Recently a bookstore near me that used to carry lots of interesting periodicals (including my favorite 2600) stopped all of them. So I have decided to subscribe directly. What are some of your favorite magazines/journals (tech and non-tech) that you love and wish would last for a long time to come.
Lapham's Quarterly - each issue (4x a year) looks at a different topic with a focus on history and showing various perspectives across times and cultures. each issue has writing from the ancients through this year.<p>Cabinet - I used to subscribe to this one but my subscription lapsed. it is kind of a hipster magazine and some of the stuff in there is obtuse garbage but every once in a while they hit it. this is a good example - <a href="http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/52/hodes.php" rel="nofollow">http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/52/hodes.php</a><p>Harper's is usually pretty good though I've never subscribed.<p>If you live in a big city there are usually a couple really high quality newstands that carry 100s or 1000s of magazines - I love browsing those. recently I came away from one with an issue of Fantasic man, Reason mag, and Harpers. always worth a trip.<p>Another good place to view magazines is art school libraries. they usually have some more wacky ones like adbusters or BITCH and some of them are true visual feasts. of course they are more liberal so you won't find stuff like the american conservative or anything murdoch owned but every once in a while you will come across something really amazing.
I've been reading the Economist for about 10 years. It provides great coverage on big issues, and recently, some fun ones (billie eilish comes to mind).<p>It's unique in that it feels "slower", more deliberate, and thoughtful than most newspaper/tv channels. It gives context and covers multiple viewpoints before giving an opinion. Its daily espresso newsletter and quarterly tech issues are always interesting too.<p>I've subscribed to NYT and WSJ over the years, but none feels as differentiated as the Economist. (Haven't tried Financial Times, if someone has and likes them, please do share your thoughts)
Private Eye. Probably only of interest to those in the UK (Ireland has The Phoenix, which appears superficially similar at least).<p>As far as I'm aware it's the only widely distributed investigative journalism magazine. You get to read about some scandals months or years before they break in the news, plenty never make it of course.<p>There are a number of regular features but the one on the state of national health by M.D. has been by far and a way the most insightful thing I've read on the state of various countries under covid. This includes how the govt. has cocked up, and frequent admissions of how covid confounded the assumptions of the medical community.<p>It's also got a good line in satire, reviews, absurdity and cartoons. It can be a bit of a slog to read, especially if you go page by page, but that's probably more a reflection of the value of the content than the quality of the prose.
<a href="https://www.lowtechmagazine.com" rel="nofollow">https://www.lowtechmagazine.com</a><p>> Low-tech Magazine questions the blind belief in technological progress, and talks about the potential of past and often forgotten knowledge and technologies when it comes to designing a sustainable society. Interesting possibilities arise when you combine old technology with new knowledge and new materials, or when you apply old concepts and traditional knowledge to modern technology.<p>> Low-tech Magazine publishes at most 12 well-researched stories per year.
<a href="https://pagedout.institute/" rel="nofollow">https://pagedout.institute/</a><p>It's an online zine focused on programming and hacking. If you like 2600 you'll love pagedout.
Logic Magazine (<a href="https://logicmag.io/" rel="nofollow">https://logicmag.io/</a>) is the only one I truly care about. I don't have their entire catalogue, but I've read everything they've produced in the last year or so. They've recently released a couple of ebooks and I'm slowly making my way through them. I'm surprised nobody mentioned them yet.<p>Other than that, I occasionally read 2600 and Jacobin, though I'm not as engaged with them as I am with Logic.
Make Magazine. I know it has its detractors here, and some of the material ends up being dated pretty quick, but it represents a mindset that I really enjoy, which is that you have the ability to transform the world around you. It’s the same thing I love about programming, but for physical objects.
N+1 and The Baffler both seem to be constitutionally incapable of releasing a bad issue. Highly recommended.<p>Jacobin is uneven, but if you read Reason et al you owe it to yourself to pick up a copy now and then to keep up with ideological writing in the land of the living.<p>The Economist is an incredibly well written magazine that unfortunately - editorials aside - can't escape the compulsion of not even being wrong. Save your money and just sign up for a couple of Axios newsletters for the same effect.<p>I have not read Edge in years, maybe decades, but it deserves a mention for treating video games as digital art rather than consumer electronics.
