By Ina Fried, 31 March 2009 11:25
NEWS
Microsoft has quietly confirmed that it is getting out of the encyclopaedia business, ending its long-standing Encarta product.
The software maker says it will discontinue all its online Encarta products by October, with the exception of Encarta Japan, which will run through the end of the year. It will also stop selling Microsoft Student and Encarta Premium, paid software products that included the online encyclopaedia.
In a posting on its website, Microsoft said that the move reflected the change in the way people use reference material.
"Encarta has been a popular product around the world for many years," Microsoft said. "However, the category of traditional encyclopaedias and reference material has changed. People today seek and consume information in considerably different ways than in years past. As part of Microsoft's goal to deliver the most effective and engaging resources for today's consumer, it has made the decision to exit the Encarta business."
The move is one of a relative handful of products that Microsoft has discontinued in the wake of expense cuts implemented in January, cuts that included the company's first across-the-board layoffs.
Last week, Microsoft said it was scrapping a web analytics product that was in beta. In November, the company announced plans to stop selling its Windows Live OneCare antivirus product.
Microsoft has been publishing Encarta, in various forms, for more than a decade. It has also scooped up various print encyclopedias along the way, according to Wikipedia. While the original Encarta was based on Funk and Wagnalls, Microsoft later bought Collier's Encyclopaedia and New Merit Scholar's Encyclopaedia and incorporated those two products into Encarta, again according to Wikipedia.

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1. misceng
Probably a good idea.
I bought the first Encarta and returned it as not of merchantable quality after finding three stupid errors. I got a refund. The errors were:-
The picture "The Ambassadors" was displayed as a mirror image. It hit me because I used to see the picture at least once a week in the National Gallery.
The calculation of conversion from Fahrenheit to Celsius was the wrong way round giving ridiculous results.
RCA was claimed to have invented television in 1942. No mention of John Logie Baird or the BBC TV broadcasts before the war.