from their education. All in all, it's a fun and fantastic learning center at the touch of a few keys.
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