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Customers who subscribe to certain AOL plans are eligible to receive a digital subscription to popular magazine titles and access content on up to 5 devices. To view what your AOL plan has to offer, check out your AOL MyBenefits page. If you’d like to get a plan that includes AOL MyMagazines, give us a call at 1.800.827.6364.
Journalist reporting and evaluation of video games in periodicals began from the late 1970s to 1980 in general coin-operated industry magazines like Play Meter [1] and RePlay, [2] home entertainment magazines like Video, [3] as well as magazines focused on computing and new information technologies like InfoWorld or Popular Electronics.
Page 6 (subtitled Atari Users Magazine) was a British magazine aimed at users of Atari 8-bit computers and Atari ST home computers. The first issue was in 1982, and it was renamed to Page 6 Atari User and then New Atari User before ceasing publication in 1998.
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Edwards' proposal was for a 32-page A4-sized magazine, to be funded by subscriptions; he interested John Clute, Colin Greenland, and Roz Kaveney in the idea and sent the proposal to the British Science Fiction Association (BSFA). Dorey was the chair of the BSFA at the time and put Edwards in touch with Pringle. [2]
Atari User was a general-interest computer magazine, containing games reviews as well as type-in programs, tutorials and hardware projects. As with Database's other publications, its appearance was somewhat conservative in comparison with its more games-oriented contemporaries, such as Computer and Video Games (C&VG) .