Showing posts with label family magazines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family magazines. Show all posts

Friday, December 19, 2014

Star Date : the Astronomy News Report

Star Date : the Astronomy News ReportI bought StarDate as a gift for my husband. We both love it and I am renewing our subscription. We have always been interested in "stargazing", and StarDate keeps us informed about what's going on in the skies.

I subscribed to this magizine early this year and was given a March 28, 2007 ship date and no later than July 25, 2007. It is now October 3, 2007. They say it was shipped, I didn't receive it. Good luck!

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Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Military Vehicles (1-year)

Military VehiclesI have subscribed to this magazine for many years. The stories are great and the pictures are wonderful if you are looking for help in restoring a Military Vehicle or not.

Te stories are great. Being in and out of the military for decades make it fun to see vehicles that I used to work on as a mechanic from Vietnam to the wars in the early nineties. This book helped me pass the vehicle recognizing tests.

Now I enjoy thinking of what I could be doing if I had the room. I do have the room for the kits advertised.

You will find hours of fun perusing the articles on museum collections and come close to buying that rare part that only a coffee table can use. Cannot throw away the older volumes. Now with the kindle you can carry your favorite volumes with you where ever you go.

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Saturday, November 22, 2014

Asana - International Yoga Journal

Asana - International Yoga JournalI love the magazine, no ads, excellent content. My only problem was it was too short! It's maybe 20 pages. I am a yoga instructor and a more advanced practitioner. In my opinion this is not a fluffy magazine. The asanas are more advanced, the content is more specific (yoga therapy, yoga theory), and there is no extra content (eat this, look at cute yoga clothes, etc.). So definitely order if you are advanced, intermediate, do yoga everyday type that reads the sutras, but if you are interested in a more asana based magazine or just beginning without any real thought to advancing to handstands and the like try something more western based.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Natural History

Natural History"Natural History" is the official popular journal published by the American Museum of Natural History, the oldest and largest museum of natural history in the Western Hemisphere and without question, one of the world's greatest museums. In its pages it has featured brilliant essays by the likes of Roy Chapman Andrews, Margaret Mead, and Stephen Jay Gould, to name but a few of the many eminent scientists both museum staff and outsiders who have contributed superb articles on natural history to this magazine. It has retained an emphasis on scientific discovery, publishing articles pertaining to ecology and other aspects of evolutionary biology (including paleobiology), geology, astrophysics, archaeology and anthropology. Recent issues have included brief articles on biomechanics of various living organisms, those pertaining to recent and current exhibitions such as the Petra exhibition on display at the museum from the Fall of 2003 to early Summer 2004, and current ecological and anthropological research. Current museum scientists, most notably Neil deGrasse Tyson, the director of the Hayden Planetarium, often report in these pages on their ongoing research as well as on issues of a more general nature that might interest a scientifically-literate public. And to its credit, it has not shied away from controversy, publishing for example, an issue on so-called "Intelligent Design", which is seen by its adherents as a competing scientific alternative to evolution via Natural Selection, but lacks any scientific credibility from professional scientists, science educators and like-minded members of the general public.

This is an outstanding journal. The articles are diverse, informative, and current. Other than possibly Scientific American, there is not better journal for the life sciences.

An earlier reviewer critized the journal for not using the metric system. Personally, I do not find this to be a problem with a journal which is primarly qualitative and not quantitative.

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I used to really like this magazine, but it seems to be going down hill very rapidly now. It is about half the size it used to be, and contains way too much advertising. I suspect that the reason is that Stephen J. Gould's column is what made the magazine so popular, until he quit writing it before he died. I will definitely be letting my subscription expire.

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I have enjoyed Natural History for a long time but I now prefer to buy individual copies. I am not a major science buff and the fund-raising tactics the Museum has used were very annoying. I really am mostly interested in evolution and DNA, which are not always featured. For many years, the magazine has done a good job of exploring current thought on diverse aspects of natural history. I agree, there has been a bit of "dumbing down" over time. This may be part of an effort (misguided and unfortunate in my view) to attract a broader readership. The articles are still authoritative, well-written and handsomely illustrated, however.

I am extremely fond of the American Museum of Natural History and always go there when in New York. The problem that drove me away from the subscription was the tendency to send me things I did not ask for like a sizeable collection of greeting cards and then to demand in rather peremptory terms that I make a contribution to pay for them. I dislike being sent things I do not want (the greeting cards struck me as bland and unappealing, as well as surprisingly irrelevant to the magazine and its subject matter) and then being told I must pay for them or be regarded as some sort of abominable churl. So I just let my subscription expire. In fairness, this was a couple of years ago. I don't know if that practice continues. I hasten to add that I am not repelled by reasonable fundraising initiatives, particularly from institutions like this that I respect and admire. I am happy to contribute to such institutions as I am able. I just felt the methods employed here were vexing and unreasonable.

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This is a great magazine: I call it semi-popular because it is occasionally technical and often referenced in scientific works, but it is very accessible and readable to the inquisitive member of the general public. If you have any interest in life on earth, do yourself a favor and subscribe.

