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Computer magazine

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784: 736: 654: 599: 544: 809: 760: 711: 686: 629: 569: 519: 148:(1953–1963), was an early computer magazine produced by Jackson W. Granholm out of Thousand Oaks, California. The first documented copyright was applied for on September 1, 1954, for issue #36. The magazine was released on the 1st and 15th of each month, which places issue #1 at March 15, 1953. The last documented release was issue #217 on March 15, 1962. 355:
Many magazines ended that year, however, as their number exceeded the amount of available advertising revenue despite revenue in the first half of the year five times that of the same period in 1982. Consumers typically bought computer magazines more for advertising than articles, which benefited
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in March 1984 apologized for publishing articles by authors with promotional material for companies without describing them as such, and in April suggested that other magazines adopt its rules of conduct for writers, such as prohibiting employees from accepting gifts or discounts.
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s editor in chief reported in the December 1983 issue that "all of our previous records are being broken: largest number of pages, largest-number of four-color advertising pages, largest number of printing pages, and the largest number of editorial pages".
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held the first Computer Art Contest in 1963 and maintained a bibliography on computer art starting in 1966. It also included a monthly estimated census of all installed computer systems starting in 1962. In 1973 name changed to
337:; their editors vowed to impartially cover their computers whether or not doing so hurt their readers' and advertisers' market, while claiming that their rivals pandered to advertisers by only publishing positive news. 424:
Some computer magazines in the 1980s and 1990s were issued only on disk (or cassette tape, or CD-ROM) with no printed counterpart; such publications are collectively (though somewhat inaccurately) known as
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In 1983 an average of one new computer magazine appeared each week. By late that year more than 200 existed. Their numbers and size grew rapidly with the industry they covered, and
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s publisher assured readers in an editorial that his company "is and continues to be quite successful ... even during these particularly difficult times in the industry".
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In 1955, the "Automatic Computing Machinery" column was removed, but the full-length articles about computers still continued to appear with varying frequency.
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In some ways the heyday of printed computer magazines was a period during the 1990s, in which a large number of computer manufacturers took out
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stated in June that many of the "150 or so" industry magazines published articles without clearly identifying authors' affiliations and
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similarly stated that year that it was the only general-interest survivor of about 150 consumer-computing magazines published in 1983.
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stated in 1988 that it was the only one of the 18 color magazines that covered computer games in 1983 to survive the crash.
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in computer magazines, so they became quite thick and could afford to carry quite a number of articles in each issue, (
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established in 1943, articles about computers began to appear from 1946 (Volume 2, Number 15) to the end of 1954.
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and hurt weaker ones. Also affecting magazines was the computer industry's economic difficulties, including the
797: 603: 449: 138: 1337: 1304: 1584: 1112: 1189: 1579: 1124: 176: 477:, many computer magazines went bankrupt or transitioned to an online-only existence. Exceptions include 492: 378: 70: 1038: 197: 192: 125: 1164: 1075: 1589: 365: 283:, but these have gone out of fashion. The first magazine devoted to this class of computers was 1279: 432: 1221: 1410: 1383: 1062: 1040:
Roster of Organizations in the Field of Automatic Computing Machinery 1952-07-20: Vol 1 Iss 3
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This article is about computer magazines in general. For the magazine published by IEEE, see
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National Conference proceedings (Proceedings of National Meetings) (1952, 1956–1987, 1997)
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magazine. It is still being published as an e-publication on the Internet. Futurist
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was a good example of this trend). Some printed computer magazines used to include
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number of pages declined from 392 in December 1983 to 160 ten months later, and
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floppy disks, CDs, or other media as inserts; they typically contained
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Computers were the only industry with product-specific magazines, like
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Lost Media Wiki article containing U.S Copyright Office catalog scans
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The BITSAVERS.ORG Documents Library: Computers and Automation Journal
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was an influential technical journal that published until the 1990s.
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Roster of Organizations in the Field of Automatic Computing Machinery
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Claims to be "the first hobby-computer publication in the world."
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were among the three thickest magazines of any kind per issue.
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First published in 1952, regular publication started in 1964 (
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Sipe, Russell (August 1988). "The Greatest Story Ever Told".
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1980s computer magazines skewed their content towards the
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Roster of Organizations in the Computing Machinery Field
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Notable regular contributors to print computer magazines
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computersAndAutomation :: Computer Census 1962-74
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magazine to focus on software, rather than hardware.
