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.)...
American Cinematographer is a magazine published monthly by the American Society of Cinematographers. It focuses on the art and craft of cinematography, covering domestic and foreign feature productions, television productions, short films, music videos and commercials. The emphasis is on interviews with cinematographers, but directors and other filmmakers are often featured as well. Articles include technical how-to pieces, discussions of tools and technologies that affect cinematography, and...
80 Microcomputing, also known as 80 Micro, was the most famous of the TRS-80 magazines and the best remembered. It was the first of the platform-specific computer magazines to become very popular, creating a model that many other magazines followed. Harry McCracken, former editor-in-chief of PC World, described PC World as "essentially an 80 Micro clone that happened to be about Windows, not TRS-80’s." 80 Microcomputing published for 101 issues from January 1980 to June 1988, plus...
Atari Online News, Etc. was an electronic text newsletter covering the Atari ST that launched in May 1999 by Dana P. Jacobson and Joe Mirando who previously contributed to the STReport newsletter. It ran for almost 1000 issues until finally closing at the end of 2016 with a promise of a transition to HTML that seemingly never came.
Official Newsletter of the Japanese Handball Association (JHA)
The official journal and newsletter of the Washington Apple Pi user group.
The first VeggieTales related item on my Archive Corner, and it's an issue of The Super Fantastic Veggie Fan Club newsletter! 😄😁 This issue was meant to promote Jonah: A VeggieTales Movie , which came out later than year, as well as its now defunct website, JonahMovie.com . Included in this issue are interviews with The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything and Mike Nawrocki, a synopsis of the Jonah movie, and a few activities for kids. This might be the first issue from this newsletter that has...
Topics: VeggieTales, Jonah, Big Idea, Newsletter
Our mission is to provide an official repository for materials of historical significance to Lancaster Bible College. Our aim is to enlighten and educate researchers about the history and legacy of Lancaster Bible College. Our goal is to accomplish the stated through the arrangement, description, and preservation of these resources. The Archives and Special Collections serves as an official repository for materials of historical significance to Lancaster Bible College. The Archives...
Topics: Lancaster Bible College, Lancaster School of the Bible, Lancaster Bible College and Graduate...
The Bulge Bugle is a quarterly newsletter containing photos of veterans and stories written by them of their experiences during The Battle of the Bulge, the largest land battle ever fought by the US Army. The battle took place along the borders of Belgium, Luxembourg and Germany and began on December 16, 1944 and ended January 25, 1945. Casualties were 100,000 for Germany and 82,000 for Americans, including 19,000 killed.
Topics: bulge bugle, battle of the bulge
Scans by the Museum of Computer Adventure Game History . From their description: "Put out by Adventure gamer Shay Addams starting in the early eighties, it is amazing to just look at this thing over the years and see how it grew and changed (see pictures). Starting from a little 8-page flyer, it grew to an oversized 16-page monthly newsletter, with hundreds (thousands?) of readers. Hundreds of computer game hints, reviews and solutions appeared here throughout the years. These are a...
Jones was known for being an early critic of the Warren Commission 's report on the assassination of John F. Kennedy and for alleging that 150 people connected to the assassination may have died under mysterious circumstances. In 1967, he self-published Forgive My Grief , a four-volume work on the assassination of President Kennedy. [1] [6] In the 1980s, Jones co-edited The Continuing Inquiry newsletter with Gary Mack of the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza . [1]
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Topics: JFK, JFK Assassination, Cold War
InterAction magazine was the newsletter and magazine for Sierra On-Line, later On-Line Systems, founded by Ken and Roberta Williams and focused on a variety of entertainment software throughout the 1980s and 1990s.
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Samuele Bacchiocchi
Endtime Issues Newsletters were produced by Sam Bacchiocchi from 1998 through 2008 and were formerly published at his website, biblicalperspectives.com. This collection represents a substantial portion of the work of his later life. As he stated, "Preparing each newsletter takes between 50 to 100 hours, because I try to address each subject as thoroughly as I possibly can," therefore this collection is of scholarly interest to many, both theological friend and foe alike. Dr....
Topic: Seventh-day Adventist, Eschatology, Ellen G. White, Samuele Bacchiocchi
Dynamic Memories is a TRS-80 User Group Newsletter for the South Bay TRS-80 Users Group, published in the 1980s.
