With the re-branding of computing power and machines as something welcome in the home and not just the workshop, a number of factors moved forth to sell these machines and their software to a growing and large group of customers. Besides the introduction of more elegant cases and an increased presence by larger and larger firms, a strong argument can be made that one of the forces was the proliferation of computer-related magazines and newsletters that gave a central, printed home for writing...
This is a collection of magazines and newsletters based around gaming of all sorts: Arcade games, Computer Games, Console Games, as well as Board Games, Role-Playing Games, and any other sort of related entertainment. This collection consists of dozens of magazine runs, digitized from fading piles of older magazines by an army of anonymous contributors. In some cases, quality is variant, due to the rareness of the issues. Special thanks and recognition are given to sites bombjack.org,...
A diverse collection of magazines about knitting.
The "ideal" for the Internet Archive system is one readable texts item per identifier. However, some users are known to upload entire collections of a given series rather than go through the trouble of making so many individual items. To help make them more readable, copies will be brought into the Archive's stacks, but the original items will still remain. This collection consists of these "mega-pack" items, contributed over years by users.
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Biography In Sounds , of F Scott Fitzgerald Romance . August 8, 1950. CBS net. The Off-Shore Pirate . NBC Presents: Short Story . March 7, 1951. NBC net. Crazy Sunday Biography in Sound , June 28, 1955 - F. Scott Fitzgerald At 25 , by F. Scott Fitzgerald, from the Sept 1922 issue of The American Magazine (narrator) Porcelain and Pink - 1-act Fitzgerald play performed by LibriVox volunteers Porcelain and Pink Song - Lyrics by Fitzgerald, music by Matt Pierard (performer) A study of F. Scott...
Topics: F. Scott Fitzgerald, LibriVox, Romance, Biography in Sound, NBC Short Story, otr, radio, Gordon...
Besides the glossy magazines, stacks of photocopied, hand-printed and distributed newsletters brought information and insight to computer users. In cases where the newsletters grew into full magazines, check the Computer Magazines collection. General Computer Newsletters The 80 Notebook Ace User Magazine Apple 2000 Apple Content Apple Hebdo Newsletter (French) Argonauts Newsletter Asgard Newsletter Atari Owners Club Bulletin Australian National OS9 Newsletter Australian OS9 Newsletter (Alt.)...
Primary computer magazines, but also other titles and subjects, from a variety of sources.
Game magazines published in spanish languages.
Starlog was a monthly science-fiction film magazine published by Starlog Group Inc. The magazine was created by publishers Kerry O'Quinn and Norman Jacobs. O'Quinn was the magazine's editor while Jacobs ran the business side of things, dealing with typesetters, engravers and printers. They got their start in publishing creating a soap opera magazine. In the mid-1970s, O'Quinn and high school friend David Houston talked about creating a magazine that would cover science fiction films and...
73 Magazine (also known as 73 Amateur Radio Today) (OCLC 22239204) was a United States-based amateur radio magazine that was published from 1960 to 2003. It was known for its strong emphasis on technical articles and for the lengthy editorials in each issue by its founder and publisher, Wayne Green. The magazine title, 73, means "best regards" in amateur radio lingo. Green, a former editor of CQ Amateur Radio magazine, published the first issue of 73 in October 1960. At that time, the...
The Australian Women's Weekly, sometimes known as simply The Weekly, is an Australian monthly women's magazine published by Bauer Media Group in Sydney. Audited circulation in June 2013 was 459,175 copies monthly. The magazine was started in 1933 by Frank Packer as a weekly publication. The first editor was George Warnecke and the initial dummy was laid out by WEP (William Edwin Pidgeon) who went on to do many famous covers over the next 25 years. The Weekly celebrated its 50th anniversary of...
Magazines and periodicals dedicated to computers manufactured by Commodore International (1954-1994), including the PET, Commodore 64, Amiga, and other related models.
