Computer magazines .net is a British Internet magazine founded in 1994 and published monthly by Future Publishing. It is sold under the name Web Builder in the USA. ...more on Wikipedia about ".net (magazine)"
ACM Queue is a computer magazine published by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). Steve Bourne helped found the magazine when he was President of the ACM and he is now Chair of the Advisory Board. The magazine is produced by computing professionals and is intended for computing professionals. It is available in print and electronic form for ACM members. ...more on Wikipedia about "ACM Queue"
Amstrad Computer User was the official magazine for the Amstrad CPC series of 8-bit home computers. ...more on Wikipedia about "Amstrad Computer User"
Australian Macworld is the Australian version of the US Macworld magazine. See publisher's website . ...more on Wikipedia about "Australian Macworld"
Australian Personal Computer (commonly called APC) is a computer magazine in Australia. It is issued every month and comes with a DVD of software. The magazine is published by Australian Consolidated Press. ...more on Wikipedia about "Australian Personal Computer"
BUG Magazine is a popular general information technology magazine in Croatia, published by Bug, d.o.o. ...more on Wikipedia about "BUG Magazine"
BYTE magazine was probably the most influentual microcomputer magazine in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s, because of its wide-ranging editorial coverage. Whereas many magazines from the mid-80s to date have been dedicated to the Wintel platform or the Mac, mostly from a business user's perspective, BYTE covered developments in the entire field of "small computers and software", and sometimes included in-depth features on other computing fields as well, such as supercomputers and high-reliability computing. ...more on Wikipedia about "BYTE"
c't (short for Computertechnik, originally for computing today) is a German biweekly computer magazine, published by the Heise Verlag publishing house. An edition for the Netherlands also exists, which is published monthly. The first issue was published in December 1983. ...more on Wikipedia about "C't"
C/C++ Users Journal is printed computer magazine. ...more on Wikipedia about "C/C++ Users Journal"
Call-A.P.P.L.E. Magazine is the publication of the Apple Pugetsound Program Library Exchange ( A.P.P.L.E.). A.P.P.L.E has produced 18 volumes of the magazine from 1978 to 1990 and 2002 to 2006. The magazine is produced on a monthly basis and contains information about all aspects of Apple computers all the way from the Apple-1 to the latest Macintosh computers with Mac OS X. ...more on Wikipedia about "Call-A.P.P.L.E."
Computer is an IEEE Computer Society practitioner-oriented magazine issued to all members of the society. It contains peer-reviewed articles, regular columns and interviews on current computing-related issues. ...more on Wikipedia about "Computer (magazine)"
Computer Graphics is a publication of ACM SIGGRAPH. It have published for years the proceedings of the annual SIGGRAPH conferences, as well as a variety of papers on a quarterly basis. Starting in 2003 all printed material from the annual conference will be included in an issue of ACM Transactions on Graphics (TOG). ...more on Wikipedia about "Computer Graphics (Publication)"
Computer magazines are about computers and related subjects, such as networking and the Internet. They are popular in advanced countries. Most computer magazines offer advice, some coding instruction, reviews of the latest technologies, and advertisements. Computer magazines used to contain type-in programs, but these have gone out of fashion. Some printed computer magazines include floppy disks, CD-ROMs, or other media as inserts; they may contain software, demos, and electronic versions of the print issue. Many computer magazines are issued only on disk with no printed counterpart; such publications are known as disk magazines and are listed separately. ...more on Wikipedia about "Computer magazine"
ComputerWeekly is a serious computer magazine/newspaper published in the UK by Reed Business Information. It is available for purchase in some magazine outlets (for the current price of £2.50, in September 2005), but usually obtainable for free for companies in the IT sector, by signing a free subscription form. ...more on Wikipedia about "Computer Weekly"
Computerworld is an IT magazine that provides information to technology managers. It is published in many countries around the world under the same or similar names. Its publisher International Data Group also publishes PC World and several other magazines. ...more on Wikipedia about "Computerworld"
Computing is a weekly magazine published by VNU Business Publications for the United Kingdom computing trade. It is mailed to members of the British Computer Society and other accredited workers in the field of computing as well as being sold on newsstands. With . ...more on Wikipedia about "Computing (magazine)"
Computing with the Amstrad CPC was one of the first magazines for the Amstrad CPC computers. It included games reviews, pokes [computer codes for altering games so that you could have help with playing games such as infinite lives or unlimited ammunition], an interactive fiction column [or adventure games as they were called back then] and a lot of serious articles about programming and hardware. ...more on Wikipedia about "Computing with the Amstrad CPC"
Dr. Dobb's Journal is a magazine for computer programmers. ...more on Wikipedia about "Dr. Dobb's Journal"
eWeek: the Enterprise Newsweekly is a weekly magazine published by Ziff Davis Media, featuring editorials, reviews, labs and rumors. ...more on Wikipedia about "EWeek"
First Monday is an electronic peer-reviewed journal for articles about the Internet. ...more on Wikipedia about "First Monday (journal)"
Free Software Magazine (a.k.a. FSM, The Open Voice) is a monthly, mostly free-content magazine about free software. It was started in November 2004 by Australian Tony Mobily, under the auspices of The Open Company Partners, Inc. (based in the British Virgin Islands). ...more on Wikipedia about "Free Software Magazine"
Free Software Magazine (FSM) was a China-based attempt, in 2002, at a free-content magazine, typeset with LaTeX, on the Free Software Movement, free software and related issues, which was very similar to the more recent globally-distributed Free Software Magazine. ...more on Wikipedia about "Free Software Magazine (China)"
Future Publishing Ltd - part of Future plc - is a magazine publishing company based primarily in Bath ( UK), but with offices in London ( UK), Milan ( Italy), California and New York ( United States) and Levallois-Perret ( France). ...more on Wikipedia about "Future Publishing"
A Persian computer magazine published in Iran. Rayaneh is the Persian word for computer. ...more on Wikipedia about "Gozaresh magazine"
GruntvillE Is a website dedicated to case modding, overclocking, computer hardware reviews, and video gaming. The current forum membership is over 5000 registered users, with well over 100,000 posts. GruntvillE is also host to one of the largest online Casemod Galleries. It offers over 500 galleries with over 7000 pictures. If you like casemods, make sure to check it out. GruntvillE is known as website where casemodders and overclockers can discuss questions and ideas they have for their machines or what hardware and accessories are available for them to try out. There are also reviews of hardware to help buyers choose the right product for them. ...more on Wikipedia about "Gruntville"
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