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

Monday, December 1, 2014

Academic Exchange Quarterly

Academic Exchange QuarterlyAcademic Exchange Quarterly is most unique academic

journal I have ever seen.

I am not aware of any other academic journal having so

many refereed articles in one issue.

Friday, November 14, 2014

Do It Yourself (2-year)

Do It YourselfSo many great ideas! I can't wait till the next issue arrives. Ranges from very simple to labor intense but always projects that most can do.

I also took another'a advice and went to the magazine's website. I got two full years for 19.99 and I got a full year subscription to Better Homes and Garden (their sister publication) for only $5.

Buy Do It Yourself (2-year) Now

This is my favorite magazine and the only one that I will subscribe to again and again. It has wonderful projects that are reasonably inexpensive. The pictures are colorful and beautiful. In one section, they'll take something (for instance, a plain coffee table) and do it three different ways to give you some options on how you would like to do it to fit into your decor. I haven't found a project yet that I wouldn't want to do in this magazine.

The downside is that it only comes bi-monthly. I would sure love to see it in my mailbox every month, or even every other week for that matter!

Browse through it in the magazine section..........you will love it!

Read Best Reviews of Do It Yourself (2-year) Here

Don't be fooled by the idea that "if it's here on Amazon, it must be the best price". Case in point, Amazon is offering 'do it yourself' for $19.97 for a 1-year subscription which sounds great until you visit the 'do it yourself' website directly and see that they are offering a 2-year subscription for $19.97!! As always, it pays to do your homework.

Want Do It Yourself (2-year) Discount?

I have not subscribed to this magazine, instead I borrowed four or five different issues from my local library. As a free magazine it is terrific, very entertaining. If I were paying for it I would love it a little less.

The magazine is full of different projects, some of them amazing and some of them a little nutty. I sort of hate to say it, but some of the finished projects (and these are done by professionals and photographed by more professionals) *look* handmade. Also there was a handful of little typos (and one page was printed so that the colors were off and impossible to read) that gave it a slightly unprofessional feeling.

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Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Mental Floss

Mental FlossIn an age of books "for dummies" and "complete idiots," Mental Floss is a magazine that makes you "feel smart again." Let's face it, some of those "dummies" books are pretty good, but you wouldn't display them in your home or read them on the train. By contrast, I openly read Mental Floss in public and place the latest issue on my coffee table.

The magazine combines a cheeky sense of humor with a wealth of information. I loved the recent "Y Files issue." "Why is yawning contagious?" "Why do people yell `Geronimo' before jumping?" "Why does the United States print $2 bills?" Mental Floss delivers the answers. Trivial pursuit may leave you wondering "why" about an answer, but Mental Floss never does.

The current "swimsuit issue" is a blast. It's not exactly titillating, but it is stimulating. The sight of Einstein and Eleanor Roosevelt in swimwear is enough to turn your attention to the articles.

There's no magazine I'd recommend more highly.

I have subscribed to "Mental Floss" from the very beginning, and now look forward to each new issue anxiously. Founded just a couple of years ago by two former college roommates who wanted a fun, hip, urbane magazine to make them smarter with style, "Mental Floss" has become a huge success, and is one of the few new magazines that debut each year that is actually prospering.

Each issue is loaded with information on interesting topics, from how common (or very uncommon) things work, to odd and unknown histories and biographies that you will not find anywhere else (and if you did, certainly not in as condensed and succinct a form as you will find here.) Without exception, the writers are literate, knowledgeable, and good humored.

The things that you don't know will amaze you after reading this magazine. Try "Mental Floss", and I am willing to bet that you will be hooked. I know I am.

Buy Mental Floss Now

There are magazines you read for specific how-to texts, like how to fix your kitchen sink. There are magazines you read to stay up to date with the latest news in the world, your field, or a given region. Then there are magazines like Mental_Floss, which is more like a "News of the Weird" magazine version release. These aren't brain puzzles to improve your memory a la Brain Age. They aren't research pieces that will test or challenge your mental ability. Instead, they are quirky factoids.

What is yelling "Geronimo" all about? Just what is a "Vegemite Sandwich"? There are all sorts of odd things covered here. Sometimes they touch on science, world politics or human relations but often they're related to pop culture, the things you hear every day and never really thought about.