If, Mondo2000, OMNI. "Speculative techno-utopianism", if one had to affix a label to the genre. Not sure if anything exists like that today?<p><a href="https://archive.org/details/ifmagazine" rel="nofollow">https://archive.org/details/ifmagazine</a><p><a href="https://archive.org/details/mondohistory" rel="nofollow">https://archive.org/details/mondohistory</a><p><a href="https://archive.org/details/OMNI197908/Best_of_OMNI_1_1980/" rel="nofollow">https://archive.org/details/OMNI197908/Best_of_OMNI_1_1980/</a>
Sorry in advance for the negativity. I'd love to rediscover the joy of reading quality periodicals so I'll read other comments here and try anything that looks good.<p>As for my experiences lately...<p>I subscribed to The Atlantic after reading it online.<p>The print edition is disappointing for the quality of its typography and illustrations. The layout subediting should contribute a lot more to the experience. Instead, I feel like I'm wading aimlessly through a swamp without landmarks.<p>I like the online typography and layout of NYT and WSJ, and I subscribed to both for the quality of their newsrooms and the depth of their resources.<p>I lament the polarisation of journalistic publications into left and right. This is particularly jarring in the comments sections of NYT and WSJ. The partisan tropes are unedifying, repetitious and dull. I'm happier not reading them.<p>For hardcopy, I'm reading books.
Do you want a totally different perspective on modern life that is well-written and will force you out of normal patterns of thinking?<p>Read old magazines. Not early Wired old. 1800s/early to mid 1900s old. Very old. The Spectator...of Addison and Steele. Life magazine, but not that upstart that started in the 1930s, but the original humor magazine.<p>A short list<p>Early Fortune magazines (1930s-1950s) to get a sense of the evolution of modern business and technology. Wonderful graphics.<p>The first hundred years of Harpers...up to, say, 1970. McClures. Saturday Evening Post. Scribners. Colliers. The Nation preWWII.<p>Early Scientific Americans. Read the 75th anniversary issue talking about all the early tech wonders that led to its 75th anniversary...celebrated in 1920. The issues of the 1870s have wonderful illustrations of intricate machinery.<p>Judge magazine and the first Life Magazine...both humor magazines about the foibles of lived modern life in the early 20th Century.<p>Niles Weekly Register, published 1810-1840. Learn how early US cities grew up...the bones of many Eastern cities formed during this period.<p>Early Popular Science and Popular Mechanics from 1920s-1950s.<p>Early enthusiast radio magazines from the 1910s to 1950s...the Internet of its time.<p>Everyday Engineering and Everyday Mechanics magazines of the late 1910s. A boy’s magazine focusing on simple projects teenagers could build on their own: movie cameras, radio telephones, small gasoline engines starting from raw iron and doing your own castings, wireless controlled torpedoes...<p>The illustrator art on the front covers of some of these are worth the price of admission alone. You can pick up vintage issues for anywhere from $7.00 to $50.00...mostly $15-$20.<p>Binge-reading ten or so issues of magazines of a given decade, say 1930s, is a psychedelic experience. You lift your eyes and your head is still in the 1930s. And you start asking interesting questions...
Milk Street Kitchen is the absolute best periodical for recipes and cooking in my opinion.<p><a href="https://www.177milkstreet.com/" rel="nofollow">https://www.177milkstreet.com/</a><p>Its by the same founder of America's Test Kitchen/Cooks Illustrated, which is another respected publication. However, Milk Street recipes tend to be simpler, less fussy and more internationally inspired. Everything I have made from them has been an absolute winner. They also have an outstanding high quality TV show free on Youtube.
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpGcoQ4AmidJSpDUXPZoq8A" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpGcoQ4AmidJSpDUXPZoq8A</a>
If you read French, MISC is a great magazine about IT security and hacking. You can find it at the airport between the cars magazines and video games magazines and it will contain excellent articles. For example a JVM hack with the byte code explained in details, or spying a wireless Logitech keyboard by forcing it into an old compatibility mode and then bruteforcing the encryption key, or a step by step tutorial to run a debugger on the Android Snapshat to break its encryption (from my memory).<p><a href="https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-System_%26_Internet_Security_Cookbook" rel="nofollow">https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-System_%26_Internet_Se...</a>
"Delayed Gratification" is all of that for me - they 'revisit the events of the last three months to offer in-depth, independent journalism in an increasingly frantic world.'<p><a href="https://www.slow-journalism.com/" rel="nofollow">https://www.slow-journalism.com/</a><p>Love all these recommendations btw!
There is something about the combination of good writing, photos and layout that makes a magazine satisfying.
2600, It's always a treat to keep in the washroom magazine rack with a old DigiKey catalogue. Worth it just for the joy of finding it in my mailbox and reading the user submitted letters.<p>[0] <a href="https://2600.com/" rel="nofollow">https://2600.com/</a>
The London Review of Books.<p>Imagine the New Yorker (in depth, long form, political and cultural) but far, far less obsessed with wokeness... yet still with a useful and critical eye on conservatism.
