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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.st
- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!uvaarpa!hub!news
- From: FRACYON@dirac.physics.jmu.edu (Ali Fracyon)
- Subject: Re: Atari seen in Compuke! Magazine
- In-Reply-To: millerm@CS.ColoState.EDU's message of Sat, 12 Dec 1992 00:39:59 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Dec13.014032.23792@hub.cs.jmu.edu>
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- Nntp-Posting-Host: dirac.physics.jmu.edu
- Organization: JMU Physics Dept.
- References: <Dec12.003959.39533@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU>
- Date: Sun, 13 Dec 1992 01:40:32 GMT
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- Lines: 178
-
- In <Dec12.003959.39533@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU> millerm@CS.ColoState.EDU writes:
-
- > Bob_BobR_Retelle@cup.portal.com writes:
- >
- > >To add to the discussion of magazines with Mark Miller..
- > >
- > >Unfortunately, what drives magazines is not the popularity of
- > >a computer's "market share", but the percentage of advertising
- > >they can sell to a particular computer's suppliers..
- > >
- > >Subscriptions alone don't pay for a very large part of the
- > >expenses in running a magazine.. it's the advertising pages that
- > >make or break a publication.. and if an advertising manager
- > >calls up companys and is told "We no longer support the Atari
- > >platform, please pull our ad", then the editorial departments
- > >can hardly continue to print material for a platform which no
- > >longer pays the bills...
- >
- > Okay, that makes sense. I did not realize that before. I thought
- > magazine subscriptions did in fact pay a large part of the bills.
- > What puzzles me though is that example I cited with TI. I am not
- > exaggerating when I say Compute! supported the TI-99/4A for about TWO
- > YEARS after TI stopped making them! I don't THINK there was a lot of
- > advertising supporting TI's either after TI discontinued it. I don't
- > know, I could be wrong. I haven't looked at those old issues in a
- > while. After reading one of the other messages on here about Borland
- > stopping support for the Mac, I've gotten another impression of the
- > computer industry. From what I've heard in the past, the Mac has
- > something like a 10% market share in the U.S. It may have grown since
- > then. I don't think it's dropped, because I heard that once they
- > brought their low-end computers down to around the $1000 range they
- > couldn't make enough of them for the demand. Perhaps in the "old
- > days" the computer industry was more forgiving and sympathetic to
- > minority brands, and were willing to hold out for them because it
- > didn't cost them much to do so. What I don't understand is how come
- > Compute! stopped covering the Mac? I can understand why it stopped
- > covering the Amiga, if they consider popularity below a certain margin
-
- Actually, they still have an Amiga section and a C64/128 section. They
- stopped advertising that they have 'special' editions for other computers
- when OMNI/PH took charge and I believe the reason that the other computers
- lost their coverage is because it looked like a 100% IBM magazine so
- only IBM people bought it. The reason that the Amiga/Commodore sections
- were left was probably because there were enough subscribers to justify
- their keeping. One odd note thou, they are charging less than $10 for
- any edition / multi-edition of their magazine (12 issue subscription).
- At first, I thoungh they are going to have these special editions until
- the subscriptions run out, but since they are advertising their special
- sections and purchasing programs for disk on the Amiga and type-ins for
- the C64/128, maybe they are in for the long run. Maybe they see a profit
- in having special sections. You should contact them; with there being
- alot less Commodore, Amiga, and Atari magazines around, maybe their
- support of these computers would be profitable to them.
-
- > (which is higher than it used to be), but why the hell did they drop
- > Mac support??? Isn't the Mac popular enough, even in products that
- > could be sold through Compute! in advertising, that it would warrant
- > devoting a part of the magazine to it? Also, isn't the Mac popular
- > enough that there would be a demand for Borland's products? Or was
- > there a competing product in the Mac market that was better? Some
- > have said the same recently of WordPerfect. The reason WordPerfect
- > had to stop supporting the Atari is not only because of lower
- > popularity over time of the computers, but because other word
- > processors had come out that competed with it, and Atari users
- > preferred them to WordPerfect.
- >
- > To sum it up, it seemed to me Compute! had changed its priorities
- > and is no longer the kind of magazine it used to be, in the spirit
- > that it used to be. I remember, they used to pride themselves
- > on the fact that they were one of the few magazines covering all
- > different kinds of computers, so no matter which one you owned you
- > could get something out of the magazine. Today I don't think this is
- > really true. They still have general articles I'm sure, but just
- > about everything else is PC-only. I was suspicious that the reason
- > the priorities were changed was that management had been changed. The
- > new management came in, decided they didn't like Compute's philosophy,
- > or didn't understand it, and decided to change it. Unfortunately I
- > don't think they understood the spirit of the older magazine, much
- > less the philosophy. I think they have turned it into a PC-only
- > magazine, rather than what it was intended to be, a magazine that most
- > computer users could enjoy and get something out of it. Maybe they
- > made the right decision to make the change. I just suspect that they
- > made some unnecessary changes, that it wouldn't have hurt them to keep
- > some things that they have elliminated, like support for the Mac.
