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Computer Jagat is an Information and Communication Technology (ICT) based Bengali-language magazine published monthly [1] [2] [3] in Bangladesh since 1991. [4] [5] [6] This is the first ICT magazine in Bangladesh founded by Professor Abdul Kader. [7] [8] The magazine holds an annual e-commerce fair, in 2015, it held the 7th e-commerce fair in ...
Express Computer – monthly information technology; Femina India – women's magazine; FHM India – monthly; Filmfare – Bollywood magazine; Forbes India – business magazine; Frontline – current affairs magazine; Goa Today; Gobar Times – monthly environmental education magazine for young adults; GQ – Indian edition; Himal Southasian ...
This is a list of magazines marketed primarily for computer and technology enthusiasts or users. The majority of these magazines cover general computer topics or several non-specific subject areas, however a few are also specialized to a certain area of computing and are listed separately.
Forum, a human rights oriented magazine published between 1969 and 1971, re-established in 2006; Dhaka Courier, English-language news magazine founded in 1984, it is the longest running English current affairs magazine in the country. Holiday, an English-language weekly newspaper [10] ICE Today, an English-language fashion and lifestyle magazine
The ubiquity of BASIC interpreters on personal computers was such that textbooks once included simple "Try It In BASIC" exercises that encouraged students to experiment with mathematical and computational concepts on classroom or home computers. Popular computer magazines of the day typically included type-in programs.
Jawed Karim was born on October 28, 1979, in Merseburg, East Germany, to a Bangladeshi father and a German mother. [4] His father Naimul Karim (Bengali: নাইমুল করিম) is a Bangladeshi who is a researcher at 3M, and his mother, Christine, is a German biochemistry scientist at the University of Minnesota. [5]
Kate Middleton’s return to greeting the public on Christmas Day was a poignant moment, not just for her, but for the many who had been eagerly awaiting her comeback after a difficult year. For ...
In 1972, when Dutta (then 21 and a student of Scottish Church College in Kolkata majoring in Bengali [3]) visited the National Library looking for little magazines he found out how they were kept in a condition of utter neglect. [1] [4] [2] According to Dutta, he was "shown a heap of books tied in bundles, with more dust and worms in them than ...