Showing posts with label print magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label print magazine. Show all posts

Monday, December 29, 2014

Philadelphia (1-year auto-renewal)

PhiladelphiaI also disagree with the first poster; while admittedly heavy on the "upscale" advertising, Philadelphia Magazine always has at least an article or two of interest, along with great tips on what to do in the region...I also find the special issues, such as "Best of Philly", "Top Docs", and "Top Schools" both entertaining and informative.

The low, low price of the subscription enticed me to order. My first issue arrive and I found it enjoyable. Being a Philadelphia suburbanite, there are articles of interest and give me better insight into what the city has to offer if I dare to enter.

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I've noticed a pattern over the years with Philadelphia Magazine: The biggest advertisers get the best reviews. The best restaurants who do not pay for add space, do not get good reviews or the "Best of Philadelphia" placards. I would not buy this magazine nor would I read it any more even if it were free. Get the "Philadelphia Weekly" or the "City Paper" for the most current advice on what to do and where to go in Philadelphia. They are what the "Village Voice" used to be: gritty, down to earth and very irreverent toward things we're supposed to like.

I followed the bad advice of Philadelphia Magazine for the last time years ago. People who've lived here in Philadelphia for a long time, and are in the habit of going out, do not respect the integrity or quality of this magazine. I'm only reviewing it because Amazon insulted me by asking me to subscribe.

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each issue has huge ad promotion for lawyers or doctors also gives dates of events that have passed useless information classifieds are always the same pretty boring!

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This is your typical city magazine. It highlights all of the different activities, places to see and eat as well as provides reviews of different restaurants, clubs and places to shop. It has an article or two on political / city type current events that the locals may find of interest.

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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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Monday, December 8, 2014

Diesel Power

Diesel Powerlots of cool tech stories and articles. lots of product reviews. read every page. learened alot about diesel engines from these guys. worth the full subscription

This is one of the BEST Diesel Mags around for the Light Duty Diesel Truck Market.

This includes the Ford Super Duty F250-F550, Dodge Cummins, Chevy Diesel and All! :)

Must for any DIESEL owners!

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ordered this mag. for my kid for Chirstmas.....told his first issue would come about 6 weeks later and i am always hesitant about that sort of thing......but true to their word, it showed up and he is VERY happy!

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We've written the publisher a few times and we still haven't received this

magazine even though they respond that its on the way!!

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I read it cover to cover every month. I also use it in my Technical Classes to keep things interesting.

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Dirt Rag Magazine

Dirt Rag MagazineDirt Rag is the real mountain biking magazine. It's not as flashy as the others, but for me, mountain biking is not about flash. It's not all about racing and corporations. It's about people and riding. And so is Dirt Rag.

Dirt Rag is the magazine for the real mountain biking enthusiast. Written by and for the rider, Dirt Rag is the insiders look at this very popular sport. Dirt Rag brings the readers what they want: where the great rides are, the hottest new products, how-to tips and much more.

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I read it for a year and found it to be mediocre. Why? 1) I didn't read one critical gear review. THey seem to just be "buffing the knob" of the company that sent them free stuff to test. 2) They have a thing for stories, either written by readers or staff, that are somewhat related to riding a bike. I'd buy a fictional book about biking if that's really what I was looking for. 3) Beer reviews!? I didn't buy a beer magazine, I bought a bike mag so why would this be relevant? Why not start putting ice cream reviews there, because everyone knows that people who ride bikes also LOVE ice cream...4) Saving on paying models by asking staff writers to model clothes/gear. Often it doesn't matter, but Karen-what's-her-name and the pink haired guy should be left out of the pick. Using models with generally good looks allows you not not be distracted when looking objectively at a product.

Look for Bike Mag or Mountain Bike Action for a mag that is less counter culture attitude, more bike magazine!

Read Best Reviews of Dirt Rag Magazine Here

Dirt Rag is the definitive cycling magazine, whether you ride a few miles each month or dozens of miles a day. The staff is as committed to cyclists, cycling products and cycling trends as anyone; you will not find an editorial staff more committed or passionate about cycling.

From original fiction to technology reviews to simple columns that celebrate the elements that make cycling the wonderful activity it is, Dirt Rag has long served as a must-read.

