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Electronics Today International, electronics magazine that also published early homebrew computer systems; Family Computing (later Home Office Computing), home/educational-oriented magazine published by Scholastic, Inc. Games for Windows: The Official Magazine; Hebdogiciel, French computing magazine from the 1980s; Info Komputer (Indonesia ...
Loadstar (ISSN 0886-4144) was a disk magazine for the Commodore 64 computer, published starting in 1984 and ceasing publication in 2007 with its unreleased (until 2010) 250th issue. It derived its name from the command commonly used to execute commercial software from a Commodore 1541 disk: LOAD "*",8,1 , with inspiration from the word "lodestar".
Pages in category "Defunct computer magazines published in the United States" The following 103 pages are in this category, out of 103 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
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Computist was a computer magazine devoted to the Apple II that was published by Charles R. Haight under the SoftKey Publishing name, between 1981 and 1993, for a total of 89 issues. The magazine was based in Tacoma, Washington. [1] Originally launched as Hardcore Computing, the 'hardcore' part was formally dropped from the title with the 27th ...
Home computer magazines were computer magazines catering to the large home computer user community of the 1980s and early 1990s. This class of magazines was responsible for introducing type-in programs and "cover tapes " and, later, cover disks (now replaced by cover CDs/DVDs).
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The magazine was acquired by and merged into Computer User magazine in 2000. [14] Computer Currents described itself as: Computer Currents is the 411/911 magazine. It's a source of help and information for PC and Mac business users of all stripes. Computer Currents doesn't torture-test 200 modems or devote space to industry chitchat.