(Australian) National OS9 Newsletter, which were produced from July 1988 to August 1994 by Gordon Bentzen, Don Berrie and Bob Devries.
The Newsletter for Forth Enthusiasts.
Nuachtlitir Chumann Gaeilge na hAstráile. An chéad eagrán (Lúnasa 2002) ar aghaidh. Newsletter of the Irish Language Association of Australia. From the first edition (August 2002) onwards.
Topics: Gaeilge, Irish, Irish language, An Astráil, Australia, language learning
The New Zork Times was the official newsletter of the Infocom software company, covering internal company news and releases of new games and products.
Time Designs Magazine
Topics: timex sinclair, timex sinclair 1000, timex sinclair 2068
BASUG (British Apple System Users Group) newsletters, published in the early 1980s.
An archive of the journal of the Alliance for Community Media and its predecessor organization, the National Federation of Local Cable Programmers At various times this journal was called the NFLCP Newsletter, The Community Television Review and the Community Media Review. If you're looking for the Community Media Archive, you'll find it here
Topics: community media, access
The UFV Faculty and Staff Association (FSA) has been the official collective bargaining agent for university employees at this institution since 1977. The FSA negotiates and administers the Collective Agreement (often referred to as “the contract”), monitors and seeks to influence internal university governance, and, in conjunction with our partner associations in other colleges and universities in B.C., lobbies the provincial and federal governments on matters which...
Topics: University of the Fraser Valley, UFV, UFV FSA, British Columbia, University, Union, Newsletter,...
Apple 2000 was a UK-based magazine, calling itself "The All Apple User Group Committed to All Apple Users Including Macintosh". It was published in the late 1980s to the early 1990s.
This is a bi-monthly newsletter published by Local 222 of the United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, 44 Bond Street East, Oshawa, Ontario. This collection has been digitized by the Oshawa Public Library.
Topic: Unifor
Roads Alert was a community produced newsletter covering roads protest in the UK in the early 1990s.
Topics: roads protest, roads, protest, dongas, direct action, davina thomson, davinactivist, twyford down,...
Weekly newsletter for the Shelton State community.
The DERIVE User Group was founded founded in 1991. The DUG now consists of more than 500 members from all over the world. The DUG publishes the DERIVE-Newsletter four times a year and organizes local User Group meetings. Each DERIVE-Newsletter has 46 pages minimum (40 pages 1995 and 34 pages before), with information about how DERIVE and the TI-92/89 is being used and useful hints for working with the program and the TI-92/89 and Voyage 200.
The OS-9 Newsletter was the official newsletter of the Bellingham OS-9 Users Forum, published in the 1990s.
Ray Peat old newsletters
Topics: health, nutrition
Northern Bytes Newsletter is a newsletter published by The Alternate Source Information Outlet in the 1980s.
Atari Coin Connection was the Atari corporate newsletter for Atari's arcade division.
Softalk (ISSN 0724-9629) was an American magazine of the early 1980s that focused on the Apple II computer. Published from 1980 through 1984, it featured articles about hardware and software associated with the Apple II platform and the people and companies who made them. The name was originally used on a newsletter of Apple Software pioneer company, Softape, who in 1980 changed its name to Artsci Inc. When the IBM PC came on the market, Softalk Publishing was on the spot with "'Softalk...
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The Monroe Institute
Topics: TMI News, TMI Newsletter, TMI Resources, The Monroe Institute, The Monroe Institute History,...
The official newsletter of the Michigan Atari Computer Enthusiasts.
The Allred Family Organization began publishing the newsletter in the Fall of 1989. Issues 1-65
Topic: The Allred Family Organization Newsletter
Full issues of Z*NET: Atari Online Magazine for the Atari ST.
Published starting in 1984, the MicroTimes Newspaper lauded itself as the newsletter for computer users in California. Published in two editions (Northern California and Southern), with minor but noticeable differences between them, MicroTimes provided interviews, instructions, humor and opinion pieces related to all manner of home computers and business.
The Stack was the official newsletter of the Long Island Computer Association. Published in the 1980s.
