I have a pretty complete series of BYTEs from 1982 until 1998 that need to
find a new library to add their immense body of computer history knowledge
to.
Pricing does not include shipping unless specifically mentioned. Priority
will go to buyers wanting to take entire runs (ie. someone wanting to buy
an entire year will get priority over someone wanting to buy one or two
issues for that year).
Please reply directly to <sellam_at_vintage.org> or <dastar_at_wco.com>.
Replies to this message to ClassicCmp will not even be seen by me, and
will therefore be ignored. Repeat: REPLIES TO CLASSICCMP WILL BE IGNORED.
APR,MAY/1982 - $2.00 each
JAN-DEC/83 - $2.00 each or $18 for the whole set
JAN-DEC/84 - $2.00 each or $18 for the whole set
JAN-DEC/85 - $1.50 each or $15 for the whole set
JAN-DEC/86 - $1.00 each or $12 for the whole set
JAN-DEC/87 - $0.75 each or $5 for the whole set
JAN-DEC/88 - $0.50 each or $5 for the whole set
JAN-DEC/89 - $0.50 each or $5 for the whole set
JAN-DEC/90 - 1.2 * shipping (whole set only please)
JAN-DEC/91 - 1.2 * shipping (whole set only please)
JAN-DEC/92 - 1.2 * shipping (whole set only please)
JAN-DEC/93 - 1.2 * shipping (whole set only please)
JAN-DEC/94 - 1.2 * shipping (whole set only please)
JAN-DEC/95 - 1.2 * shipping (whole set only please)
Also available are these special editions:
1984 IBM PC Special Issue: Guide to the IBM PCs - $3.00
1985 IBM PC Special Issue: Guide to the IBM PCs - $2.00
1986 Extra Edition Guide to the IBM PCs - $1.00
1987 Extra Edition Guide to the IBM PCs - $1.00
1987 Bonus Edition: Applications Software Today - $1.00
1988 IBM Special Edition - $1.00
1989 IBM Special Edition: Redefining the Standards - $1.00
1990 IBM Special Edition: Guideposts for the 90s - $1.00
1991 Extra Edition: Outlook '92 - $1.00
1992 Special Issue: Essential Guide to Windows - $3.00
1992 Special Issue: Essential Guide to Portable Computing - $1.00
1993 Spring '93 Special Issue: Essential Guide to Windows - $1.00
Remember: Reply to <sellam_at_vintage.org> or <dastar_at_wco.com>.
To help you decide which issues you want, here's a handy guide that shows
the issue topic that is printed on the binding of each issue:
04/82: Human Factors Engineering
08/82: Logo
01/83: Looking Ahead
02/83: Standards
03/83: Mass Storage
04/83: New Chips
05/83: The Electronic Office
06/83: 16-bit Designs
07/83: Videotex
08/83: The C Language
09/83: Portable Computers
10/83: Unix
11/83: Inside the IBM PC
12/83: Easy Software
01/84: 1984 and Beyond
02/84: Benchmarks
03/84: Simulation
04/84: Real-World Interfacing
05/84: Computers and the Professions
06/84: Computers and Education
07/84: Computers and Video
08/84: Modula-2
09/84: Computer Graphics
10/84: Databases
11/84: New Chips
12/84: Communications/Byte Guide to Apple PCs
01/85: Through the Hourglass
02/85: Computing and the Sciences
03/85: Bargain Computing
04/85: Artificial Intelligence
05/85: Multiprocessing
06/85: Programming Techniques
07/85: Computers and Space
08/85: Declarative Languages
09/85: Homebrewing/10th Anniversary (* great historical issue!)
