Cartopedia: The Ultimate World Reference Atlas

by WorldVillage Software Reviews, published Friday, March 31st, 2006 at 9:39 am

Around The World In Eighty Clicks


A Review of Cartopedia: The Ultimate World Reference Atlas




Steve Smith

Atlases, Gazetteers, encyclopedias and such are the mainstay of middle-school

students who are hot on the trail of geographical data, usually for the

purpose of quasi-plagiarization in school reports. Dorling-Kindersley’s

Cartopedia, which mistitles itself the “Ultimate World Reference Atlas,”

really amounts to a more convenient but no less wooden and unimaginative

collection of such swipable data. It is workmanlike, more comprehensive than

detailed, and wholly unwilling to encourage you or your child to think about

the world and its people in anything but the most familiar ways.

Cartopedia’s opening menu promises five distinct ways of looking at our

planet, though it delivers considerably less. The Political World brings up

an earth map that is divided along traditional nation-state boundaries. A

click on any country brings up its more detailed local map where you can zoom

in even closer to specific regions and view numerous profiles of the

country’s life. The Physical World view would have been an excellent

opportunity to offer a truly innovative view of the planet from the

standpoint of its ecological resources rather than its formal political

divisions. Alas, this segment of the Disk is a misnomer and a true

disappointment, as it just gets you to the same information as the Political

View but through a borderless map of the world’s geographical features.

A

globe icon zips you into the World in View section, a bit of multimedia

fluff, in which the user can collect in a gallery any of the numerous photos

and videos that are available in the other views. Two other segments off of

the main menu simply allow access to the database via an alphabetical listing

of nation’s as well as a more robust index of all of the place names,

including cities, on the disk.

Cartopedia’s interface is a simple and considerate design, icon-intensive

and almost exclusively visual. Clicking on most maps brings up detailed

visual and informational views. All icons are clearly tagged at all times. An

ever-present globe spins in the corner of most detailed views, and you can

command it to enlarge into the center of the screen and locate where you are

on the global scale.

Especially welcome is having the main menu for the

program available in miniature at every point in the program, allowing you to

jump to all areas of the program without backtracking through previous menus.

There is a back-up button that scrolls sequentially through previously viewed

screens, but a History device would have been even more helpful. For all of

the iconic selections, however, Cartopedia’s screen never seems overwhelmed

with choices, a true sign of intelligent interface design. Oh that the real

guts of the program showed such thoughtfulness.

The informational content of Cartopedia seems to be pitched mainly to

school-aged report writers and perhaps older browsers of perfunctory data.

Like the common atlas or encyclopedia, every nation’s page offers

categorized profiles, in this case eighteen, on a convenient menu. Each is a

lengthy paragraph that covers the usual material in a gazetteer of this sort:

education, politics, general history, foreign aid, crime rates, etc. Of

course, all of the textual information is available for printing. As is the

case throughout Cartopedia, depth is the main limitation. There is little to

no information regarding individual cities, geographical formations, or

anything beyond general national views. Each nation has one or more photos of

main sites or general life.

The sparse videos on this disk are just a bit

more than gratuitous, as they depict many of the natural phenomena within an

area, volcanos in Hawaii and such. One very helpful innovation is the ability

to compare any of the quantifiable information and charts of one nation with

that of another. Otherwise, the capabilities of the computer are devoted to

convenience items. Legends and mileage scales can be popped up atop the map,

which makes map reading less arduous. The opportunity to hot-link data,

provide deeper informational profiles, or make the maps themselves more

detailed and informative have been ignored here.

What we have in Cartopedia is a high-priced disk-based world atlas that is

functional but fails to exploit the depth or flexibility of information that

the CD-Rom invites.



School House Scorecard












Product:

Cartopedia: The Ultimate World Reference Atlas


Company:

Dorling-Kindersley Multimedia
95 Madison Ave.
New York, N.Y. 10016
Phone: 1-800-DKMM-575






Cost:

$39.95








System Requirements:



PC, 386DX/33 and above, 4Megs, SVGA,
CD, 3Megs HD space, mouse and Windows 3.1 or above.



Breakdown:



Ease of Use 4
Learning Value 3
Entertainment Value 1
Graphics 2
Sound 2



Overall Score:






0 rating, 0 votes0 rating, 0 votes (* 0 rating, 0 votes)
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