Byte magazine was a microcomputer magazine, influential in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s because of its wide-ranging editorial coverage. Whereas many magazines from the mid-1980s had been dedicated to the MS-DOS (PC) platform or the Mac, mostly from a business or home user's perspective, Byte covered developments in the entire field of "small computers and software", and sometimes other computing fields such as supercomputers and high-reliability computing. Coverage was...
Warren Publishing was an American magazine company founded by James Warren, who published his first magazines in 1957 and continued in the business for decades. Magazines published by Warren include After Hours, Creepy, Eerie, Famous Monsters of Filmland, Help!, and Vampirella. Initially based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the company relocated by 1965 to New York City, New York. Begun by James Warren, Warren Publishing's initial publications were the horror-fantasy-science fiction movie...
Cracked is a defunct American humor magazine. Founded in 1958, Cracked proved to be the most durable of the many publications to be launched in the wake of Mad magazine. In print, Cracked conspicuously copied Mad's layouts and style, and even featured a simpleminded, wide-cheeked mascot named Sylvester P. Smythe on its covers (see Alfred E. Neuman). The Smythe character was referred to as Cracked's janitor. Unlike Neuman, who appears primarily on covers, Smythe sometimes spoke and was...
Magazines and periodicals dedicated to computers manufactured by Apple Computer Inc. (later Apple, Inc.), including the Apple II, Macintosh, iMac, and Macbooks.
Popular Mechanics is a classic magazine of popular technology. First published January 11, 1902, by H. H. Windsor, it has been owned since 1958 by the Hearst Corporation. There are nine international editions, including a now-defunct Latin American version that had been published for decades, and a newer South African edition. Popular Mechanics features regular sections on automotive, home, outdoors, science, and technology topics. A recurring column is "Jay Leno's Garage" featuring...
Scientific American (informally abbreviated SciAm) is a popular science magazine. It is notable for its long history of presenting science monthly to an educated but not necessarily scientific public, through its careful attention to the clarity of its text as well as the quality of its specially commissioned color graphics. Many famous scientists, including Einstein, have contributed articles in the past 167 years. It is the oldest continuously published monthly magazine in America. Scientific...
The Austin Chronicle is an alternative weekly, tabloid-style newspaper published every Thursday in Austin, Texas, United States. The paper is distributed through free news-stands, often at local eateries or coffee houses frequented by its targeted demographic. The newspaper reported a readership of 230,500. The Chronicle was co-founded in 1981 by publisher Nick Barbaro and editor Louis Black, with assistance from others who largely met through the graduate film studies program at the University...
Maclean's is a Canadian news magazine that was founded in 1905, reporting on Canadian issues such as politics, pop culture, and current events. Its founder, publisher J. B. Maclean, established the magazine to provide a uniquely Canadian perspective on current affairs and to "entertain but also inspire its readers". Its publisher since 1994, Rogers Media, announced in September 2016 that Maclean's would become a monthly beginning January 2017, while continuing to produce a weekly...
Electronics Australia or EA was Australia's longest-running general electronics magazine. It was based in Chippendale, New South Wales. It can claim to trace its history to 1922 when the Wireless Weekly magazine was formed. Its content was a mix of general and technical articles on the new topic of radio. In April 1939 the magazine became monthly and was renamed Radio and Hobbies. As its name suggests, it was a more technical publication for hobbyists, but it also featured articles on...
Magazines related to sound, and music.
ports Illustrated is an American sports media franchise owned by Time Inc. Its self-titled magazine has over 3 million subscribers and is read by 23 million people each week, including over 18 million men. It was the first magazine with circulation over one million to win the National Magazine Award for General Excellence twice. Its swimsuit issue, which has been published since 1964, is now an annual publishing event that generates its own television shows, videos and calendars.