Seconding The Economist. A league on its own. :-)<p>I never subscribed, but like/liked to read (e.g. at B&N)<p>THE NEW YORKER
2600
FOREIGN POLICY
HARPER'S
THE ATLANTIC
Even the Rolling Stone can have good articles. E.g.:
<a href="https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/how-america-lost-the-war-on-drugs-170965/" rel="nofollow">https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/how-amer...</a>
I enjoy both Quanta and Aeon. They get linked on HN somewhat often, and for good reason - they manage to balance being detailed and informative on technical subject matter while still being interesting and readable.<p>The New Yorker and The Economist have already been mentioned but are worth mentioning again.<p>Le Monde Diplomatique has some great material. Though I'm not quite willing to subscribe, maybe a third of their articles are available for free.
Started reading more in print magazines to help pass the lockdown time.<p>In general, I'd recommend Monocle to just about anyone. The articles and photography are top notch: <a href="https://monocle.com/magazine/" rel="nofollow">https://monocle.com/magazine/</a><p>For Canadians living in or entranced by the Maritimes: <a href="https://maritimeedit.com/" rel="nofollow">https://maritimeedit.com/</a>
Stripe has a software magazine called increment that’s pretty cool.<p>I’ve also liked a lot of writing in the Atlantic.<p>Recently I subscribed to some Substacks: Persuasion, The Weekly Dish, The Diff which are usually interesting.
It is a French magazine about video-games with a satirical tone. It is called "Canard PC", which is a play on a well-known toilet brand ("Canard WC"). It brings interesting takes to video-game coverage, and it makes me laugh.<p>There is one free article per week. This is the current one and it is very typical: <a href="https://www.canardpc.com/413/jouer-among-us-comme-un-enqueteur-de-la-police-judiciaire-among-us" rel="nofollow">https://www.canardpc.com/413/jouer-among-us-comme-un-enquete...</a><p>This is the one which will be free 11 hours from now: <a href="https://www.canardpc.com/413/xbox-ps5-choix-de-la-nouvelle-generation" rel="nofollow">https://www.canardpc.com/413/xbox-ps5-choix-de-la-nouvelle-g...</a>
I was a long time subscriber to Scientific American and IEEE Computer and tried to read The Economist as often as possible also.<p>I also used to buy local newspapers as well. But these days it's just so expensive, both in terms of money and time, that I gave most of that up.<p>And that's a lot of paper to have around, so I generally just read stuff online these days.<p>I agree with several of the other commenters here in suggesting you go to a real book/magazine store and look around. Then check out the online versions magazines you identified and make sure it's something in which you're willing to invest time and money.<p>I'd give an extra plug to The Economist, as it's generally really well written and will spur you to think even if you disagree with some of their positions.
Current Affairs strikes me in some ways as the anti-Economist. Brilliant and even if you disagree with their politics their critique of the current state of capitalism is well-researched, well-argued and insightful.<p>Jacobin is the house publication of the resurgent socialist labor movement. Given the generational sea change in attitudes toward socialism, the resurgence of fascism, and economic conditions we haven’t seen since the Gilded Age (1/4 of the US population unemployed or earning starvation wages) it seems wise to keep an eye on what may become future policy.<p>The Believer is a simply amazing literary and culture magazine nurtured by Dave Eggers / McSweeneys. Amazing interviews, off-kilter features and some of the best illustrators / graphic novelists of the past 20 years.
The Golfer's Journal: <a href="https://www.golfersjournal.com/" rel="nofollow">https://www.golfersjournal.com/</a>. It's basically National Geographic, but for Golf. I adore it.
My favorite magazine is Software Design (<a href="https://gihyo.jp/magazine/SD" rel="nofollow">https://gihyo.jp/magazine/SD</a>), a Japanese magazine that specializes in software engineering and IT topics. It reminds me of Dr. Dobbs' Journal. The articles are well-written and have code samples. I started reading this magazine in 2010 when I was living in Japan doing an internship at a major Japanese tech company, and I always purchase a physical copy whenever I visit Japan.
I like Research*EU.<p>It's free, made by the EU and every month I find some really good articles that worth reading.<p>I'll leave a link to this month's issue in case you're interested.<p><a href="https://op.europa.eu/o/opportal-service/download-handler?identifier=ca325622-1f16-11eb-b57e-01aa75ed71a1&format=PDF&language=en&productionSystem=cellar" rel="nofollow">https://op.europa.eu/o/opportal-service/download-handler?ide...</a>
The Spectator. It's been going since 1828 though so it's pretty long lived already. Profitable currently as well so should be able to keep going for a while.