As for purchases from the company, I've never encountered any trouble (going so far as to receive personalized email messages to ensure I was happy and satisfied with the service and products I received).

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If you own a mountain bike, commuter bike, uni, touring bike, snow bike, etc, why do you not already own this magazine? It is beyond awesome! Articles on pump tracks, off road unicycling, trail maintenance and advocacy, and of course, sweet trail riding. We savor and fight over this magazine when it comes in, reading it slowly to make it last 2 months. The only problem I have is this magazine's propensity to put scantily clad females on the cover and in prominent photo shoots. I can overlook that though, because this magazine is so sweet.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Elle - Uk Edition

Elle - Uk EditionIt took longer to get the UK version delivered to us, than it did for Barnes and Noble to have the same issue available to sell.

And they dont charge as much for it in the store as they do to have a subscription.

Bad value for money.

Hi

little problem, perhaps ypu can assist. I was billed and my subscribtion is fully paid . Up to this point , and it s been a while I ve never received a copy of uk elle!!!

Apart from that I love uk elle ( i used to live in the uk).

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Monday, March 24, 2014

Skona Hem

Skona HemI am so glad to see this wonderful Swedish home design and lifestyle magazine offered on Amazon.com!

I have searched for it countless times at U.S. newsstands to no avail. They always have plenty of German, French, English, and Italian mags, but never seem to have the Scandinavian ones, which is a shame, because they are often top-notch, style-wise, and Skona Hem is no exception!

This magazine is a great reflection of the Swedish style, elegant, relaxed, comfortably refined. Granted, one must know Swedish to read Skona Hem, but the pictures are of course universal, and what gorgeous pictures they are!

The subscription rate to the U.S. is rather high, but perhaps if many people subscribe, the price will come down?! We can hope! Enjoy your Skona Hem!

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Future Music

Future MusicThe earlier reviewer commenting on the price is referring to the US edition of the magazine, which is about $20 per year, and is no where near as well put together. This is a great magazine, I had the subscription for it and bought it in pounds and got the bill once it had been converted to dollars, needless to say I only did it for one year. It's still less than buying it at the newsstand which is around $16 per issue I think. If you like to get new audio samples, tutorials, plugins and virtual instruments every month, this is "the" magazine to get, if you like that stuff but don't want to pay the charge for having it sent over the pond, consider the US version, but realize they are not the same and the US one is not nearly as good.

This magazine is invaluable for the present-day producer.

I produce hip hop tracks and find that this particular magazine is tailored perfectly to the producer who works much with virtual instruments, plug-ins and the like.

Each month's issue also comes with a bonus CD that includes plug-in demos (often free fully-functional plugins), tutorial videos, sound samples, etc. This, for me, puts "Future Music" in a different league than other magazines.

Mags like Mix and EQ are great covering a wider scope of music and music-for-film production, but for the producer working with a Digital Audio Workstation, "Future Music" is probably the best "get right down to business" audio magazine available.

Highly Recommended.

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This mag is not publish anymore as told in previous reviews. They won't tell you instead I got a note that said I would get Guitar World, and got 1 issue only. Not only I just got 1 issue, but I never asked for guitar world. Please take note that Amazon is very good at everything except mag subscriptions. They send you with the publisher to deal with. No refund are made this way. Also this happened with the Mental Floss mag subscription. Your are on your own with magazine subscriptions.

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Just like another reviewer, I sent in the card for a preview issue. I did receive one issue, which I found to be of limited value anyway. I have since been bombarded with collection agency notices. I can't believe I may have to get legal help for this. Absolute rubbish.

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I sent in a card for a preview issue and never recieved it. Since then I've been bombarded with with forceful Must Pay notices. They've now turned me over to a collection agency. I've not to this day subscribed.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Brutus Magazine

Brutus MagazineI read this magazine for more than 10 years now. Though it's in Japanese, and my limited Japanese language skill cannot aid me to fully understand all the text, I find it the best and most interesting magazine focusing on modern living and design innovation. Especially it becomes more international in the recent years in terms of content and vision.

Other than having a theme, it features and covers almost every aspects of today city life thoughtout every issue. From fashion to dining, entertainment to culture, even achitecture and technology, you'll be amazed how the working team do their research so diversely and deeply.

