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Computer magazine

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Computer magazines are about computers and related subjects, such as networking and the Internet. Most computer magazines offer (or offered) advice, some offer programming tutorials, reviews of the latest technologies, and advertisements.

History

1940s-1970s

Mathematics of Computation established in 1943, articles about computers began to appear from 1946 (Volume 2, Number 15) to the end of 1954. Scientific journal.

Digital Computer Newsletter, 1949-1968, founded by Albert Eugene Smith.

Computers and Automation was published from 1951 to 1978 and is arguably the first computer magazine. It was briefly called Roster of Organizations in the Computing Machinery Field (1951-1952), and The Computing Machinery Field (1952-1953)[1] and was published by Edmund Berkeley. It held the first Computer Art Contest circa 1963 and maintained a bibliography on computer art starting in 1966.[2] It also included a monthly estimated census of all installed computer systems starting in 1962.[3]

IEEE Transactions on Computers from 1952, scientific journal.

Journal of the ACM from 1954, scientific journal.

Datamation published in 1957 was another early Computer and Data Processing magazine. It is still being published as an ePublication on the Internet. Futurist Donald Prell was its founder.

Information and Computation from 1957, scientific journal.

IBM Journal of Research and Development from 1957, scientific journal.

Communications of the ACM from 1958, mix of science magazine, trade magazine, and a scientific journal

The Computer Journal from 1958, scientific journal.

Dr Dobbs Journal (1976) is one of the oldest computer magazines still being published, and it was the first to focus on software, rather than hardware.

1980s

1980s computer magazines skewed their content towards the hobbyist end of the then-microcomputer market, and used to contain type-in programs, but these have gone out of fashion. The first magazine devoted to this class of computers was Creative Computing. Byte was an influential technical journal that published until the 1990s.

In 1983 an average of one new computer magazine appeared each week.[4] By late that year more than 200 existed. Their numbers and size grew rapidly with the industry they covered, and BYTE and 80 Micro were among the three thickest magazines of any kind per issue.[5] Compute!'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".[6] Computers were the only industry with product-specific magazines, like 80 Micro, PC Magazine, and Macworld; 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.[7]

Many magazines ended in 1984, 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 already leading journals like BYTE and PC Magazine and hurt weaker ones. Also affecting magazines was the computer industry's economic difficulties,[4] including the video game crash of 1983, which badly hurt the home-computer market. Dan Gutman, the founder of Computer Games, recalled in 1987 that "the computer games industry crashed and burned like a bad night of Flight Simulator—with my magazine on the runway".[8] Antic's advertising sales declined by 50% in 90 days,[9] Compute!'s number of pages declined from 392 in December 1983 to 160 ten months later,[10] and Compute! and Compute!'s Gazette'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".[11] Computer Gaming World stated in 1988 that it was the only one of the 18 color magazines that covered computer games in 1983 to survive the crash.[12] Compute! similarly stated that year that it was the only general-interest survivor of about 150 consumer-computing magazines published in 1983.[13]

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 disk magazines and are listed separately.

1990s

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 advertisements in computer magazines, so they became quite thick and could afford to carry quite a number of articles in each issue, (Computer Shopper (UK magazine) was a good example of this trend). Some printed computer magazines used to include floppy disks, CD-ROMs, or other media as inserts; they typically contained software, demos, and electronic versions of the print issue.

2000s-2010s

However, with the rise in popularity of the internet, many computer magazines went bankrupt or transitioned to an online-only existence. Exceptions include Wired magazine, which is more of a technology magazine than a computer magazine.

List of computer magazines

Notable regular contributors to print computer magazines

Name Occupation(s) Magazine(s) (years of regular contributions)
United States Ken Arnold Programmer Unix Review (1980s - 1990s)
United Kingdom Charlie Brooker TV comedian, TV reviewer, newspaper columnist PC Zone (1990s)
United States Orson Scott Card Science fiction author Ahoy!, Compute!
United Kingdom Chris Crawford Game designer BYTE, Computer Gaming World
United States Pamela Jones Paralegal, legal blogger Linux User, others
United Kingdom Stan Kelly-Bootle Writer, consultant, programmer, songwriter UNIX Review (1984 - 2000), OS/2 Magazine, Software Development
United States Nicholas Negroponte Professor, investor Wired magazine (1993 - 1998)
United States Jerry Pournelle Science fiction author BYTE (1980 - 2006)
United Kingdom Rhianna Pratchett Game scriptwriter, journalist PC Zone
United States Bruce Schneier Security specialist, writer, cryptographer Wired magazine
United Kingdom Charles Stross Science fiction and fantasy author Computer Shopper (UK magazine) (1994-2004)

References

  1. ^ "Computers and People". Berkeley Enterprises. 1957: 111. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ The BITSAVERS.ORG Documents Library: Computers and Automation Journal
  3. ^ https://archive.org/details/bitsavers_computersArCensus196274_16451676
  4. ^ a b Berg, Eric N. (1984-09-08). "The Computer Magazine Glut". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-07-03.
  5. ^ "Boom in Computer Magazines". The New York Times. 1983-11-09. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  6. ^ Lock, Robert (December 1983). "Editor's Notes". Compute!. p. 6.
  7. ^ Bartimo, Jim (1984-12-10). "Magazines Woo Users". InfoWorld. pp. 35–36. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
  8. ^ Gutman, Dan (December 1987). "The Fall And Rise Of Computer Games". Compute!'s Apple Applications. p. 64. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  9. ^ Bisson, Gigi (May 1986). "Antic Then & Now". Antic. pp. 16–23. Retrieved 28 January 2015.
  10. ^ Maher, Jimmy (2013-07-28). "A Computer for Every Home?". The Digital Antiquarian. Retrieved 19 March 2016.
  11. ^ Lock, Robert C. (January 1986). "Editor's Notes". Compute's Gazette. p. 6.
  12. ^ Sipe, Russell (August 1988). "The Greatest Story Ever Told". Computer Gaming World. p. 6.
  13. ^ Mansfield, Richard (January 1988). "Editor's Notes". Compute!. p. 6. Retrieved 10 November 2013.