The Guide to Computer Living was a magazine dedicated to Commodore computers that was published in the 1980s.
MSX Fan Magazine was a French computer magazine covering the MSX Computer and published in the 1990s.
Computer idea era una rivista italiana di informatica edita da 1Plus SRL e diretta da Andrea Maselli. Nacque nel febbraio del 2000 ed era il primo magazine quattordicinale dedicato al PC mai pubblicato in Italia. Presentava un formato lungo e stretto ed una foliazione di 100 pagine, poi passata a 84 in maniera più o meno stabile. L'elemento editoriale più caratteristico era la sua sezione centrale staccabile, denominata Passo a passo: qui viene descritto l'uso di numerosi programmi, servizi...
Home Computer - La rivista del computer in casa è stata una meteora nel panorama editoriale italiano. Edita dal Gruppo Editoriale Jackson, è uscita nel maggio del 1984, affiancandosi alla rivista VideoGiochi. Essa si prefiggeva di dare informazioni principalmente sui computer da casa, che in quel periodo stavano entrando in parecchie case, ma lo scarso successo editoriale la portarono logicamente a confluire nella più blasonata 'cugina' dopo solo 15 numeri pubblicati. Quest'ultima dal n.29...
The BeeBon was a newsletter dedicated to the BBC Micro and Acorn Computing machines. Published in 1982.
Laserbug Magazine was a newsletter covering the BBC Model B computer. Short-lived, only a small number of issues were produced.
French magazine dedicated to the Amstrad PCW computers series.
ELectron User magazine is a magazine for BBC Electron Users published in the 1980s.
CE Lifestyles Magazine targets digital electronics enthusiasts and avid computer users who like all things digital. Each issue of CE Lifestyles includes hardware reviews, buying advise, and tutorials for getting started on a broad range of devices. CE Lifestyles provides all-around gadget hounds with the latest advancements in computer electronics.
Microkids was one of a handful of magazines that had emerged in the early 80s with a focus on family members as it’s audience, in this case tweens and teens. Other slicks of the day included titles such as Family Computing and Enter, magazines that made their way to the racks as a result of a newly growing global demand for personal computers. No longer was it only hobbyists and programming professionals who showed an interest in this developing technology. Now there was a smattering of...
Hacker Journal is the first italian magazine dedicated to hacking. It can be bought at the news-stands since 2002. Hacker Journal is a magazine which combines computer security articles and others where are explained the main techniques of computer attack. Articles are structured as tutorial which show step by step, and with the help of the support code, how to realize exploits and the most common intrusion techniques (attack side) and how to prevent the attack (defense side). We cooperate with...
Your Computer was a British computer magazine published monthly from 1981 to 1988, and aimed at the burgeoning home computer market. At one stage it was, in its own words, "Britain's biggest selling home computer magazine". It offered support across a wide range of computer formats, and included news, type-in program listings, and reviews of both software and hardware. Hardware reviews were notable for including coverage of the large number of home microcomputers released during the...
Acorn Programs Magazine is a glossy magazine covering the BBC Acorn and Acorn software. It was published in 1984.
Acorn User magazine was founded by Acorn Computers in 1982, contract-published by Addison-Wesley, to coincide with the launch of the BBC Micro. It covered the range of Acorn home computers, the BBC Micro and Atom at first and later the Electron, Archimedes and Risc PC. The first issue was dated July/August 1982. From the April 1984 issue, the magazine came under the control of Redwood Publishing, a company recently founded by Michael Potter (a former publisher at Haymarket Publishing),...
From Wikipedia: Amstrad Action was a monthly magazine, published in the United Kingdom, which catered to owners of home computers from the Amstrad CPC range and later the GX4000 console. It was the first magazine published by Chris Anderson's Future Publishing, which with a varied line-up of computing and non-computing related titles has since become one of the foremost magazine publishers in the UK. The publication, often abbreviated to AA by staff and readers, had the longest lifetime of any...
HARDCORE was the Journal of the British Apple Systems User Group. It was a computer newsletter published in the 1980s and dedicated to the Apple family of computers.