On top of all the fulfilling and updating content, it also shows a very unique and lively layout design. It's particularly good for graphic designer as inspiring reference.

Again, I think it has already stepped out of its own country/bountry and will very soon reach an important position in the global magazine market.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Biblical Archaeology Review (1-year auto-renewal)

Biblical Archaeology ReviewI once asked the Regius Professor of Hebrew at the University of Cambridge how he stays abreast of fast-moving developments in biblical archaeology, a field of investigation that is related but decidely peripheral to his own work.

'I mostly read BAR ... ', he said, in an unexpectedly low-brow response for the hallowed halls of the Great University. 'Then if I want to know more about a topic, I move on to more scholarly publications.'

It was a vote of confidence in a magazine (*not* an academic journal!) that I've read for years and found equally useful in maintaining a generalist knowledge in an area of investigation that let's address the elephant in the room most of us come to out of religious interests.

BAR effectively combines the well-edited prose of leading scholars with due general-interest attention to color photos and complementary resources like slides (in a past era) and phenomenally well-produced videos and dvds.

An issue pulled at random from my shelves (November/December 2001) contains articles entitled:

-Excavating Philistine Gath. Have we found Goliath's hometown

-The Monastery of the Cross. Where heaven and earth meet

-The Rise and Fall of the Dead Sea

-Is It or Isn't It a Synagogue?

In addition, the usual suspects appear issue by issue in interesting columns that add color commentary to a polemical field where personalities as well as artefacts and theories loom large.

You'll want to ignore the over-heated reader responses on one brand of disillusionment or another. But you'd be wrong to heed some reviewers' critiques of the political headbashing that goes on among archaeologists. When elephants of this kind collide, it's usually over an ideological argument that matters. It does us no good to deride such battles as mere politics. BAR has had the good sense to play both a spectator's and a provocateur's role in such infighting over the complaints of readers who wish things were more placid around here.

They are not. And the things we continue to dig up from the rocky ground of Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt and other locations continue to insure that we never fall prey to boring consensus regarding the history of these great lands and the faiths they engendered.

Read BAR if this sounds remotely interesting and decide for yourself.

He's been in the rock business a long time, serving as chief editor/founder of BAR, Bible Review and Archaeology Odyssey; he is also president of Biblical Archaeology Society among many other ventures. I've read his Understanding the Dead Sea Scrolls which he mainly edited, although he wrote a few articles himself. This is a magazine of substance, one I would love to have a subscription to. The issue of July/August 2004 has an interesting article/interview that Mr. Shanks orchestrated between Elie Wiesel and Frank Moore Cross, the subject being how they understood, approached, studied the Bible, from their perspective, which their lifes' work ultimately revolves around. One, F.M. Cross, comes from a Presbyterian, academic background, the other, Wiesel, a jewish one. Frank Moore Cross contributed several articles to Understanding the Dead Sea Scrolls. He was the only protestant to work on the scrolls among the original team of 7 other people, six of whom were Catholic clerics; he is an expert in this field. And I just love Wiesel's mind, I love how he writes and thinks. That one article, I think is really illuminating, showing how rich in teaching the Bible is regardless of its many detractors, or fumbling misinterpreters. It is, as I've been taught in sunday school, G-d breathed, it's G-d's words, it is a living text even if it contains mostly stories of people long since dead and gone. Elie Wiesel says of it: " Wherever you open it, any page, you know that you are in the presence of something that exists nowhere else." The moral of the article is neither approach, Wiesel's or Cross', toward scripture is wrong, it just simply reflects the richness, the variety of the text.

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BAR presents an overall terrific introduction to the world of Biblical artifacts! Professional archaeologists & world-renowned scholars distill their dry, black-and-white academic publications into a language ordinary, non-technical people can understand & put to use when they study the Bible. What I like in particular is their presentation of vivid color photos that bring the artifacts & excavation sites to life! I appreciate BAR for introducing me to material I never knew existed that complements the Biblical record & helps demonstrate its reliability (such as the mysterious LMLK seal impressions made during the lifetimes of King Hezekiah & the great prophet Isaiah, which inspired me to write my own book on the subject--also available here at Amazon). My only complaint is that the editor occasionally publishes statements by archaeologists/scholars as facts when they actually represent atheistic/theistic biases in disguise. Fortunately, a "Letters to the Editor" section provides a forum for readers to challenge the experts, which makes for some interesting, often entertaining reading!