10/85: Simulating Society
11/85: Graphics Hardware
12/85: Computer Conferencing
01/86: Robotics
02/86: Text Processing
03/86: Homebound Computing
04/86: Number Crunching
05/86: Mass Sotrage
06/86: Computers and Music
07/86: Engineer's Toolbox
08/86: Object-Oriented Languages
09/86: The 68000 Family
10/86: Public Domain Powerhouses
11/86: Knowledge Representation
12/86: Graphics Algorithms
01/87: Programmable Hardware
02/87: Educational Computing
03/87: Image Processing
04/87: Instruction Set Strategies
05/87: Desktop Publishing * Internal Modems
06/87: CAD * Mice * 12-Mhz ATs * IBM PS/2 Family
07/87: LANs * IBM PS/2 Models 30,50,60 * CAD Software
08/87: Prolog * 386 Hardware and Software
09/87: Printer Technologies * 80386 System Software
10/87: Heuristic Algorithms * Tandy's New Lineup
11/87: Accelerator Boards * Workstations
12/87: AT Memory Boards * Natural Language Processing
01/88: Database Software * Managing Megabytes
02/88: 14 Multiscan Monitors * LISP
03/88: New Math Coprocessors * Enhanced EGA/VGA Boards
04/88: Memory Management * 24-pin Printers
05/88: CPU Architectures * Word Processors
06/88: New Benchmarks * Ultra-High-Speed Modems
07/88: Multitasking * Fast 40-megabyte Hard Disks
08/88: The C Language * Special Macintosh Supplement
09/88: Display Technology * Postscript Printers
10/88: Hypertext * Affordable 80386s
11/88: Parallel Processing * NeXT * Project Management
12/88: Mac Supplement * Groupware * Benchmark Update
01/89: PC Communications * Annual Awards * Digitizing Tablets
02/89: Personal Workstations * C Compilers * Mac SE/30
03/89: Mac Supplement * 286 vs. 386SX * Object-Oriented Programming
04/89: CASE * UPSes * Graphics Supplement
05/89: Unix * CAD * Technology Breakthroughs
06/89: Mac Supplement * Security * Modems
07/89: 12 GUIs * LAN OSes * Distributed Processing
08/89: 80386-based Portables * Neural Networks * Mac Supplement
09/89: Apricot 80486 * Multiuser Operating Systems * Database Trends
10/89: Mac Portable * Optical Technologies * Optical Storage
11/89: Inside EISA * Beyond VGA * 32 Bits and Above
12/89: 5 New Laptops * Sound and Image Processing * CASE Tools
01/90: Annual Awards * Harddisk Utilities * State of Chips
02/90: Annual Index * Multimedia * Great Spreadsheets
03/90: 26 VGA Monitors * Compaq Systempro * Life within 1 Megabyte
04/90: OS/2 2.0 * Applications Architecture * 386 Roundup
05/90: SQL Servers * Amiga 3000 * Global Text Displays
06/90: Windows 3.0 * Networking * Low-cost LANs
07/90: Computing Without Keyboards * Low-cost Lasers * Reader's Awards
08/90: 386SX Showdown * Inside Windows 3.0 * End-user Programming
09/90: 15th Anniversary Summit * WYSIWYG Word Processors
10/90: DTP * Object-Oriented Computing * Knowledge Engineering
11/90: Mass Storage * Large SCSI Drives * FPUs
12/90: Laser Printer Alternatives * Advanced Graphics
01/91: Annual Awards * Artificial Intelligence * Caching Controllers
02/91: Laptop Technologies * 15 Notebook Computers
03/91: E-mail Software * Network Management * DOS Secrets
04/91: OCR Tools * Soviet Computing * Paperless Offices
05/91: Managing Gigabytes * Nineteen 486/33s * HP 95LX
06/91: 486SX vs. Am386-40 * SX Notebooks * Desktop Multiprocessing
07/91: DOS 5.0 * Wide-Area Networks * Sparc Clones
08/91: Safe Data * 10 Years of Smalltalk * NCR's Pen-based Portable
09/91: 64-bit Computing * 3rd-Generation CD-ROMs * Group Schedulers
10/91: Printer Technologies * Modularity * 9600-BPS Modems
11/91: Interoperability * Momenta * New Macs
12/91: OS/2 2.0 * Multimedia * Presentation Graphics
01/92: 1991 Awards * Databases * Cross-platform Development
02/92: Tomorrow's Processors * PowerPC * Network Servers
03/92: Windows on the Road * Memory & Storage * Spreadsheets
04/92: Natural I/O * Business Graphics * Windows 3.1
05/92: 3-D Computing * Intel's 486DX2 * High-resolution Monitors
06/92: Text Management * Color Printers * Windows Special Report
07/92: Apple's PDA * Portable Libraries * Flatbed Scanners
08/92: Network Analysis Tools * Postscript Printers * Parallel Computing
