On 4/15/05, Timwi timwi@gmx.net wrote:
Neil Harris wrote:
A couple of attempts at contributing (perfectly reasonable) test edits to Encarta have resulted in nothing at all happening to the articles in question. I'm not impressed.
How long ago have you made those edits? Even if their claims of having an editorial board check every submitted edit are true, it would probably take on the order of weeks or months for your edit to appear.
The whole experience is extraordinarily lacking in incentive for Encarta contributors, who will effectively see a brick wall, if my experience is anything to go by.
I'm afraid this sounds a lot like bias from your experience with Wikipedia. You are used to your edits appearing immediately, so in comparison to that, Encarta naturally feels like a "brick wall". It is doubtful that the same kind of feeling will be experienced by casual users who are unfamiliar with "open-content encyclopedias that post their users' edits immediately". Even if they have vaguely heard of it, they will probably still readily accept a considerable delay in the processing of their contributions in return for what they perceive as superior factual accuracy.
I used to contribute to the [[Internet Movie Database]] - I was hovering around the top 100 contributors level, which would have got me a free IMDb Pro subscription had I carried on. What put me off in the end - and caused me to embrace WP - was the "brick wall" effect. Contributions often take weeks (or months) to appear, and some never appear at all. Only about 20 editors process millions of contributions a year, giving no feedback, and sometimes changing edits in seemingly arbitrary ways. Debate rages between contributors on message boards, but there's never any chance to build policy by consensus, because only a few of the editors read the message boards and they're not bound by anything that's said. And software development is excruciatingly slow. And the resulting database is the property of Amazon.
It was frustrating, as you can tell. IMDb may be the most repected movie database, but as a community it's hell, and I don't expect Encarta to be much better. Public contribution and closing editing doesn't scale.