Practical Computing magazine
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Practical Computing (magazine) was a UK computer magazine published monthly. The magazine was published by IPC Electrical Electronic Press Ltd. The first edition was released in August 1978 as a special computer show edition, and the second issue was October 1978. The magazine carried on to 1987 when it merged with Business Computing. In September 1989, it was renamed Management Computing.
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[edit] Overview
Practical Computing magazine provided in-depth reviews and previews of the latest hardware and software for the information technology professional, initially for a mix of hobbyist and small business people, and then increasingly business people only.
[edit] Development and evolution
The magazine followed the trends of the microcomputer industry at the time. Initially it covered a broad range of systems including Commodore PETs and the Tandy TRS-80 as well as single-board computers such as the UK101 and Nascom 2. Later in its life it focussed more on business computers such as the ACT Sirius 1 and the IBM PC. Towards the end of its life it almost exclusively covered PC clones, with the occasional Apple Mac or small UNIX workstation piece.
The editors were as follows:
- 1978 — Dennis Jarrett (main magazine), Nick Hampshire (Computabits)
- 1984 — Jack Schofield
The initial publisher in 1978 was Wim Hoeksma, who died 1981.
The cover price in 1978 was 50p; in June 1980 it rose to 60p, June 1981 80p, 1984 85p and 1985 £1.
[edit] Trivia
- The coverart was initially hand-drawn, later it went for occasional (but humorous) photographs, then finally a mix of photos and geometric graphic design.
- From October 1978 to Octoner 1979 the magazine serialised the book Illustrating BASIC by Donald Alcock. This book was unusually written by hand rather than typeset, and featured little insects to show common programming errors or bugs.
- When it was more of a hobbyist magazine, Practical Computing published fiction -- usually stories with a computing or science fiction slant. A noted series was Richard Forsyth's Son of Hexadecimal Kid, which ran from September 1980 to December 1981.
- The magazine underwent two redesigns in its history, in 1982 and 1985. In 1985 the title font changed, losing its trademark 'mu' symbol, and the subtitle 'for business and professional micro users' appeared.