It's intriguing that how you react to this magazine is probably based a lot on what you have read until now. If what you've been reading has been mainstream newspapers aimed at the "lowest common denominator", or the Dummies series of books, you'll be greatly refreshed by this! This magazine doesn't assume you're a dummy with a dead brain. It assumes you want to learn, to grow, to find out the "why" behind the things in your world. It's aimed for people who pop onto Wikipedia when they hear about a new, interesting item on the news ... or people who jump onto IMDB to see what else an actor was in when they watch a movie. It's for people who are intrigued by those connections and backgrounds.

On the other hand, Mental_Floss generally provides a surface read. It's the perfect bathroom magazine but for those who already get mentally challenging magazines, they might be let down by a magazine that is explicitly named Mental_Floss. This doesn't provide in depth or rigorous details on anything. If the academic magazines are at college level, Mental_Floss is more like the fun high school underground newsletter that tackles intriguing issues that might otherwise be ignored. Now, before you start to clamor that most newspapers write at a 5th grade level, that is in fact untrue! Here's a factoid for you :) The New York Times writes at a 12th grade level of vocabulary and comprehension, while most other newspapers fall between 9th and 10th grade. The 5th grade stat came from the 1700s and 1800s.

Still, every magazine has its target audience and its purpose in life. Mental_Floss isn't there to provide in depth education. There are other magazines for that. Instead, it gives you great tidbits on things that many people care about things that are *super* to use at cocktail parties, networking events, dinners out with your boss or employees. Instead of getting into a discussion about religion or politics, and perhaps starting the third world war, you can give info on a topic that will intrigue most people there, and often impress them.

Definitely a magazine that just about every age group will enjoy and that is very "useful"! If I have a real issue with this magazine, it's that it only comes out every other month. It'd be great if they could get this onto a monthly schedule, with more intriguing facts to keep us fresh and full of new information.

Read Best Reviews of Mental Floss Here

Let me start off with I subscribe to at least 15 magazines covering a range of subjects. Mental Floss is the only magazine that I save and leave out for guests. The reason I save it is that is a very quick read that can be read while people have a few moments to spare. The articles are short and don't provide much depth. However it is enjoyable to read something that requires no brain power to process. Mental Floss is a great magazine that you can sit down with and read in one sitting. It even occasionaly brings a smile to your face. I suggest you give it a chance but don't expect to much.

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I just recieved my first copy of mental floss and I havent been able to put it down. In one sitting I found out the meaning behind common nursery rhymes, the origins of conflicts in Rwanda and East Timor, and realized the importance of physicists. Mental Floss is different then Time, Newsweek etc. because it puts information and knowlege out there in a way that wont bore you to tears. I can feel my brain expanding everytime I turn the page and feel much more confident in global news and relive prior events, fads, and trends that I soon would have forgotten (rubix cube?). I really am eager to keep getting new editions. Maybe in a few years, I can finally send for my MENSA exam.

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Thursday, April 17, 2014

Colorado Biz

Colorado BizThis magazine is progressive and insightful. The editorial design is top quality. It's fun and challenging. It avoids the typical business mediocrity in regional publications.

Oh, by the way, I am the Art Director of this magazine, so my review might be a little biased. Sorry.

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Monday, March 10, 2014

Motorcyclist (1-year auto-renewal)

MotorcyclistMotorcyclist is a mainstay in the motorcycle magazine world, a place where cycle novices like this reviewer can begin to get a monthly diet of news, mechanics, advertisements, reviews, and cycle talk.

The format is busy, with very narrow margins. Think the opposite of those luxury goods magazines that seem bent on calming your mind. MOTORCYCLIST wants to rev it up, or better yet, place it in a helmet and roughly equidistant between the two ends of a handlebar.

The magazine pays fair attention to racing and racing cycles, then moves on to street bikes and eventually to the cruisers that most interest this middle-aged fat boy of a reviewer. The current issue in front of me has an Asian touch, with a series of articles headlined provocatively as 'Korean bikes: do they suck?' and an article entitled 'Riding the Ho Chi Minh Trail.'

'Makes one recall thirty years ago, when we couldn't imagine that a company named Honda could actually squeak out a running car.

Motorcyclists in this country, where riding a bike is a choice rather than a transportation necessity, tend to be passionate about their ride. So expect some flaming in the letters and reviews sections.

MOTORCYCLIST is a staple: the literary Hamburger Helper of a cyclist's regular reading.