Amazing Computing was a computer magazine devoted to the Amiga computer. It was published by PiM Publications of Fall River, Massachusetts, USA, from 1985 to (sporadically) 1999. Other Amiga publications from PiM include AC's Tech for the Amiga and AC's Guide. The publisher was Don Hicks. A frequent column in Amazing Computing was "Roomers" by "the Bandito" which offered unsourced rumors, speculation, and inside information regarding developments on the AMIGA scene. These...
Computer Age Magazine is a early 1980s general computer magazine.
Tux Magazine was a Linux magazine aimed at Linux desktop end users, specifically those who use the KDE desktop environment. Tux's mission was to help Linux take over the desktop market. Tux was not a print magazine: each issue was delivered digitally as a PDF file. The first issue was published in March 2005 and further 19 issues followed almost every month. On January 1, 2007, the publisher announced that the December 2006 issue was the last for the moment, because financial and other issues...
German-language magazine from the mid-late 1980s.
Canada's Personal Computing Magazine.
This magazine is dedicated to the curious people who want to know the "inside" technical information regarding computers, BBS's, the telephone company, arcade games, radio equipment, general electronic equipment, cable and other utility companies and anything/everything nobody else wants to talk about... or might not even KNOW about! Are you a hacker? Are you curious? Do you want to know how-it-works? Then you want to read this magazine!
ITEC (Information Technology Electronics Computers) was a partwork magazine published by GEJ Publishing Ltd in the United Kingdom during 1983 and 1984. It ran for 51 weekly issues.
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Chip magazine Romanian language version 2012
Topic: Chip
Magazines about the computers made by Atari: 8-Bit, ST, and Related.
Consumer Electronics Tips Magazine is "Your User Guide To Consumer Electronics & Computers".
MSX Fan Magazine was a Japanese computer magazine covering the MSX Computer and published in the 1990s.
Oh! X Magazine (Japanese)
Microhobby Magazine was a Spanish-language magazine covering the ZX Spectrum and other microcomputers. It was published from the 1980s to the early 1990s.
SmartComputing is a monthly computing and technology magazine published by Sandhills Publishing Company in Lincoln, Nebraska, USA. It was formerly known as PC Novice, and the first issue rolled out in 1990.
UNIX Review was an American magazine covering technical aspects of the UNIX operating system and C programmer . Recognized for its in-depth technical analyses the journal also reported on industry confabs and included some lighter fare. It was founded in 1983. In 1985 it was acquired by Miller Freeman. The journal was renamed to UNIX Review's Performance Computing (UR/PC) Magazine with the April 1998 issue, and ceased publication in 2000. The on-line...
Home Computing Weekly was a magazine published from 1983-1985 about computer software and the industry at large.
The official magazine of Compuserve.
Sync Magazine was a relatively short-lived glossy magazine dedicated to the Timex Sinclair / ZX80 / ZX81 models of computers.
Softgold Magazine, Publisher: Goldsoft. The Softgold Magazine was published in Australia from at least 1987 into 1988. Its contents were mainly software with a few reviews and general purpose computing articles thrown into the mix. Sometime in 1988 it turned into a MS-DOS only magazine with the CoCo contents moved to the Australian CoCo Magazine (a sister publication). It is unknown when the magazine started or ended its publication.
Kaypro Corporation, commonly called Kaypro, was an American home/personal computer manufacturer of the 1980s. The company was founded by Non-Linear Systems to develop computers to compete with the then-popular Osborne 1 portable microcomputer. Kaypro produced a line of rugged, portable CP/M-based computers sold with an extensive software bundle which supplanted its competitors and quickly became one of the top selling personal computer lines of the early 1980s. While exceptionally loyal to its...
Under Color Newsletter was a bi-weekly newsletter published in support of the Tandy Color Computer (Coco).
Personal Software è un mensile di informatica italiano edito dal Gruppo Editoriale Jackson tra il 1982 e il 1986, dedicato principalmente a listati di programmi BASIC per vari modelli di personal computer.
Family Computing was a 1980s U.S. computer magazine published by Scholastic, Inc.. It covered all the major home computer platforms of the day including the Apple II series, Commodore Vic 20 and 64, Atari 8-bit family as well as the IBM PC and Apple Macintosh. It printed a mixture of product reviews, how-to articles and type-in programs. The magazine also featured a teen-oriented insert called K-Power, written by Stuyvesant High School students called the Special-K's. The section was named...