The scientific discoveries and technological innovations produced by Bell System research and engineering were critical not only to the evolution of global telecommunications but, more widely, they had a considerable impact on the technological base of the global economy and, indeed, on our daily lives. Bell Labs is the source of many significant contributions, of course, in the area of telephony, but also in memory devices, imaging devices, system organization, computers and software...
MCmicrocomputer, per brevità MC, è stata una delle riviste storiche di informatica in Italia. Diretta prima da Paolo Nuti e poi da Marco Marinacci, fu edita da Technimedia (Roma) dal 1981 al 1999 e da Pluricom (Roma) dal 1999 al 2001. Nacque, contemporaneamente alla rivista "sorella" AudioReview, da una cerchia di collaboratori del Gruppo Editoriale Suono (Roma) come proseguimento dell'esperienza fatta nella testata Micro & Personal Computer, fondata da Paolo Nuti due anni...
Die Zeitschrift 64'er – Das Magazin für Computerfans war ein von 1984 bis 1996 vom Markt+Technik Verlag vertriebenes Computermagazin. In den 1980er Jahren war es neben den Data-Becker-Büchern eine der wichtigsten Informationsquellen für Commodore 64-Anwender im deutschsprachigen Raum. Die Erstausgabe 04/1984 erschien auf der Cebit 1984. Neben zahlreichen Kursen für Einsteiger und Fortgeschrittene, oft seitenlangen Listings zum Abtippen und vielerlei Tipps und Tricks wagte das Magazin auch...
Flight International (or Flight) is a global aerospace weekly publication produced in the UK. Founded in 1909 as "A Journal devoted to the Interests, Practice, and Progress of Aerial Locomotion and Transport". It is the world's oldest continuously published aviation news magazine. With a team of journalists and correspondents around the world, it provides global coverage of aerospace manufacturing and aviation operations in the areas of air transport, business aviation, defence,...
PC Zone, founded in 1993, was the first magazine dedicated to games for IBM-compatible personal computers to be published in the United Kingdom. Earlier PC magazines such as PC Leisure, PC Format and PC Plus had covered games but only as part of a wider remit. The precursor to PC Zone was the award-winning multiformat title Zero. The magazine was published by Dennis Publishing Ltd. until 2004, when it was acquired by Future plc along with Computer And Video Games for £2.5m. In July 2010 it was...
Varios factores ayudaron a que las computadoras y su software dejaran de ser promocionadas como algo exclusivo para la oficina y el trabajo, sino que también tenía un lugar en el hogar. Además de una presentación más amena y una presencia cada vez más grande de compañías informáticas, se puede decir que una de las razones más grandes fue la proliferación de revistas y boletines que cubrían el tema de la computación. Y gracias tanto a los grupos de apoyo entre usuarios, las...
Diplomacy is a strategic board game created by Allan B. Calhamer in 1954 and released commercially in 1959. Its main distinctions from most board wargames are its negotiation phases (players spend much of their time forming and betraying alliances with other players and forming beneficial strategies) and the absence of dice and other game elements that produce random effects. Set in Europe before the beginning of World War I, Diplomacy is played by two to seven players, each controlling the...
Macworld is a web site dedicated to products and software of Apple Inc. It is published by Mac Publishing, which is headquartered in San Francisco, California. Published since 1984, the magazine has the largest audited circulation (both total and newsstand) of Macintosh-focused magazines in North America, more than double its nearest competitor, MacLife (formerly MacAddict). Macworld was founded by David Bunnell (publisher) and Andrew Fluegelman (editor). It was the oldest Macintosh magazine...
Aktueller Software Markt (literally Current Software Market), commonly known by its acronym, ASM, was a German multi-platform video game magazine that was published by Tronic Verlag from 1986 until 1995. It was one of the first magazines published in Germany focused on video games, though the very first issues of ASM covered the software market in general for almost all platforms at this time, hence the magazine's full name. According to the magazine itself, it was the first computer software...
Magazines and Periodicals from around the world, covering a wide range of topics.