09/92: Unix * Optical Computing * Notebooks
10/92: Windows NT * Local Bus * Removable Storage
11/92: DSPs * Low-cost PCs * Ultimate Workstations
12/92: 66-Mhz 486DX2s * CPU CHoices * Objects and Users
01/93: 1992 Awards * Machine Translations * Windows Accelerators
02/93: Recordable CD-ROM * Fax Servers * Mobile Communications
03/93: E-mail * Groupware * 600-DPI Printers
04/93: Fighting Fatware * Compression * Visualization
05/93: Pentium * Lab Report: 126 Printers * Security
06/93: Windows * Client/Server Technology * Fast 486s
07/93: Pentium PCs * Data Acquisition * Fast Modems
08/93: PowerPC * 100 Ethernet Cards * Tomorrow's Networks
09/93: Video Computing * Hard Drives * Digital Documents
10/93: First PDAs * Pen and Voice * Notebooks
11/93: Special Report: Windows & OS/2 * Graphics Technology * Printers
12/93: WANs * High-speed 486s * Printer Technology
01/94: Advanced Operating Systems * New Processors * Monitors
02/94: Compression * Graphics Accelerators * Compilers
03/94: The Data Highway * 486-based Portables * Mass Storage
04/94: PowerPCs * Pentium/486 Systems * Object Database Systems
05/94: Componentware * Printers * Wireless Communications
06/94: New 80x86s * Ethernet Adapters * Distributed Computing
07/94: PC-Telephony * 14.4-Kbps Modems * Groupware
08/94: Document Management * High-end Pentiums * Bus Technologies
09/94: Plug and Play * Fast CD-ROM Drives * Internetworking
10/94: Intelligent Networks * Portable Systems * Data Acquisition
11/94: Special Report: Beyond Windows * Printers * New CPUs
12/94: Apple's Gamble * 90-Mhz Pentiums * Networking
01/95: Small-office Computing * Monitors * Color Management
02/95: The New Novell * Graphics Accelerators * Pattern Recognition
03/95: Technology Reshapes Learning * Tape Drives * SOftware Agents
04/95: Intel's P6 * Internet Firewalls * Client/Server Computing
05/95: Mainframes of the Future * Printers * Digital Video
06/95: Mobile Computing * V.34 Modems * Memory Technologies
07/95: The Internet * Ethernet Switching Hubs * 3-D Graphics
08/95: Microsoft * Windows 95 * Internet Servers * Groupware
09/95: 20th Anniversary Special Issue
11/95: Chips * Operating Systems * Network Printers
12/95: Software Reliability * 133 Mhz Pentiums * Games
01/96: Supercomputers * Best of Comdex * Componentware
03/96: Web PC * Web Servers * Multimedia
04/96: Future Computers * Windows 95 * Middleware
05/96: Unix vs. NT * Mobile Computing * WANs
06/96: Electric Money * Ink-jets * Recordable CDs
07/96: Group War * NT * Reader's Choice Awards
08/96: Business on the Net * Tape Libraries * ATM
09/96: No-wait Web * Telephony Boards * Software Quality
10/96: 3-D For Everyone * Notebooks * Network Design
11/96: Java Chips * Dual Pentium Pros * Cairo, Copland, 64-bit Unix
12/96: How Chips Changed the World * Network Printers
01/97: Can Java Replace Windows? * 3-D Workstations * Netware 4.11
04/97: Network Computers * Web Componentware * Java 1.1
05/97: NT 5.0 * SMP Servers * Hostile Applets
06/97: Digital IDs * 56K Modems * Database Programming
07/97: New User Interface * MMX Systems * Memphis
08/97: Energize Your Intranet * New Chips * Extend Your Enterprise
09/97: ActiveX Demystified * 300-Mhz Pentium IIs * Universal Inbox
10/97: Your Next Net * 8 Java Solutions * Pentium II with AGP
11/97: The Orbiting Internet * MMX Notebooks * Secure Windows NT
12/97: Beyond Pentium II * Editor's Choice * Network Computers
01/98: 1998's Top Technologies * 300-Mhz Pentium IIs * Cable Modems
02/98: Disposable PCs * Internet2 * Storage Report
03/98: Reinventing the Web * Netware 5 * 3-D Boards
04/98: Crash-proof Computing * Benchmarks * Color Lasers
Sellam Alternate e-mail: dastar_at_siconic.com
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Don't rub the lamp if you don't want the genie to come out.
VCF East? VCF Europe!? YOU BETCHA!!
Stay tuned for more information
or contact me to find out how you can participate
http://www.vintage.org
Received on Wed Oct 13 1999 - 22:44:26 BST