Microhobby Magazine was a Spanish-language magazine covering the ZX Spectrum and other microcomputers. It was published from the 1980s to the early 1990s.
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Chip magazine Romanian language version 2012
Topic: Chip
MSX Fan Magazine was a Japanese computer magazine covering the MSX Computer and published in the 1990s.
MSX Fan Magazine was a Japanese computer magazine covering the MSX Computer and published in the 1990s.
Enter was an American magazine produced from October 1983 to May 1985 by Children's Television Workshop (CTW, later renamed Sesame Workshop). Similar to sibling titles Sesame Street, The Electric Company, and 3-2-1 Contact magazines, the title was aimed at school-age children. The focus of the magazine was, as declared on the cover, "The world of computers and new technology". Each issue included programs in the BASIC computer language, which readers could type into their own home...
The Nintendo Power Advance magazines were spin-offs on the Nintendo Power magazine, released in 2001, and stopped the same year. They exclusively contained information for Game Boy Advance games, the last being a complete guide for Super Mario Advance 2: Super Mario World. Only four issues were printed, and Mario personally appeared on the covers of all but one.
The BeeBon was a newsletter dedicated to the BBC Micro and Acorn Computing machines. Published in 1982.
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Chip magazine Romanian language version 2012
Topic: Chip
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...