Modell Eisenbahner Magazine
Topics: Modell Eisenbahner, Magazine, Complete
«Советское фото» — советский, затем российский ежемесячный иллюстрированный журнал Союза журналистов СССР. Был основан в 1926 году советским журналистом Михаилом Кольцовым, при помощи бывших журнальных работников, редакторов журнала Фотографические Новости издаваемого...
Meccano Magazine was an English monthly hobby magazine published by Meccano Ltd between 1916 and 1963, and by other publishers between 1963 and 1981. The magazine was initially created for Meccano builders, but it soon became a general hobby magazine aimed at "boys of all ages". It remained in circulation for over sixty years. The magazine was launched by Frank Hornby, the inventor of Meccano, as a bi-monthly publication in 1916 in the United States as "Meccano Engineer",...
From Wikipedia: Compute! (ISSN 0194-357X) was an American computer magazine that was published from 1979 to 1994, though it can trace its origin to 1978 in Len Lindsay's PET Gazette, one of the first magazines for the Commodore PET computer. In its 1980s heyday Compute! covered all major platforms, and several single-platform spinoffs of the magazine were launched. The most successful of these was Compute!'s Gazette, catering to Commodore computer users. The magazine's original goal was to...
Magazines about sound and audio technology, including mixing, playback, and electronics.
PC Magazine (shortened as PCMag) is an American computer magazine published by Ziff Davis. A print edition was published from 1982 to January 2009. Publication of online editions started in late 1994 and continues to this day.
Title means Modeller. Monthly modelling magazine which also features aeromodelling items. Good aviation content, including a scale drawing in each issue of an aircraft important to Polish aviation history. First appeared in May 1955.
Cette collection regroupe les anciens magazines en langue française en rapport avec le radio-amateurisme et la CB. Vous trouverez des liens et des détails sur les «Titres» disponibles dans l'onglet «ABOUT» ci-dessous. Magazines disponibles dans cette collection (Voir filtre «Creator» de la colonne de gauche): - Megahertz-Magazine paru de Novembre 1982 à Août 2008 (No305) + quelques Hors-série - CQ Radioamateur (version française) paru de Mai...
Topics: magazine, radioamateur, francais, ham, radio, amateur
Sinclair User, often abbreviated SU, was a magazine dedicated to the Sinclair Research range of home computers, most specifically the ZX Spectrum. Initially published by ECC Publications, and later EMAP, it was published in the UK between 1982 and 1993, and was the longest running Sinclair-based magazine. Like many similar magazines, it contained news, game reviews, previews, tips, help guides, regular columns, readers' letters and cover-mounted game demos. In May 1992 the former rival...
Vampirella is a fictional character, a comic book vampire superheroine created by Forrest J Ackerman and costume designer Trina Robbins in Warren Publishing's black-and-white horror comics magazine Vampirella #1 (Sept. 1969). Writer-editor Archie Goodwin later developed the character from horror-story hostess, in which capacity she remained through issue #8 (Nov. 1970), to a horror-drama leading character. Vampirella was ranked 35th in Comics Buyer's Guide's "100 Sexiest Women in...
PC Open è stata una rivista di informatica, a frequenza mensile, il cui primo numero uscì in edicola nel novembre 1995. Negli ultimi anni della sua pubblicazione venne rinominata PC Open Studio e diffusa solo in abbonamento. Nel corso degli anni ha cambiato diverse volte editore. Inizialmente pubblicata da Agepe con direttore responsabile Pasquale Laurelli, passò poi al gruppo 01Net con la guida di Roberto Mazzoni. Infine fu edita dal gruppo Il Sole 24 Ore. Ogni mese venivano pubblicate...
Computer Gaming World (CGW) was an American computer game magazine published between 1981 and 2006. In 1979 Russell Sipe left the Southern Baptist Convention ministry. A fan of computer games, he realized in spring 1981 there was no magazine dedicated to computer games. Although Sipe had no publishing experience, he formed Golden Empire Publications in June and found investors. He chose the name of Computer Gaming World (CGW) instead of alternatives such as Computer Games or Kilobaud Warrior...
