.info (magazine)

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.info
Editor Mark R. Brown
Categories Computer magazine
Frequency Monthly (approx)
Circulation < 50,000
First issue September 1983
Final issue
— Number
April 1992
Issue 49
Company Info Publications Ltd
Country United States, Canada
Language English
ISSN 08975868

.info (originally INFO=64) was a computer magazine covering Commodore 8-bit computers and later the Amiga. It was published from 1983 to 1992.

Contents

[edit] History

INFO=64 began as a newsletter published by its founder, Benn Dunnington, operating out of a spare bedroom in his home. After a few issues, the entrepreneurial spirit struck and he decided to expand it into a full-fledged magazine.

The first few issues of the magazine were published by Dunnington operating as a sole proprietorship in the state of Washington. After a few issues, he moved the company to Iowa, eventually incorporating as Info Publications, Inc.. This, in turn, became a limited partnership, (Info Publications Ltd), which published the magazine until its demise.[1]

INFO=64 was the first magazine to be entirely produced using personal computers. An editorial statement in each issue explained that the magazine was produced using only "lay equipment", such as home computers and 35mm cameras, that were inexpensively available to the general public. Early issues were typeset using a Commodore 64 and a dot-matrix printer, giving the magazine a distinctive hand-crafted appearance. An early and rarely recognized pioneer in the field of desktop publishing, .info can legitimately claim to be the first desktop published magazine sold on newsstands in the United States.[2]

The Computer Press Association named .info as one of two 'Runners-Up' in the category of Best Computer Magazine - Circulation Less Than 50,000 at its seventh annual awards ceremony in April of 1992. Computers in Accounting won that category, which included well over 100 computer magazines at the time, but .info tied with the slicker and much better-funded NeXTWORLD.

Ironically, .info was in serious financial trouble by then, and the publisher was desperately seeking someone to buy the magazine. The magazine closed its doors in April of 1992, and on September 20th the magazine's assets were auctioned off. [3]

Over the course of its run, .info absorbed three pioneering Commodore magazines that ceased publication during the "great extinction" that struck computer magazines in the late 1980s. These were Jim Oldfield and James Strassma's Midnite Software Gazette (which had previously absorbed 'The Paper'[4], one of the oldest independent publications supporting Commodore computers), Mitch Lopes' RoboCity News (the one-time official publication of FAUG, the First Amiga Users' Group, before it was spun off), and Chris Zamara and Nick Sullivan's Transactor (the official publication of TPUG, the Toronto PET Users' Group). Unfortunately, when .info ceased publication, the receivers stood in the way of allowing .info's publisher to find another magazine to fulfill its subscriptions.

A full set of the entire run of INFO magazine, including photocopies of the original newsletter along with other documents related to the magazine, is housed in the library of the State Historical Society of Iowa in Iowa City, Iowa.

[edit] Staff & Writers

  • Benn Dunnington - Founder, Publisher, Editor
  • Mark R. Brown - Managing Editor
  • Tom Malcom - Senior Editor
  • Jim Oldfield - Associate Editor (after acquisition of 'Midnite Software Gazette')
  • Carol Brown - Advertising Director (through issue 31)
  • Anna Folkers - Advertising Director (issues 32-49)
  • Megan Ward - Art & Production Director
  • Kent A. Embree - Art & Production Assistant
  • Tony Bodensteiner - Art & Production Assistant
  • Marty Amorin - Data Manager (early issues)
  • Judith Kilbury-Cobb - Data Manager (through issue 47) / Staff Writer
  • Krista L. Kapacinskas - Data Manager (issue 49)
  • Chris Zamara - Technical Editor (after acquisition of 'The Transactor')
  • Nick Sullivan - Technical Editor (after acquisition of 'The Transactor')
  • Bradley W. Schenck - Contributing Editor / Graphics Columnist
  • Harv Laser - Contributing Editor / Multimedia Columnist
  • Peggy Herrington - Contributing Editor / Music & Sounds Columnist (through issue 42)
  • Bob Lindstrom - Contributing Editor / Music Columnist (issues 44-49)
  • Oran J. Sands III - Contributing Editor / Video Columnist
  • Jeff Lowenthal - Contributing Editor / Public Domain Columnist
  • Don Romero - Contributing Editor / GEOS Columnist & 'CHUMP' computer magazine parody guru
  • Jim Meyer - Contributing Editor / Productivity Software Reviewer
  • Mort Kevelson - Contributing Editor / Hardware Reviewer
  • Gregory Conley - Contributing Editor / Cartoonist
  • Warren Block - Contributing Editor
  • David Martin - Writer
  • Bob Baker - Writer
  • Daniel Barrett - Writer
  • Mindy Skelton - Writer
  • Jim Butterfield - Writer
  • Dave Haynie - Writer

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Evidence for this can be found at Mark R. Brown's .info page
  2. ^ Mark R. Brown's nostalgia page details how .info became fully desktop-published in 1986, and was recognized as coming "closer to total desktop publishing than any other mass-market publication we've seen" by Personal Publishing magazine.
  3. ^ Auction flyer from the sale of the assets, according to Mark R. Brown's nostalgia page a lot of the office furniture was actually added by the auctioneers to bulk the sale
  4. ^ Compute! magazine, Oct 1982, p. 226

[edit] External links