- >
- > One may wonder why I am advocating that Compute! support the Mac. I
- > am not advocating it per se. I am an Atari user. It just strikes me
- > as very odd that Compute! doesn't at least support the Mac in addition
- > to the PC. I think it was unnecessary to take Mac support out.
- > Either it was management, or else the readers decided it. Maybe Mac
- > users didn't like Compute! in the first place. I just find the
- > lacking support odd, because it has not happened before.
- >
- > >(I've actually sat with the "advertising manager" of an Atari
- > >specific publication and heard those same kinds of comments from
- > >her advertisers.. It's a pretty discouraging experience..)
- >
- > Yeah, must be depressing.
- >
- > >It might be that after having so many other platforms pulled out
- > >from under them (Radio Shack, Texas Instruments, ADAM, Sinclair,
- > >etc..) when the Atari 8bit market started to collapse, the
- > >publishers of Compute! decided not to wait until the bitter end
- > >to drop their coverage.. the Atari market had hung on by its
- > >fingernails much longer than any of those others..
- >
- > Well it would seem they dropped support for the ST a little earlier
- > than "usual" also. I think they dropped the ST mag. a year or two
- > after they dropped Atari 8-bit support. One of the things that
- > might've been an indication of lack of support for some of the
- > other computers, as well as type-in programs in general is some of
- > their computer-specific publications went bi-monthly almost from the
- > beginning.
- >
- > >Like any other businessman, a publisher has to go where his
- > >customers are, and give them what they want to buy, if he wants
- > >to stay in business. Just call the rolls of all the now
- > >defunct Atari publications to see how true that is...
- >
- > I couldn't agree with you more. One of the other things that Compute!
- > used to pride itself on is it acted as kind of a bridge between
- > computer users. Remember, I said one of the reasons I liked Compute!
- > was because it showed me the strengths and weaknesses of each make of
- > computer. I remember Arlan Levitan writing a sarcastic column about
- > other magazines always supporting the make of computer they were
- > supporting and downgrading all other makes like they were the scum of
- > the earth, or making fun of them. He also wrote about how silly it was
- > that computer users of one make were downgrading other makes of
- > computer. He then went on to say, basically, "Alright! Just
- > to show how stupid it is, I'm going to downgrade every make of
- > computer there is!!" and proceeded to do so, focusing only on the
- > weaknesses of each brand/type. The point he was making, and some
- > other columnists of Compute! had made in the past is Compute! was
- > a magazine where this kind of stuff didn't happen, where all brands of
- > computer were considered equal in merit based on what they could do,
- > rather than what other computers couldn't do.
- >
- > What I see happening with Compute! becoming another PC-only magazine
- > is that bridge is lost. It would seem the computer industry has gone
- > back to the days where there were no general computer magazines, just
- > computer-specific ones, and each segment of computer users (using
- > their brand) were naive about what was going on with other brands,
- > because computer-specific publications don't cover other brands, or if
- > they do they cover them in a negative way. The only general computer
- > magazines that I can think of now are Byte and Computer Shopper. I
- > consider Byte to be a business-person's magazine, not a personal
- > computer user's mag. Maybe Computer Shopper is the only one left in
- > this area?
-
- Damn PCs are everywhere. Modern electronics changed their format and
- claimed that it was going to have CPU projects (build around 6502, ...)
- but starting with their second issue, they have been having articles
- on how to stick a harddrive in a PC or articles on different brands
- of 387 math coprocessors that are available.
-
- I don't think that it matters if Atari has been rulling the computer
- composition market or if multimedia is better on the Amiga, if there are
- thousands of PC users going around asking about which sound board they
- should buy or which MPC package is the best, they are going to get all
- the attention.
-
- -My views only; not MDI's; not JMU's. -Congratulations Finland. 75 years!
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Ali Fracyon - - - - - -
- Modular Dreams, Inc. // Only - - - - - -
- P.O. Box 486 \X/ Amiga! - - - - - -
- Harrisonburg, VA 22801 - - - - - -
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- >
- > |Mark Miller, computer science |"The most important human endeavor is the |
- > |major at C.S.U. |striving for morality in our actions. Our |
- > |millerm@cs.colostate.edu |inner balance and even our very existence |
- > |mmiller@nyx.cs.du.edu |depend on it. Only morality in our |
- > | / Atari friend! ||| |actions can give beauty and dignity to |
- > | \/ --- The Mark )|( |life." --- Albert Einstein |
- > | World Peace / | \ There's nothing else quite like it. |
- >
-