Computer Power User (or CPU) is a monthly computing and technology magazine published by Sandhills Publishing Company in Lincoln, Nebraska, USA. It has been in circulation since December 2001. The magazine features articles, reviews of hardware and software, editorial content and classified advertising. It is geared toward more advanced users than its sister publication, SmartComputing. Regular guest writers used to include Chris Pirillo. CPU Magazine differs from most other computing magazines...
8000 Plus (renamed PCW Plus early in 1992) was a monthly British magazine dedicated to the Amstrad PCW range of microcomputers. It was one of the earliest magazines from Future Publishing, and ran for just over ten years, the first issue being dated October 1986 and the last (as PCW Plus) being issue 124, dated Christmas 1996. Science fiction writer David Langford wrote a regular column for 8000/PCW Plus, which ran (albeit not continuously) for the magazine's entire lifespan.
Bit è stata una rivista mensile italiana di informatica e tecnologia, pubblicata tra il 1978 e il 1997 dal Gruppo Editoriale Jackson. Uscita per la prima volta in edicola nel dicembre 1978, inizialmente a cadenza bimestrale, dopo alcuni numeri ha assunto la periodicità mensile. Fondata da Marcello Montedoro con il supporto del caporedattore Pietro Dell'Orco che ne assumerà la direzione dal numero di settembre 1988 al numero di luglio-agosto 1990, successivamente diretta da Sergio Mello-Grand...
BBS: The Bulletin Board Magazine.
MSX Top Class is a british MSX magazine published in 1993.
Not to be confused with the workworking magazine of the same name, Workbench was a newsletter by the Amiga Users Group of Australia covering Amiga-related subjects and news.
Let's Compute! was a magazine for the CPC Amstrad, BBC Micro, Commodore, Atari ST, and other computers of the 1980s.
Electronique et Loisirs (Translation: Electronics and Entertainment) Magazine
Magazines dedicated to the IBM PC / Windows / DOS family of computers and compatibles.
Magazine for the Raspberry Pi circuit board.
CPU Newsletter: The Magazine for Commodore 64/128 8-Bit Enthusiasts (Published in the late 1990s)
From its debut in May 1983 until the publication of its final issue in July 2006, Microcontamination and then MICRO was recognized as one of the leading technical trade magazines in the semiconductor and related advanced micro/nanoelectronics manufacturing fields.
Practical Computing was a UK computer magazine published monthly. The magazine was published by IPC Electrical Electronic Press Ltd. The first edition was released in August 1978 as a special computer show edition, and the second issue was October 1978. The magazine carried on to 1987 when it merged with Business Computing. In September 1989, it was renamed Management Computing. It provided in-depth reviews and previews of the latest hardware and software for the information technology...
New Computer Express was a weekly magazine published by Future Publishing in the UK from 1988 to 1991. New Computer Express was started in 1988; the first issue appeared in November 1988. The launch editor was Chris Anderson. During this time 8-bit micros were still prevalent, and 16-bit micros were growing their share of the market. The PC had yet to cement its hold on the home market and as a result it was a varied landscape. NCE was a multi-format magazine which tried to cover...
A russian-language videogame, computer, and hobby magazine.
Dragon User was a British magazine for users of the Dragon 32/64 computers published from 1982 by Sunshine Publications. Production of the computers themselves had ceased by 1985 but the user community remained sufficiently active to justify the magazine's continuation until 1989. From its launch until June 1986, Dragon User appeared on the shelves of major newsagents such as WHSmith in a full-colour glossy picture cover. A number of different editors were involved during this initial period,...
Computer Language Magazine.
CompuServe (CompuServe Information Service, also known by its acronym CIS) was the first major commercial online service in the United States. It dominated the field during the 1980s and remained a major player through the mid-1990s, when it was sidelined by the rise of services such as AOL with monthly subscriptions rather than hourly rates. Since the purchase of CompuServe's Information Services Division by AOL, it has operated as an online service provider and an Internet service provider....
INPUT Magazine is a Spanish-language magazine published in the 1980s in Brazil and covering apple and other microcomputer news for around 80 issues.
