The 126-year-old Oxford English Dictionary may no longer be published in book form. The online version gets millions of visitors. But only 30,000 printed sets have ever been sold. The decision will be made when the new revision is complete.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5g6CldEyTFyTcI6HxFN0tBwFhr_WgD9HTCDT00
It's the futtre and it saves the trees ;-)
Another 10 years before they complete it, and I think they have been working on this edition for about 25 years so far
lols@3
I hope not. The way our dopey government is handling our energy generating crisis (replacing coal and nuclear power stations with windmills that don't work) we'll be facing blackouts in less than five years. Not much point having the OED online when no one can bleeding access it.
Progress...who needs it?
I hope they print some. Not everyone still has access to a computer, and libraries should still exist. When the power goes down, we are lost if we rely heavily on electronics. I agree about the trees, but paper can be made from other things that are cheaper and better, if governments are serious about ecology.
We're all chronically hypnotised by music and television, so our IQ is dropping anyway. We're going to need the dictionary just to form a thought soon.
The last version from 20 years ago cost 1,200 dollars and the 20 volumes weigh 130 lbs.
Heck, you would be better off buying a nice computer.
I find the single volume Webster's Unabridged to be a reasonable substitute for home use.
On or off the internet, the free Answers.com app that allows alt + left click info on anything is indispensable. It's like an instant dictionary and encyclopedia combined.
http://www.answers.com/main/download_answers_win.jsp
For that kind of money you can probably add a generator and some diesel as well to not be dependent on the power grid. :-)