1546: 1165:"ACM-NATIONAL-CONFERENCE Conference - Proceedings" 225:(1966–1976), Amateur Computer Society newsletter. 1571: 994: 391:s advertising sales declined by 50% in 90 days, 1540: 1402: 1375: 1298: 1296: 1257:Computing News Issue #217 from March 15th, 1962 920:"Publications in computing: an informal review" 1268:Amateur Computer Society newsletter, 1966-1976 1246:Computing News Issue #216 from March 1st, 1962 553:TV comedian, TV reviewer, newspaper columnist 465:, and electronic versions of the print issue. 1531: 1483: 893:Publications in computing: an informal review 486: 368:, which badly hurt the home-computer market. 16:Magazine about computers and related subjects 1489: 1462: 1456: 1429: 1381: 1293: 473:However, with the rise in popularity of the 1435: 1330: 1188:Limited, National Computing Centre (1970). 769:Security specialist, writer, cryptographer 663:Writer, consultant, programmer, songwriter 511:Magazines (years of regular contributions) 1525: 1506: 1356: 164:from 1957, was another early computer and 1194:. National Computing Centre. p. 40. 995:Sternadori, Miglena; Holmes, Tim (2020). 935: 1408: 1187: 185:IBM Journal of Research and Development 1572: 45:offer (or offered) advice, some offer 1438:"The Fall And Rise Of Computer Games" 917: 1512: 1362: 1302: 1191:A World List of Computer Periodicals 1001:. John Wiley & Sons. p. 7. 990: 988: 913: 911: 238:People's Computer Company Newsletter 1547:Mansfield, Richard (January 1988). 1043:. Berkeley Enterprises. 1952-07-20. 793:Science fiction and fantasy author 113:Computers and Automation and People 13: 1303:Berg, Eric N. (8 September 1984). 1057:. Berkeley Enterprises. 1957: 111. 382:β€”with my magazine on the runway". 14: 1601: 1382:Bartimo, Jim (10 December 1984). 985: 908: 102:(1952–1953). It was published by 1513:Lock, Robert C. (January 1986). 998:The Handbook of Magazine Studies 807: 782: 758: 734: 709: 684: 652: 627: 597: 567: 542: 517: 1272: 1261: 1250: 1239: 1228: 1181: 1157: 1133: 1117: 1106: 885: 818:Writer, consultant, programmer 1363:Lock, Robert (December 1983). 1141:"AFIPS conference proceedings" 1082: 1047: 1031: 1015: 960: 872: 863: 798:Computer Shopper (UK magazine) 745:Game scriptwriter, journalist 468: 356:already leading journals like 216: 212:from 1958, scientific journal. 188:from 1957, scientific journal. 180:from 1957, scientific journal. 156:from 1954, scientific journal. 142:from 1952, scientific journal. 139:IEEE Transactions on Computers 124:conference proceedings (AFIPS 60: 33:and related subjects, such as 1: 1490:Maher, Jimmy (28 July 2013). 1442:Compute!'s Apple Applications 1436:Gutman, Dan (December 1987). 1024:The Computing Machinery Field 918:Weiss, Eric A. (1972-07-01). 902: 100:The Computing Machinery Field 1492:"A Computer for Every Home?" 1409:Bartimo, Jim (4 June 1984). 1338:"Boom in Computer Magazines" 1305:"The Computer Magazine Glut" 1145:onesearch.library.uwa.edu.au 279:market, and used to contain 7: 834: 177:Information and Computation 82:Digital Computer Newsletter 10: 1606: 493:List of computer magazines 490: 487:List of computer magazines 258:(1976–2014) was the first 204:, and a scientific journal 126:Joint Computer Conferences 84:, (1949–1968), founded by 71:Mathematics of Computation 55: 18: 1494:. The Digital Antiquarian 1463:Bisson, Gigi (May 1986). 