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The layout is very friendly and nice and the issues I got have lots of ads. The mag says it's the first mag ever to be produced entirely with personal computers, and it's 100% done on the Amiga ! Additional infos provided by H.R.Laser. Thanks ! The magazine started as INFO=64, a Commodore 64 magazine and later mutated to INFO (with combined C64/Amiga coverage) and then finally .info with just Amiga coverage. I wrote for about their final 25 issues. I was their "multimedia" columnist and review writer for a few years. I even appeared in one of their cartoons :) Former editor Mark Brown is now a Netscape book author for QUE books. Additional infos provided by Benn Dunnington. Thanks ! .info -was- the first commercial magazine in the world to be entirely desktop published (with Professional Page), and it was done so entirely with Amiga computers (unlike Amazing Computing which eventually went to desktop publishing - but using Macs!) I also have several old Amiga-formatted 20MB Bernoulli cartridges with lots of the original text and graphics files from the magazine and would like to transfer them to Mac (what I work with nowadays) or PC formatted Zip or Jaz cartridges, and eventually onto the Web. I have a placeholder at my homepage where I would like to develop the .info Nostalgia Pages when I have more time. Let me know if you know somebody who might be able and willing to translate the old Bernoullis and help make this possible. |
| WANTED: Cover of Ahoy Amiga |
There was also an Amiga spinoff magazine from "Ahoy" whose name I can't remember.. it might have been Amiga Ahoy or not. (My memory is fading here..) WANTED: More infos about Ahoy |
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This is a great magazine for both Amiga-fans and people interested in computer graphics. However, I wonder how they still keep it going with so few ads. After Video Toaster User stopped publishing, they got some more ads, so I think the mag is kind of safer now. This is a magazine with a long history, let's hope it will be there for a long time to come ! The Amazing Amiga people also published AC's Tech and are still working on a new issue of AC's Guide |
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It was made by the people who still publish Amazing Computing Amiga and AC's Guide. |
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| WANTED: Cover of Amigadget |
AmiGadget magazine was published for about 2 years by Jay Gross, who also wrote a number of Amiga books published by himself and by MicroSearch. Each issue came with a disk which are now available on Jay's web site and on the AmigaZone. WANTED: More infos about Amigadget |
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Additional infos provided by H.R.Laser. Thanks ! Amiga+ was published by Antic in San Francisco. Amiga+ was edited by a guy named Nat Friedland. The asst. editor, Arnie Cachelin, now works for NewTek. You can see his name in many LightWave/Modeler ARexx scripts. |
| WANTED: Cover of Amiga Sentry |
Amiga Sentry magazine was published for a few years. I don't remember who published it. It's one of the two or three that I never wrote for. WANTED: More infos about Amiga Sentry |
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It also concentrated on graphics and I really liked the monthly gfx-series. The May issue was the last one, after IDG decided there was no future for it because Commodore was bankrupt (what a stupid decision !). They couldn't even make a "goodbye-issue". Well folks, we'll always remember you, you did a great job ! I still use the "Amiga's 10th Anniversary Year Scrapbook" from the 100th issue to promote the Amiga and often look at an old issue just to think of the "good old times"... |
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| WANTED: Cover of Amiga World Tech Journal |
From the people that made Amiga World. AmigaWorld Tech Journal was a separate (and expensive!) non-color magazine for Amiga developers, published for a couple years by Amiga World. It was even three-hole-punched so it could be kept in binders as a reference, and it had a "peer review panel" of expert developers who reviewed each article for accuracy. |
| WANTED: Cover of AX and Graf/X |
AX Amiga Software & Information, and Graf/X magazines were published on the USA East Coast by a guy named Clyde Wallace. They sometimes came with disks. |
| WANTED: Cover of Compute's Amiga Resource |
Compute's Amiga Resource magazine started out as a section in regular Compute, then expanded to become a whole magazine by itself, edited by Denny Atkin (who now works for Computer Gaming World) and then back to a section in Compute. Then it vanished, and then Compute itself vanished. (Compute was owned by Bob "Penthouse" Guccione's company, General Media). Additional infos provided by Dave Pfenninger. Thanks ! The first USA Amiga magazine that I subscribed to was Compute's Amiga Resource. It was a full-color magazine, published bi-monthly (I think), with around 95-100 pages per issue. It later was absorbed into Compute's main magazine, where former Amiga Resource subscribers got a special Amiga edition of Compute. I have probably almost every issue, from the very first one in early 1989, to near the end of the Amiga section of Compute. Additional infos provided by Daniel Johnston. Thanks ! Amiga Resource was another US mag. It lasted about a year in the late 80's, and this mag was incorporated into Compute! magazine after the company that owned Amiga Resource was boughtout. Compute! also had Compute Gazette for the Commodore 64. Both Amiga Resource and then Compute! could be gotten with or without coverdisks. But with Compute! the coverdisk could have been Amiga, C64 or MS-DOS. The subscriber had to let Compute! know which one he wanted, and if the subscriber wanted both or all three disks then he would have to subscribe 3 times. |
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It could be bought at selected newsstands and by subscription, although I've never seen it at a newsstand in the USA, but at Amiga-dealers. Amiga Informer was integrated into Amazing Computing in 1999, some authors continued to write for Amazing, but the informer-logo quickly disappeared from Amazing's cover. |
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With only about 20 pages and nearly no ads this mag cost $8, but it was worth it ! I bought about 10 issues and still use them today to see how things are done. You can call this mag an Amiga-mag since at the beginning, Lightwave was Amiga-only and they always wrote about Amiga-stuff also. The new owner shut the mag down soon after buying it. |
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The magazine is mostly directed towards LightWave 3D and Aura users, but also contains some coverage of the Video Toaster Flyer. Infos provided by Dhomas Trenn. Thanks ! NewTekniques has expanded to include a new Amiga/toaster/Flyer dedicated section, called "The Gateway". |
| WANTED: Cover of Robo City News |
RoboCity News was originally the newsletter of the FAUG (First Amiga User Group) in Silicon Valley, later expanded to a full color newsstand magazine. |
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It also contains interesting articles for non-toaster users, like graphic and Lightwave-tutorials, reviews of tools and new hw/sw for Amiga. The new owner shut the mag down soon after buying it. Watch out for a magazine called NewTekniques from ex VTU-editors. |
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