Previously 99er Magazine - produced two volumes before closing.
The Micro User (titled BBC Micro User in the first three issues) was a British specialist magazine catering to users of the BBC Microcomputer series, Acorn Electron, Acorn Archimedes and, to a limited extent, the Cambridge Z88. It had a comprehensive mix of reviews of games, application software, and the latest Acorn computers; type-in programs (duplicated on a "cover disk" which was available separately), a correspondence page offering help with computer problems, and approachable...
K-Power described itself as "The Magazine for the Computer Generation". It was a computer magazine with an emphasis on education, published in the United States by Scholastic, Inc and edited by Anne Krueger. 8 issues of K-Power were published, running from February to November/December 1984, after which it was merged with Family Computing and became a teen-oriented insert of its parent magazine. K-Power featured type-in BASIC programs for many different platforms, perhaps most fondly...
Die CeVi-aktuell war ein C64-Magazin im PDF-Format und wurde kostenlos zum Download angeboten. Es handelte sich um ein reines Hobbyprojekt von C64 Fans für C64 Fans und verfolgte keinerlei kommerzielles Interesse. Wie die Lotek64 gehörte Sie zu den letzten deutschsprachigen C64-Magazinen. Seit 2005 erschien sie nahezu monatlich, ab Anfang 2008 in unregelmäßigen Abständen. Das Magazin darf in unveränderter Form frei kopiert und weiterverbreitet werden. Die Ausgabe 06/2009 ist die letzte...
Digit is an Indian monthly technology magazine published by 9.9 Media. According to the Indian Readership Survey (IRS 2011) it has a circulation of about 1,00,000 and a readership of over 2,49,000. The same survey results suggest that it is the most read technology magazine in India, higher than even the combined readership of its peers (e.g., Chip, PC Quest, T3, etc.). It is circulated in India, Nepal, Sri Lanka and some other countries. It was started in 2001 by Jasubhai Digital Media Pvt....
A revista Micro Sistemas, foi a primeira publicação brasileira especializada em microcomputadores, tendo circulado entre Outubro de 1981 e meados de 1997 (edição 169). Inicialmente, foi publicada pela ATI Editora Ltda. e depois pela Enter Press Editorial Ltda.. A partir do nº 157, teve uma curta sobrevida através da PRB (Primeira Revista Brasileira) de Informática Editora Ltda. Muitos de seus projetos editoriais tornaram-se clássicos na comunidade de programação, como o Micro Bug para...
Personal Computing Magazine issues 1977-1984
Topics: computer, magazine
I/O is a Japanese Computer magazine that has been published since the 1970s.
The Independent Magazine for the Entire Zenith Computer Community, The Independent magazine for Users of Heath/Zenith Microcomputers, For Users of Heath/Zenith Computers. Sextant's publisher/editor was Charles Floto. He also published the BUSS newsletter.
Metamorphosis Magazine/Newsletter was a publication dedicated to the TRS-80, OS-9, and other related families of computers.
Dragon World, an official publication from Dragon Data. Followed up where Stop Press left off.
Issues of Laserbug Magazine
Magazines about Tandy Computers, including the TRS-80, Color Computer, and other Tandy devices.
Interface Age evolved out of the club newsletter for the Southern California Computer Society: SCCS Interface. The magazine catered to a fairly technical readership and offered product reviews as well as programming information and coverage of more technical topics. Starting out as the newsletter of the first successful national computer club, the Southern California Computer Society (SCCS), then changing its name to Interface, it was staffed by volunteers before it became Interface Age under...
Amtix! magazine was, as its subtitle stated, a "monthly software review for the Amstrad computers". Published by Newsfield Publications Ltd in the mid eighties. Amtix! ran from November 1985 to April 1987 and produced 18 issues in total. A special issue (Issue zero) was given away with Zzap!64 and CRASH, two of Newsfield's other publications. After issue 18, the title was merged with Computing With The Amstrad magazine and the Amtix! logo appeared in CWTA's games review section.
SoftSide Magazine is a defunct computer magazine, begun in October 1978 by Roger Robitaille and published by SoftSide Publications of Milford, New Hampshire. Descriptions for this collection have been added by Thomas Chester.