924:Communications of the ACM 638:Paralegal, legal blogger 193:Communications of the ACM 115:, and finally in 1975 to 856: 438: 366:video game crash of 1983 266: 108:Computers and Automation 1284:www.computerhistory.org 720:Science fiction author 578:Science fiction author 1465:"Antic Then & Now" 1090:"Computer Art Contest" 1070:Cite journal requires 1055:"Computers and People" 98:(1951–1952), and then 1534:Computer Gaming World 1384:"Magazines Woo Users" 937:10.1145/361454.361456 619:Computer Gaming World 414:Computer Gaming World 350:conflicts of interest 246:Amateur Computer Club 117:Computers and People. 1585:History of computing 695:Professor, investor 677:Software Development 209:The Computer Journal 92:Computers and People 1169:ACM Digital Library 878:Alternative title: 691:Nicholas Negroponte 86:Albert Eugene Smith 21:Computer (magazine) 1580:Computer magazines 1342:The New York Times 1309:The New York Times 1220:has generic name ( 822:Dr. Dobb's Journal 405:Compute!'s Gazette 286:Creative Computing 255:Dr. Dobb's Journal 196:from 1958, mix of 153:Journal of the ACM 76:Scientific journal 27:Computer magazines 1519:Compute's Gazette 1344:. 9 November 1983 1201:978-0-85012-029-5 1008:978-1-119-15152-4 972:nsarchive.gwu.edu 832: 831: 741:Rhianna Pratchett 659:Stan Kelly-Bootle 433:listed separately 372:, the founder of 1597: 1565: 1564: 1562: 1560: 1549:"Editor's Notes" 1544: 1538: 1537: 1529: 1523: 1522: 1515:"Editor's Notes" 1510: 1504: 1503: 1501: 1499: 1487: 1481: 1480: 1478: 1476: 1471:. pp. 16–23 1460: 1454: 1453: 1451: 1449: 1433: 1427: 1426: 1424: 1422: 1417:. pp. 54–56 1406: 1400: 1399: 1397: 1395: 1390:. pp. 35–36 1379: 1373: 1372: 1365:"Editor's Notes" 1360: 1354: 1353: 1351: 1349: 1334: 1328: 1327: 1325: 1323: 1300: 1291: 1290: 1276: 1270: 1265: 1259: 1254: 1248: 1243: 1237: 1232: 1226: 1225: 1219: 1215: 1213: 1205: 1185: 1179: 1178: 1176: 1175: 1161: 1155: 1154: 1152: 1151: 1137: 1131: 1130: 1121: 1115: 1110: 1104: 1103: 1101: 1100: 1086: 1080: 1079: 1073: 1068: 1066: 1058: 1051: 1045: 1044: 1035: 1029: 1028: 1019: 1013: 1012: 992: 983: 982: 980: 978: 964: 958: 957: 939: 915: 896: 889: 883: 876: 870: 867: 851:Online newspaper 812: 811: 787: 786: 763: 762: 739: 738: 714: 713: 689: 688: 657: 656: 632: 631: 602: 601: 574:Orson Scott Card 572: 571: 547: 546: 522: 521: 502: 501: 450:Computer Shopper 410: 397: 390: 379:Flight Simulator 316: 281:type-in programs 275:end of the then- 198:science magazine 172:was its founder. 41:. Most computer 1605: 1604: 1600: 1599: 1598: 1596: 1595: 1594: 1590:Magazine genres 1570: 1569: 1568: 1558: 1556: 1545: 1541: 1530: 1526: 1511: 1507: 1497: 1495: 1488: 1484: 1474: 1472: 1461: 1457: 1447: 1445: 1434: 1430: 1420: 1418: 1407: 1403: 1393: 1391: 1380: 1376: 1361: 1357: 1347: 1345: 1336: 1335: 1331: 1321: 1319: 1301: 1294: 1278: 1277: 1273: 1266: 1262: 1255: 1251: 1244: 1240: 1233: 1229: 1217: 1216: 1207: 1206: 1202: 1186: 1182: 1173: 1171: 1163: 1162: 1158: 1149: 1147: 1139: 1138: 1134: 1123: 1122: 1118: 1111: 1107: 1098: 1096: 1088: 1087: 1083: 1071: 1069: 1060: 1059: 1053: 1052: 1048: 1037: 1036: 1032: 1021: 1020: 1016: 1009: 993: 