Building is one of the United Kingdom’s oldest business-to-business magazines, launched as The Builder in 1843 by Joseph Aloysius Hansom – architect of Birmingham Town Hall and designer of the Hansom Cab. The journal was renamed Building in 1966 as it is still known today. Building is the only UK title to cover the entire building industry. The Builder's first two editors, Hansom and Alfred Bartholomew (1801–45), did not last long in the job. The architect George Godwin (1813–1888) was...
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Dragon is one of the two official magazines for source material for the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game and associated products; Dungeon is the other. TSR, Inc. originally launched the monthly printed magazine in 1976 to succeed the company's earlier publication, The Strategic Review. The final printed issue was #359 in September 2007
Topics: Dungeons & Dragon, Fantasy, Wargaming
Amiga Joker magazine was the first German-language Amiga magazine that concentrated only on games. It was published from 1989 to 1996.
Веселка з'явилася в 1954 році в редакції „Свободи". Свіже число виходило щомісяця, наповнене віршами, оповіданнями, чарівними казками, сценічними картинами-п'єсами, цікавими розповідями і статтями, загадками, сміховинками, дописами з дитячого життя. Сторінки...
Creative Computing was one of the earliest magazines covering the microcomputer revolution. Published from October 1974 until December 1985, Creative Computing covered the whole spectrum of hobbyist/home/personal computing in a more accessible format than the rather technically oriented BYTE. The magazine was founded by David H. Ahl, who sold it to Ziff-Davis in the early 1980s, but remained as Editor-in-Chief. Featured writers included Robert Swirsky, David Lubar, and John J. Anderson. The...
Power Play Magazine is a german-language video game magazine produced in the 1990s and discontinued around the turn of the century.
This collection consists of a variety of magazines, digitized from a number of sources, that do not have a comprehensive and non-comprehensive collection available.
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),...
Веселка з'явилася в 1954 році в редакції „Свободи". Свіже число виходило щомісяця, наповнене віршами, оповіданнями, чарівними казками, сценічними картинами-п'єсами, цікавими розповідями і статтями, загадками, сміховинками, дописами з дитячого життя. Сторінки готувалися...
Topics: часопис, журнал, періодика, дитяча література
Source: toloka.to/t77915
Smash Hits was a pop music magazine aimed at teenagers and young adults, featuring lyrics, photographs, interviews and news related to celebrity music acts in the UK (Later offshoots arrived in the US and Australia). After an initial test issue, the magazine started publishing in 1979, switching to a fortnightly schedule after three issues, and finally closing up in 2006. Starting in 2008, Brian McCloskey began a project called Like Punk Never Happened, providing scanned and described issues of...
Crash was a magazine dedicated to the ZX Spectrum home computer. It was published from 1984 to 1991 by Newsfield Publications Ltd until their liquidation, and then until 1992 by Europress. Crash was initially launched in 1983 by Roger Kean, Oliver Frey and Franco Frey as a mail order software catalogue that included several pages of reviews. It then launched as a magazine in February 1984, maintaining its focus squarely on Spectrum gaming (unlike its competitors, which tended to feature more...
Muzik was a UK dance music magazine published by IPC Media from June 1995 to August 2003. Muzik was created by two former Melody Maker journalists, Push and Ben Turner. Push was the editor of Muzik from its launch until he left the magazine in 1998, at which point Turner took over as editor. The title was subsequently edited by Conor McNicholas, who went on to edit NME. Aimed at serious dance music fans rather than weekend clubbers, Muzik's writers included a number of well-known DJs, including...
I/O is a Japanese Computer magazine that has been published since the 1970s.
Computer and Video Games Magazine was published in Great Britain in the early 1980s.