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Society of American Archivists
Archival Outlook (ISSN 1520-3379) is published six times a year and distributed in print and electronically by the Society of American Archivists. It currently has a circulation of more than 6,200. The newsletter updates readers on important business of the Society and on the work of its many component groups. It reports on regional, national, and international news of relevance to the North American archival profession. Articles focus on best practice and how-to pieces on timely and relevant...
On Three was a glossy newsletter dedicated to the Apple III computer, published in the mid-1980s.
Scans of the Michigan Mountain Biking Association's periodic print newsletter, Bent Rim Bugle, from 1987 through 2000. All issues scanned for archival purposes.
Topics: mountain bike, mountain biking, mmba, michigan, michigan mountain biking association, brb, bent rim...
Arcade Express billed itself as the bi-weekly electronic games newsletter. Published in the early 1980s.
ELBUG Magazine is the newsletter for the BBC Micro published by BEEBUG Publications published in the UK in the 1980s.
RISC User is the Magazine and Support Group exclusively for users of the Archimedes. It was published in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
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Morton Grove Public Library
An archive of newsletters from the Morton Grove Public Library in Morton Grove, Illinois. Learn more at mgpl.org .
Topic: newsletter
Summary of the Decisions of the Second Labor Fightback Conference (Rutgers, N.J., May 15-17, 2015) (report presented by Alan Benjamin on behalf of the Labor Fightback Network Steering Committee and approved unanimously, following a Motion to Adopt by Donna Dewitt, President Emeritus of the South Carolina AFL-CIO) The Second Labor Fightback Conference brought together more than 100 union leaders and activists, along with representatives of progressive community organizations, with the purpose of...
Topics: Labor Unions, Civil Rights, Human Rights, Black Power, Mexico, Haiti, USA
OS-9 Message of the Day was a newsletter published by the OS-9 USers Group in the late 1980s through to the late 1990s.
TPUG prospered, and its influence went far beyond Ontario's boundaries, or even those of North America. Today, it may be difficult to comprehend the difficult in distributing free programs across the country or around the world. We use the internet. Back then, you put cassette tapes in the mail, or, later, floppy disks. And a central clearing point produced better organization. TPUG was it, for many years; most Commodore clubs across North America became associate TPUG members. TORPET was the...
"Inside Solaris Newsletter: Tips & Techniques for users of Sun Solaris," initially published by ZD Journals and later Element K Press. Issues were published monthly and covered beginnier and intermediate-level technical topics of interest to Sun Solaris system administrators.
We offer support for all Motorola based computer systems and microcontrollers, and the OS-9 operating system. I'm the person who conceived of and published "the world of 68' micros" -- Frank (Francis) Swygert. The title is correct -- it was officially in all lower case to emphasize "micro" computers. For shorthand I often used "268'm" (two - the world of) in messages on Delphi and in the magazine. I started thinking about something like this when Falsoft started...
Micro Cornucopia was a 1980s microcomputer magazine for hobbyists and enthusiasts, published in Bend, Oregon by David J. Thompson, a former Tektronix engineer. The magazine, originally conceived as a newsletter for users of the Ferguson Big Board (a single-board CP/M computer), was published bi-monthly beginning in July 1981. It soon expanded its coverage to other board-level computers, the Kaypro computer, and general hobbyist/experimental computing, with special interest areas being robotics,...
Monthly newsletter for Higbee's employees for December 1984. It contains an article about employee Halle Berry with photo. Berry had recently won the title of Miss Teen All American. It also contains an article about TV personality Earl Keyes, who played the role of Mr. Jingeling.
Topics: Cleveland, Christmas, Halle Berry, actor, Higbee's, employee, newsletter, 1984, Mr. Jingeling, Earl...
The Australian Apple Review newsletter was published by Gareth Powell from 1984-1987.
CLOAD was a magazine on cassette for the TRS-80 Model I computer, and was a forerunner of the later concept of disk magazines. It began publishing in March, 1978, by founding publisher Ralph McElroy and editor Dick Fuller. Its name was from the command used in TRS-80 BASIC to load a program from a cassette. David Lagerquist became editor-in-chief of CLOAD Magazine in July 1980. It continued publishing until at least 1984, and was joined by sister publication Chromasette, for the TRS-80 Color...