986: 976: 974: 966: 965: 961: 916: 909: 905: 900: 899: 890: 886: 877: 873: 868: 864: 859: 841:Online magazine 837: 806: 781: 757: 733: 716:Jerry Pournelle 708: 683: 651: 626: 596: 566: 549:Charlie Brooker 541: 516: 500: 495: 489: 471: 441: 408: 395: 388: 314: 269: 219: 166:data processing 104:Edmund Berkeley 63: 58: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 1603: 1593: 1592: 1587: 1582: 1567: 1566: 1539: 1524: 1505: 1482: 1455: 1428: 1401: 1374: 1355: 1329: 1292: 1271: 1260: 1249: 1238: 1227: 1200: 1180: 1156: 1132: 1116: 1105: 1081: 1072:|journal= 1046: 1030: 1014: 1007: 984: 959: 930:(7): 491–497. 906: 904: 901: 898: 897: 884: 871: 861: 860: 858: 855: 854: 853: 848: 843: 836: 833: 830: 829: 819: 816: 803: 802: 794: 791: 789:Charles Stross 778: 777: 774:Wired magazine 770: 767: 765:Bruce Schneier 754: 753: 746: 743: 730: 729: 721: 718: 705: 704: 700:Wired magazine 696: 693: 680: 679: 664: 661: 648: 647: 639: 636: 623: 622: 609: 608:Game designer 606: 604:Chris Crawford 593: 592: 579: 576: 563: 562: 554: 551: 538: 537: 536:(1980s–1990s) 529: 526: 513: 512: 509: 506: 499: 496: 491:Main article: 488: 485: 470: 467: 445:advertisements 440: 437: 428:disk magazines 374:Computer Games 268: 265: 264: 263: 251: 242: 234: 226: 223:ACS Newsletter 218: 215: 214: 213: 205: 202:trade magazine 189: 181: 173: 157: 149: 146:Computing News 143: 135: 129: 128:) (1952–1987). 119: 89: 79: 62: 59: 57: 54: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1602: 1591: 1588: 1586: 1583: 1581: 1578: 1577: 1575: 1554: 1550: 1543: 1535: 1528: 1520: 1516: 1509: 1493: 1486: 1470: 1466: 1459: 1443: 1439: 1432: 1416: 1412: 1405: 1389: 1385: 1378: 1370: 1366: 1359: 1343: 1339: 1333: 1318: 1314: 1310: 1306: 1299: 1297: 1289: 1285: 1281: 1275: 1269: 1264: 1258: 1253: 1247: 1242: 1236: 1231: 1223: 1211: 1203: 1197: 1193: 1192: 1184: 1170: 1166: 1160: 1146: 1142: 1136: 1128: 1127: 1120: 1114: 1109: 1095: 1091: 1085: 1077: 1064: 1056: 1050: 1042: 1041: 1034: 1026: 1025: 1018: 1010: 1004: 1000: 999: 991: 989: 973: 969: 963: 955: 951: 947: 943: 938: 933: 929: 925: 921: 914: 912: 907: 894: 888: 881: 875: 866: 862: 852: 849: 847: 844: 842: 839: 838: 827: 823: 820: 817: 815: 814:Don Lancaster 810: 805: 804: 800: 799: 795: 792: 790: 785: 780: 779: 776: 775: 771: 768: 766: 761: 756: 755: 752: 751: 747: 744: 742: 737: 732: 731: 727: 726: 722: 719: 717: 712: 707: 706: 702: 701: 697: 694: 692: 687: 682: 681: 678: 674: 673:OS/2 Magazine 671:(1984–2000), 670: 669: 665: 662: 660: 655: 650: 649: 645: 644: 640: 637: 635: 630: 625: 624: 621: 620: 615: 614: 610: 607: 605: 600: 595: 594: 591: 590: 585: 584: 580: 577: 575: 570: 565: 564: 560: 559: 555: 552: 550: 545: 540: 539: 535: 534: 530: 527: 525: 520: 515: 514: 510: 507: 504: 503: 494: 484: 482: 481: 476: 466: 464: 460: 456: 452: 451: 446: 436: 434: 430: 429: 422: 420: 416: 415: 407: 406: 401: 394: 387: 386: 381: 380: 375: 371: 367: 363: 359: 353: 351: 347: 346: 340: 336: 335: 330: 329: 324: 319: 313: 312: 307: 306: 301: 296: 294: 293: 288: 287: 282: 278: 277:microcomputer 274: 261: 260:microcomputer 257: 256: 252: 250:(ACCN; 1973–) 249: 247: 243: 240: 239: 235: 232: 231: 230:Computerworld 227: 224: 221: 220: 211: 210: 206: 203: 199: 195: 194: 190: 187: 186: 182: 179: 178: 174: 171: 167: 163: 162: 158: 155: 154: 150: 147: 144: 141: 140: 136: 133: 130: 127: 123: 120: 118: 114: 109: 105: 101: 97: 93: 90: 87: 83: 80: 77: 73: 72: 68: 67: 66: 53: 51: 48: 44: 40: 36: 32: 28: 22: 1557:. 