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It seems that at least one letter to the editor in each edition of Biblical Archaeology Review and its companion magazine, Bible Review, has a request to 'cancel my subscription'! Indeed, at one point upon renewing my subscription, I received the bonus gift of a small book that bore the title 'Cancel My Subscription!' These are letters which come from people who have found something offensive or unsettling among the many articles in an issue. And that is perfectly understandable -these magazines are touching upon very core beliefs in a way that is no respector of interpretative frameworks. BAR and BR are wonderful at letting the scholars, reviewers and other contributors speak for themselves. In fact, one might go so far as to say that the controversies are encouraged -for every reader who cancels, there are many more who are thankful for the illumination of differing viewpoints.

Biblical Archaeology Review has to its great credit early calls to the end the monopolistic tactics that the review team of the Dead Sea Scrolls seemed to have, and seemed to be poised to keep the scrolls out of the public view for yet another generation of scholars.

BAR takes issue with those who block the free transmission of knowledge and the free exercise of research. They have also taken public issue with archaeologists (the community with whom one would think they need to stay in good standing) for their fairly regular failure to publish results of archaeological research in a timely manner, or at all. And, as much archaeological research involves an element of destruction (when you move one layer off another layer, the top layer is usually destroyed -documentation of what was removed is critical, or else it really is lost) archaeologists who do not report what they've done are really burying the past more securely than any ocean tide or sand dune could.

The Biblical Archaeology Society (which produces these two magazines and a third, which I haven't read extensively and so do not yet feel qualified to review) also hosts regular seminars and gatherings. When I went the the AAR/SBL (American Academy of Religion/Society for Biblical Literature) conference last year, I also attended the BAS seminars held nearby. These are wonderful occasions, with noted scholars who regularly appear in the pages of BAR and BR, with groups of people, both amateurs and professionals, who are intensively interested in the topics presented. And, of course, one of the questions which always arises is, 'Where is Hershel?'

This refers to Hershel Shanks, editor and founder, who has, through his efforts and style, seemed to have established an instant rapport with his readers, such that those who have never met him feel they are on a first-name basis.

BAR has various sections with short newsy updates and in-depth articles on current archaeological problems, issues or discoveries. They also highlight personalities. Some scholars have regular columns (Elie Wiesel has been contributing a regular column to Bible Review for the past few years on significant figures from the Hebrew Scriptures).

Articles include an examination of current archaeological investigations and digs, as well as past digs that were not adequately covered. Architectural and artifact analysis is done, with extensive scientific reporting, but not so much that the articles are inaccessible to the interested layperson. Textual analysis and new interpretations are presented, both on newly discovered biblical and proto-biblical texts (the Dead Sea Scrolls aren't the only ones), as well an non-biblical texts from the region, to illustrate better the culture and society. There is usually at least one article on a major player in the field, again past or present, often in an interview with Hershel Shanks.

For the low price, one gets a wonderful magazine that always leaves one wanting more. Glossy pages, beautiful photography, interesting maps and diagrams -this magazine is a visual feast as well as an intellectual treat. Biblical Archaeology Review invests as much in the outstanding photography (for which it has won awards) as it does in the clear and precise writing. BAR is not afraid to contradict itself (archaeological evidence is often susceptible to multiple, sometimes conflicting interpretations) and will be up front with what it does and does not believe. It does not purport to support any particular doctrinal or dogmatic view, inviting the reader to take what is presented and work for her or himself the implications for faith, both spiritual and historical.

Read it to find out what you agree with; don't be afraid to disagree -write in and tell them about it! Just don't cancel your subscription!

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I've subscribed to BAR for at least 6 years now, and I enjoy the mix of articles on Holy Land archeology and related topics. The current events reported are informative and useful. The book reviews are helpful for guiding further reading in the field. I recommend it highly. My only complaint about the content would be that the editor tends to focus on controversies in the press and in the field that perhaps merit less attention than he gives it. Of course, it seems self-serving on his part to keep beating drums, but it is never dull. Probably sells a few extra copies evry month as well.

A little background on myself: BA degree in anthropology, ordained elder in the Presbyterian Church, USA. I have worked in a public school for 20 years now.

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