The Midnite Software Gazette was a newsletter started for the Central Illinois PET Users Group. Published by Jim Strasa, it dated from 1980 to 1987, published 41 issues and additional materials, and expanded its coverage out to all Commodore computers.
The Coco Clipboard Magazine is a Tandy Color Computer-oriented newsletter published in the late 1980s.
CoCo-123 is the voice of the Glenside Computer Club, a newsletter dedicated to the Radio Shack Color Computer, and published since 1985 into the 1990s.
Global Indoor Health Network, Newsletter 02-17-2017, special commemorative issue about Jack Thrasher PhD toxicologist
Topics: Global Indoor Health Network, Newsletter, February 17, 2017, Jack Thrasher, PhD, toxicologist,...
Five issues of the Interactive Computing newsletter (January through September 1979 inclusive) and 24 issues of Interactive Computing Press Review (December 1975 through September 1979 inclusive.) Published by the Association of Time-Sharing Users and the Association of Small Computer Users and shared here with the permission of its founder, Hal Segal. Here's an interview with Hal . Later issues of Interactive Computing are in another item at archive.org . This set of newsletters is a...
Topics: Interactive Computing, timesharing, time sharing computers, newsletters, Association of Small...
The Toronto PET User's Group (est. 1979) is the oldest computer user group in Canada, the second-oldest Commodore users' group in the world, and was also probably the largest. The non-profit group is based in Toronto but has an international membership. TPUG supports nearly all Commodore computers, including the PET, SuperPET, CBM, B128/256/1024, VIC-20, C64, C128, Plus/4, C16, C65 and Amiga, and including the COMAL, CP/M and GEOS environments. TPUG Meetings are held at 7:30 pm on the 3rd...
"The Guardian" Leaders newsletter published by the Camp Fire Girls in June 1940. Prominent physical educator and outdoor recreation leader Jay B. Nash is featured on page one.
Topics: CAMP FIRE GIRLS, JAY B. NASH, THE GUARDIAN, OUTDOOR RECREATION, CAMPING
U,S,C.G. and U.S.N. rates and specialty marks.,
Topics: Sea Services, Foreign and U.S.uniforms rates
Pictures of Navy and Marine Corps insignia most welcome.
Topic: Crow's Nest Newsletter Number Five
The Australian National OS9 Newsletter was a Color Computer-oriented newsletter created by Gordon Bentzen, Don Berrie and Bob Devries. Issues were produced from July 1988 to August 1994. Credit to CoCoCoding for issue information and summary.
OS-9 International was a newsletter for the European Forum For OS-9, published in the 1990s.
Henry George Seldes (/ˈsɛldəs/ sel-dəs;[aa] November 16, 1890 — July 2, 1995) was an American investigative journalist and media critic. The writer and critic Gilbert Seldes was his younger brother. Actress Marian Seldes is his niece. Influenced by Lincoln Steffens, his career began when he was nineteen years old and was hired at the Pittsburgh Leader. In 1914, he was appointed night editor of the Pittsburgh Post. In 1916, he went to the United Press in London and, starting in 1917,...
The 80 Notebook was a newsletter published in the early 1980s covering the TRS-80.
Newsletter KUNCI #4 : Budaya Materi
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Topics: newsletter, pdf, KUNCI Cultural Studies, budaya materi
Sea Service rates and specialty marks,
Topic: Crow's Nest Newsletter
Shareware Solutions II is a computer newsletter dedicated to the Apple II, published in the late 1990s.
The Texas Instruments User's Group Newsletter, published in the early 1980s, gave information on a wide range of Texas Instruments machines and computers.
II Alive Newsletter was a publication published by Quality Computers, a large mail-order retailer specializing in the Apple II.
The Open Apple Gazette was the newsletter for the Apple /// SIG of the San Francisco Apple Core users group. 9 issues were published in the early 1980s.
Uptime Magazine, published by JWT Enterprises (Jordan Tsvetkoff). Total issues - 24. A newsletter for the RS-DOS, OS9, OSK, CoCo, and 68XXX's. It was published from September 1992 until August 1994. Jordan also published Ninetimes disk magazine.
The Atari Connection was the official publication of the Atari Computer division. It was a quarterly slick-format newsletter/magazine that was as much an extended sales brochure as it was an informational magazine. As such, it was very similar to what Apple put out for their computers.