When Mitch Boehm left, and Brian Catterson took top spot, this magazine went into a tailspin. Despite several retorts that it didn't turn into a Ducati infomercial, the evidence is overwhelming to the contrary. The writing went downhill, the perspective of what motorcycling means to a wider audience, and the circumspect approach to all owners flew out the window. I used to tell people Motorcyclist was the best. Not anymore. Do yourself a favor and get Cycle World. The writing is better, the experts are more credible, the articles are more intelligent, and they cover ALL the bikes. Rider is improving with each issue, having also surpassed Motorcyclist in quality some time ago.

Buy Motorcyclist (1-year auto-renewal) Now

I subscribed for a year just because the price was only $10. I now know that the price of $10 was not really worth it for this magazine. First of all, when you hold it in your hands, you can feel how light and insubstantial it is. Then, you open it up and it's mostly ads for motorcycle gear and cars (!). I used to like Motorcyclist for its articles and the way I would get excited about new bikes and technologies they presented.

But then I started reading the far, far better UK bike mags like Bike and Superbike (which are more along my interests anyway since they mainly feature sportbikes). But you pick up one of those, yes they cost $10 each, but they are like 5 times the weight of Motorcyclist and jam packed with actually relevant articles that inform me and get me excited about riding every time I read. Unfortunately for us Americans, the UK bike scene is better in every way, so it's mostly a gallery of what we can't have.

Anyway, skip this magazine. It's unfortunate that Motorcyclist is actually among the best general interest motorcycle magazines in the US, which speaks volumes about the state of motorcycling in this country.

Read Best Reviews of Motorcyclist (1-year auto-renewal) Here

Motorcyclist has never been the highest quality US motorcycling mag around, but it's always been a somewhat interesting. These days, though, I barely skim the issues. Tons of ads make that easy enough. Half of the magazine beyond that is dedicated to industry news and "sneak peeks." These days, that service is better provided online. What a magazine can offer is solid editorial content, comprehensive reviews, and possibly even a sense of community. The editorial content has improved somewhat with the addition of Keith Code's articles. Motorcyclist's reviews of motorcycles have been shoddy in the last few years, the gear reviews sound like an advertisement. And the sense of community, which would be accomplished through a solid online presence, falls short as well.

I'll pay more for Cycle World they have great editorials, experts on staff, and a good website. I'll pay even more for Motorcycle Consumer News their reviews pull no punches and they provide fantastic info-sheets for each bike reviewed. I'll even pay for Hellforleathermagazine.com's subscription they get the latest information before anyone else and have an invaluable user base. All of these are more expensive and I'm happy to pay for them.

I'm on my last issue of Motorcyclist and my renewal offer is a year for only $5. That's just too much for what I get out of the magazine.That's the only reason it gets two stars over one. It's affordable.

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I've suscribed for several years, I like Cycle World better as it just seems more professional but Motorcyclist is OK. They have a chopped up format that makes it hard to track an article through all the way. They also assume everyone is a RicKy Racer type and that we all go to the track.

Still I send them their $$ every year.

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Sunday, October 20, 2013

Country Woman

Country WomanCountry Woman is a good magazine for craft tips and recipes as each edition usually has a bit of both. There is usually a feature concerning country living and an editor spends a day at a country business to learn about how the business does their thing.

That being written it's been awhile since I've read this magazine and you can not find it here at local stores. The reason why I did not renew my subscription as the magazine seemed to lose its homey feel after the Reiman Magazines were sold to another publisher. Since then the magazine feels cheaper, especially after they moved to "recyclable" paper. I have nothing against using Earth friendly products but the choice of paper just feels cheap.

I am no longer a subscriber as Country Woman just doesn't appeal.

Don't throw your money away. Mostly advertising about stuff the average person doesn't need. Even most of the articles were not practical.

Buy Country Woman Now

had seen the magazine inthe doctors office, So decided to order,. Very pleased. Liked the craft info thats in them

Read Best Reviews of Country Woman Here

This is a more recent subscription we have setup with Amazon and the magazine is a great magazine with a variety of articles within.

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I think what I like most about Country Woman Magazine are the vibrant, colorful photographs. I love the stories about the 'cover woman' telling about their life and successes. The craft ideas have gotten so much better recently! Their craft section had some outdated projects, but recently, in the last couple of years, I've seen fresh ideas that are more in tune with today. Glad to see the magazine moving forward instead of staying stuck in the past. :)

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