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Retrieved 971: 962: 927: 923: 892: 887: 879: 874: 865: 825: 821: 801:(1994–2004) 796: 772: 748: 728:(1980–2006) 723: 703:(1993–1998) 698: 676: 672: 666: 641: 634:Pamela Jones 617: 611: 587: 581: 556: 531: 478: 472: 448: 442: 426: 423: 418: 412: 403: 399: 392: 383: 377: 373: 361: 357: 354: 343: 338: 332: 326: 322: 320: 309: 303: 299: 297: 290: 284: 270: 253: 244: 236: 228: 222: 207: 191: 183: 175: 170:Donald Prell 159: 151: 145: 137: 116: 112: 107: 99: 95: 91: 81: 69: 64: 26: 25: 1559:10 November 1555:. p. 6 1348:25 February 1218:|last= 977:25 December 668:UNIX Review 533:Unix Review 528:Programmer 508:Occupation 469:2000s–2010s 362:PC Magazine 328:PC Magazine 241:(1972–1981) 217:1960s–1970s 61:1940s–1950s 47:programming 1574:Categories 1475:28 January 1174:2023-06-28 1150:2023-06-14 1099:2023-06-14 903:References 895:, p. 494). 643:Linux User 524:Ken Arnold 455:covermount 370:Dan Gutman 248:Newsletter 161:Datamation 65:Sources:. 35:networking 29:are about 1448:18 August 1415:InfoWorld 1388:InfoWorld 1317:0362-4331 1210:cite book 946:0001-0782 646:, others 345:InfoWorld 50:tutorials 43:magazines 31:computers 1553:Compute! 1498:19 March 1394:14 March 1369:Compute! 954:27504743 846:Magazine 835:See also 589:Compute! 561:(1990s) 475:Internet 459:software 431:and are 419:Compute! 400:Compute! 393:Compute! 334:Macworld 323:80 Micro 311:Compute! 305:80 Micro 273:hobbyist 39:Internet 37:and the 828:, etc. 750:PC Zone 558:PC Zone 56:History 1421:20 May 1322:3 July 1315:  1198:  1005:  952:  944:  396:'s 331:, and 233:(1967) 1469:Antic 950:S2CID 857:Notes 583:Ahoy! 505:Name 480:Wired 463:demos 439:1990s 409:' 389:' 385:Antic 315:' 267:1980s 122:AFIPS 1561:2013 1500:2016 1477:2015 1450:2014 1423:2019 1396:2011 1350:2011 1324:2017 1313:ISSN 1222:help 1196:ISBN 1076:help 1003:ISBN 979:2021 942:ISSN 826:Byte 725:BYTE 613:BYTE 402:and 360:and 358:BYTE 339:BYTE 302:and 300:BYTE 292:Byte 932:doi 132:ACM 1576:: 1551:. 1517:. 1467:. 1440:. 1413:. 1386:. 1367:. 1340:. 1311:. 1307:. 1295:^ 1286:. 1282:. 1214:: 1212:}} 1208:{{ 1167:. 1143:. 1092:. 1067:: 1065:}} 1061:{{ 987:^ 970:. 948:. 940:. 928:15 926:. 922:. 910:^ 824:, 675:, 616:, 586:, 461:, 435:. 352:. 325:, 289:. 200:, 106:. 1563:. 1502:. 1479:. 1452:. 1425:. 1398:. 1352:. 1326:. 1224:) 1204:. 1177:. 1153:. 1102:. 1078:) 1074:( 1011:. 981:. 956:. 934:: 882:. 88:. 78:. 23:.

Index

Computer (magazine)
computers
networking
Internet
magazines
programming
tutorials
Mathematics of Computation
Scientific journal
Albert Eugene Smith
Edmund Berkeley
AFIPS
Joint Computer Conferences
ACM
IEEE Transactions on Computers
Journal of the ACM
Datamation
data processing
Donald Prell
Information and Computation
IBM Journal of Research and Development
Communications of the ACM
science magazine
trade magazine
The Computer Journal
Computerworld
People's Computer Company Newsletter
Amateur Computer Club
Dr. Dobb's Journal
microcomputer

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