Encyclopaedia Britannica, which has been published for almost 244 years, said Tuesday it will discontinue its print version and go solely online.

The current edition, which costs $1,395 for all 32 volumes, will be the last, the company said in a statement. No more copies will be made after the 2010 version now in print is sold out, the company said.

“The end of the print set is something we’ve foreseen for some time,” Jorge Cauz, president of Chicago-based Encyclopaedia Britannica, said in the statement. “It’s the latest step in our evolution from the print publisher we were, to the creator of digital learning products we are today.”

Encyclopaedia Britannica was founded in 1768 in Edinburgh, with a three-volume first edition, according to its website.

The company published the first digital version in 1981 and now updates the Britannica.com website daily, competing with newer players like Wikipedia.org, which relies on input from thousands of users for its content.

Print sales in the U.S. peaked at 120,000 copies in 1990, the New York Times reported earlier. They now account for less than 1 percent of revenue. The company generates about 85 percent of its sales from curriculum products and the rest from website subscriptions, the newspaper said.

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4 Comments

  1. Encyclopedia Britannica is one of the many sources available to all Maine residents through the MARVEL databases.  http://www.maine.gov/Marvel/  Students, teachers and other researchers throughout Maine have had and will continue to have this excellent resource provided by the State Library, the University System, the Legislature, and the PUC

    1. Which version.  ‘Updated’ with all the previously-held facts and writings altered?  It’s good that the encylopoedia is available online, but  — wait — and the PUC ??

  2. My mother purchased an EB many years ago, paying for it by installments. She didn’t earn a lot of money.  She used the EB often, and never regretted the purchase. She willed it to a grandson, who has it to this day. 

  3. The diminution  of demand for  forest -paper products is only just starting to accelerate.  Economic free fall of demand in this industry is only around the corner.  Only a head well tucked up the fundament can fail to see  the signs.

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