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Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Concho River Review

Concho River ReviewThe first issue of Concho River Review I purchased (at Brazos Bookstore, Houston) was a mixture between the same old "avantgarde, creative" stuff and a few insightful pieces. The latest issue, Volume XX, is a total disaster: it's entirely the kind of machine-stamped, workshop-generated, topicless, "unique" in setting but mindless in execution, trendy garbage. There is nothing of literary value here although the poem "Lapse" is amusing. I hope Concho River Review gets off the MFA trip it is on and resumes printing material that is actually critical of the assumptions we make, conveys learning instead of emotional sure bets, and has something at all to say, because right now this is a wasteland of zero value.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Consumer Reports On Health (1-year auto-renewal)

Consumer Reports On HealthAs a health professional in Nutrition, Regeistered Dietitian practicing in the Community Nutrition field, I thought this "magazine" would be full of up-to-date information. Rather I received an eight page "newsletter," written at a fourth grade reading level. Everything written in the articles was old news. It was way overpriced for a product the size of my weekly "Church Bulliten."

As someone who is not a registered dietician, but who values good health, I have found this magazine to provide great, up-to-date information. I have given it as a gift a number of times, because I have found it to add quality to my life, and hope that it will to others' as well!

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Nowhere more than in the US is this kind of publication desperately needed what with all the doublespeak, pseudo-science and borderline-illegal/unethical claims being made in advertising, advertorials, product placements etc.

For me, I almost feel like I'm working on even footing against the marketing of health-related products by subscribing to this report. Without it, I'm lost at sea.

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I am a longtime subscriber to Consumer Reports and I also subscribe to the website and also to the online consumer reports health. This adds up to quite a few $ per year and I feel I deserve all their content. Recently I have received a direct mail ad for OnHealth, which is a print product. The ad shouts the tabloid glaring headlines we associate with sleazy operations. It is also impossible to tell the relation to the online health site; is it the same content? And if not, why is significant health information being witheld from my $19/year online subscription?

CU used to be a quiet and conservative organization. A few years ago they took on some marketing advice and became much more aggressive about selling their content six ways from Sunday. I am a supporter of the mission of CU and understand they need to seek revenues. But I am dismayed by the loud, vulgar advertising and the attempts to sell overlapping content. They have become a little too much like all the quick-buck companies they criticize.

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I received these as a gift from my mom. I will say that I am heavy into alternative health.

A lot of the information in these reports goes along with mainstream medical information. If you already

receive or read about it online, then this type of reporting probably is not necessary.

The quality of the reports is about on par with local newsletters and magazines that I get for free

at the grocery store.

After having read some of the contents of the reports I will say that they tend to disagree with

alternative medicine newsletters on certain issues and of course it appears that these newsletters are probably

either in the pockets of big pharma or are just repeating common medical knowledge which tends to be in

the pockets of big pharma. So I'd say it is a hit and miss of good and possibly slanted information which is not necessarily good for you, at least in my opinion.

Although I guess if you hate reading at a computer and your grocery store doesn't carry these types of

magazines, and you are not into mainstream medical care, then maybe you might like these. I still think

there are better options out there. My mom apparently likes these.

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Friday, January 31, 2014

Linux Format - Incls Linux Format - DVD

Linux Format - Incls Linux Format - DVDThere are several Linux magazines out there, but this one, Linux Format is probably #1, Linux Pro Magazine is probably #2. However, they are priced ridiculously high...about $150 to $200 per year!!! NOT BEGINNER FRIENDLY!!

It is more than about time the Linux FORMAT started offering subscriptions without the DVDs or even better an online .PDF version to lower the costs. Until then, I will stick with the MANY online resources and FREE online magazines out there.

Linux is about freedom and being advanced...being cutting edge and thinking outside the box, yet Linux Format continues to "stay the course" and only offer a subscription with DVD. The magazines pile up, the DVDs never see the light of day (how many distros can you possibly test drive in a year for God's sake???) and your money gets wasted.

As far as I am concerned and as much as I love the writing behind Linux Format, I think the executive people behind it are ripping us all off.

I've been reading Linux Format for a few years now. This magazine is typical of the excellent quality of many magazines published in England about the whole range of subjects. Having said that it's the best on the market, I should qualify that a little, by pointing out that I'm not a Linux developer/guru so I'm coming at it from the viewpoint of the relatively casual intermediate level user. There may be Linux magazines that are better if you're a Linux system administrator, or if you are developing software for Linux.

I enjoy the variety of articles covering various aspects of Linux and the "How-TO" articles as well as reviews of products and software for Linux.

I sure wish it was a bit less pricey, though.

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This is, in my view, the best "using Linux" magazine on the market. There's a lot of information in each issue, it's an entertaining read, and the coverage is broad enough that you're likely to learn a fair amount if you read it cover to cover.

The quality is sometimes uneven, though. The "Roundup" feature, in particular, has of late used such narrow review criteria that it feels like looking through a keyhole. The all white male editorial staff that they seem to have settled on can be annoying as well. As others have pointed out, though, the biggest negative to this magazine is the fact that it's only available in paper form with an accompanying DVD and, outside of the UK, an astonishing subscription price. I'd love to keep getting it, but have a hard time justifying to myself a subscription price that's now north of $15 US per issue. When we start talking that kind of money I'd think that I'd rather donate it to open source projects.

Read Best Reviews of Linux Format - Incls Linux Format - DVD Here

I've purchased several Linux magazines over the years and find myself coming back to Linux Format time and again, from the bookstore even, regardless of the the price. But what people I don't think realize is that the magazine is not published in the US. Its published in Britain and is sold primarily there. So when its sold in the states it is, unfortunately, subject to the current exchange rate.

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I agree with others, Best Linux Magazine out there, you will get a lot for you money. But it is a lot of your $$.