Playmanía es la revista de PlayStation más vendida de España. Llevamos desde 1999 informando de todo lo relacionado con las consolas de Sony y sus juegos con un espíritu práctico, con la intención de entretener e informar al mismo tiempo, siendo claros, precisos y asequibles. Un ejemplo de nuestro espíritu práctico son secciones como las Comparativas, donde analizamos los mejores juegos de un género concreto para ayudar a elegir el título ideal para cada jugador. O nuestras guías,...
Radio-Electronics was an American electronics magazine that was published under various titles from 1929 to 2003. Hugo Gernsback, sometimes called The Father of Science Fiction, started it as Radio-Craft in July 1929. The title was changed to Radio-Electronics in October 1948 and again to Electronics Now in July 1992. In January 2000 it was merged with Gernsback's Popular Electronics to become Poptronics. Gernsback Publications ceased operations in December 2002 and the January 2003 issue was...
This magazine was a monthly publication that was printed in Japan from the early 80s to 2003 and contained programs written in BASIC for many Japanese computers of the time, both the popular and less popular ones. Also included are ads for various Japanese computers and games of the time, such as arcade ports of Namco games and Hudson Soft’s licensed Nintendo games. In the case of the latter, some issues even feature pre-release screenshots of these games.
The Games Machine, also known by the acronym TGM, is an Italian Video game magazine. The magazine features previews, reviews, and cheat codes for computer games. Launched in September 1988 as the Italian edition of the British magazine The Games Machine by the Milan-based publishing company Xenia Edizioni. The publishing of the Italian edition has continued also after the close of the British edition, The Games Machine became one of the most popular video games magazine in Italy. In November...
PC Player war ein deutsches PC-Spiele-Magazin, das von 1992 bis 2001 monatlich herausgegeben wurde. Die Gründer waren Heinrich Lenhardt und Boris Schneider. Mit einer Auflage von 140.000 Exemplaren war die PC Player im März 1994 die meistverkaufte Computerspiele-Zeitschrift Deutschlands. Sie war der Versuch, erstmals mit einer Zeitschrift über PC-Spiele ein älteres Publikum anzusprechen. Die Erstausgabe 1/93 wurde Ende 1992 auf der „World of Commodore“-Messe in Frankfurt verkauft. Die...
Aviation Week & Space Technology, often abbreviated Aviation Week or AW&ST, is the flagship magazine of the Aviation Week Network. The weekly magazine is available in print and online, reporting on the aerospace, defense and aviation industries, with a core focus on aerospace technology. It has reputation for its contacts inside the United States military and industry organizations. The publication is sometimes informally called "Aviation Leak and Space Mythology" in defense...
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Nintendo Power Magazine Releases ranging from 1988 to 2004.
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Topics: Magazines, Retro-Mags, Nintendo Power, Nintendo
«Весёлые картинки» — детский юмористический журнал. Рассчитан на детей от 4 до 10 лет. Издаётся в Москве ежемесячно с сентября 1956 года. До 1990-х годов был органом ЦК ВЛКСМ. Журнал включает стихи и рассказы, настольные игры, комиксы, ребусы, шутки, загадки. Он организует досуг...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garo_(magazine) Garo ( ガロ ) was a monthly manga anthology magazine in Japan, founded in 1964 by Katsuichi Nagai. It specialized in alternative and avant-garde manga .
Topic: gekiga
Tilt, connu également sous les noms Tilt - Jeux électroniques, Tilt Micro Jeux ou Tilt Microloisirs, fut le premier magazine français entièrement consacré au jeu vidéo sur ordinateur et console. Il est apparu en septembre 1982, publié par Editions Mondiales (Paris), et as été le magazine de référence pour beaucoup. Le nom vient du jeu de flipper. Les premiers numéros étaient bimensuels; le magazine devient principalement mensuel à partir du numéro 10 (mars 1984). Le dernier...