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As my first computer system was a Commodore PET I
started to investigate the Commodore specific magazines that were available.
Initially there was the club newsletter, with the laborious name: Commodore PET Users Club News,
put out by Commodore themselves in 1979 (the third edition is pictured left - I don't possess the
first edition). Despite its cheap, dour appearance - a poorly produced, dot-matrix
printed affair - it held a wealth of interesting information for the CBM programmer. Articles that
cut to the heart of these machines, especially those by Canadian computer guru
Jim Butterfield,
tantalised us with what these early devices could be made to do. However, very little of it was
actually practical - these computers were really nothing more than glorious toys (but that was
not necessarily a bad thing).
Under the later guidance of Pete Gerrard, the magazine's title became shortened to the simpler
Commodore Club News and started to look far more profesional. However, I seem to remember reading
that Commodore wanted to be rid of the responsibility of producing it and so, in 1981, Gerrard,
in conjunction with Nick Hampshire, continued independent
publication under the title: Commodore Computing - the first edition, shown left, lacks the
International in the title that appeared on the second and subsequent editions. Much later on,
this title was to spawn Amiga User International though, by that time, the publisher had changed
and both Gerrard and Hampshire had moved on to indulge themselves in various other publishing
pursuits.
1979 also saw the beginnings of IPUG, the Independent PET Users Group, created to provide
PET users with a voice that was not affiliated with Commodore. Like the official CBM newsletter,
the IPUG equivalent was initially a non-professional, photocopied affair that slowly grew to be
more professional, though the frivolous newletter cover (see left) was retained for many
years - some of us were sorry to see it go and the later, sanitised version was
far from inspirational. During 1982, after the advent of the VIC-20 and with other new CBM machines
such as the C64 and 500 and 700 series looming, the name of the publication was
changed to ICPUG dropping P for PET and replacing it with CP for Commodore Products.
Many names 'famous' within the Commodore arena could be found in its pages including
Mike Todd and the aforementioned Jim Butterfield.
I even managed to get a few things published there, too. The newsletter flourished through the
years that the original Commodore managed to keep its head above water but, a few years after
its demise, the C in ICPUG stopped representing Commodore and stood for Computer. Today
they still have a website but the newsletter is no longer published.
The other Commodore-related publication that appeared in 1979 was originally just called Printout.
Initially very thin - the first edition was only 20 pages but cost 95p which was expensive compared
to PCW or Practical Computing which only cost 50p back then - it was a well-produced glossy right
from the beginning and catered for all levels of PET user. By 1982 it had added Microcomputer
to its title and with the arrival of the VIC it started to spread its wings initially to that computer
and then further afield to encompass computers outside the CBM range. The magazine was one of the
first to include a column that basically took the mickey out of the industry - one of its favourites
was to call the Computing Today magazine Computnig Toady, a term that was also occasionally to
be found popping up in other magazines. It is therefore ironic that Microcomputer Printout was later
taken over by and merged into Computing Today some months before CT itself folded.
During 1981 VIC Computing arrived, initially published by the same company as Printout as a joint
venture between themselves and CBM UK. The cover (above right) is from the first edition that was published
for that year's Commodore Computing Show (which was still called the PET Show back then). The title
then appears to have changed hands with the offical volume 1, number 1 appearing in October 1981
though after 12 issues it transformed itself into
Commodore User, the first edition of which can be seen above right.
During the 80s many new titles appeared aimed at the Commodore 64. On the right are just a few:
Commodore Horizons (later absorbed into Commodore Computing International) was always rather on the
thin side, Your 64 initially had and VIC-20 as part of the title though this disappeared as
the 64's elder brother fell from fashion. Your Commodore seemed to fill most of its pages with
user-supplied programs, usually reams of incomprehensible machine-code dumps that, once labouriously
typed in, would result in something that usually either crashed immediately or, if it did run, was
never quite as good as the title and screen-shots suggested. |





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