Circuit Cellar [1], if you're into electronics. Good mix of industry coverage, recent trends, and experiential projects. It's like a more sophisticated version of Elektor.<p>Maximum PC [2], for the PC enthusiasts out there.<p>[1] <a href="https://circuitcellar.com/" rel="nofollow">https://circuitcellar.com/</a><p>[2] <a href="http://maximumpc.com/" rel="nofollow">http://maximumpc.com/</a>
I've been a big fan of my stack magazine subscription: <a href="https://www.stackmagazines.com/subscribe/" rel="nofollow">https://www.stackmagazines.com/subscribe/</a><p>It's a little left leaning when they choose "critical" works, but also I received great magazines like OH-SO (<a href="https://www.stackmagazines.com/magazine/oh-so-issue-4/" rel="nofollow">https://www.stackmagazines.com/magazine/oh-so-issue-4/</a>) which is an all girls skateboard magazine (great photos and wonderful to see a small community serving itself) and Visions which was fun sci-fi short stories: <a href="https://www.stackmagazines.com/magazine/visions-issue-2/" rel="nofollow">https://www.stackmagazines.com/magazine/visions-issue-2/</a> If you want to support a variety of independent magazines and are okay with randomness, most have been great.
* For news: Financial Times; The Economist<p>* UK politics/culture: New Statesman (not The Spectator!)<p>* Literature: The London Review of Books<p>* Cooking: BBC Good Food - so good to receive a thick magazine of new recipes each month, stops your lockdown cooking repertoire getting stale.<p>My favorite from earlier in my life were: National Geographic (as a kid) and Byte (teenager; taught me everything I knew about computers).
I love National Geographic and have been a subsciber of this magazine for more than 10 years now.When I read this magazine which is full with amazing photos and graphs I am always taken to a very exciting and absurbing place.<p>Another magazine which I also love and subscribed to for the last years is Popular Science which I highly recommand.
Not a magazine, but the Thinking About Things newsletter is always interesting. <a href="https://www.thinking-about-things.com" rel="nofollow">https://www.thinking-about-things.com</a>
I really enjoy Courier, one of the only magazines I still get excited to read each month<p>Lots of stories about founding small tech and non tech businesses across the world, from DTC brands to restaurants to delivery companies. Always great stories about how founders got through a journey, intersped with top quality advice and tips. And celebrates lots of folks who do a craft just for the sake of it. Delightful read<p><a href="https://couriermedia.co" rel="nofollow">https://couriermedia.co</a>
For new and/or adventurous music: The Wire - <a href="https://www.thewire.co.uk/" rel="nofollow">https://www.thewire.co.uk/</a>
I enjoy reading Fermat's Library (<a href="https://fermatslibrary.com/journal_club" rel="nofollow">https://fermatslibrary.com/journal_club</a>), a publication that covers one scientific paper of interest a week (give or take) with annotations by the authors. Papers come from a wide variety of fields: biology, computer science, physics, mathematics, anthropology, and so on.
Failory is one site that I've come to like in recent times. They talk about startup failures amongst other things. But it provides some semi regular blogs on start ups that went bust and why. I believe that there's a lot to learn from someone else's mistakes. And there are some that are also quite hilarious like the one in Juicer.<p>However, it isn't a magazine or a journal per se.
The link is failory.com
Australian or New Zealand Geographic. I am into hiking, and environmentalism is the topic I care about most when it comes to politics. Aus Geo manages to cover these topics with thoughtful and in-depth stories. I like the focus on my own country, I always find out something new and interesting from reading an issue.
Two which i've subscribed in print form recently:<p>Monocle - Really a general affairs magazine particularly focussed on Urban design, travel, technology, business and current affairs. Global editing staff. Produce some nice podcasts as well.<p>Courier - Startup focussed in the UK but i find it generally informative and attractive style to it.
Nature. There is front matter that is quite approachable, including introductions to the main articles.<p>The main articles are more readable than you might expect -- pick up a copy at a university library to give it a try.<p>My only wish is that they offer an every-other-week subscription. A year of Nature is a lot of material.
AramCo, Laphams Quarterly, Nautilus, Quanta, New Yorker(on the fence now),National Geographic, Popular Mechanics.<p>ETA: London review of books, Edge.org before they shuttered(they are back. I didn’t know).
London Review of Books - which I receive print copies of.<p>The New Yorker - which I read on a kindle.<p>Domus - which I receive print copies of.<p>If I had to pick one journalistic endeavor to support it would be the New Yorker.
Mine are IEEE's "Computer" and "Software". Their "Annals of the History of Computing" is also a great read. Horrendously expensive, unfortunately. IEEE also has the IBM journals behind a paywall. I real shame.<p>ACM's "Communications of the ACM" is also very good.
Hey posters!<p>This is a great topic, and a lot of great responses... but it would be nice to link out to your journal/magazines. I know I’m being a little lazy but I’ve searched for a bunch, and it seems like an ideal use for a link.<p>Thanks
Skeptic, Reason, Spectator, Lapham’s, Nautilus, Foreign Policy, Economist ... I could keep going but the world of magazines is far richer than regular news. There is significant diversity of thought available (just buy a few different magazines), and with the long form format, there is more than just a shallow hot take.<p>One frustration is that as you devote more time to reading from such sources, the more mainstream news and social media seem broken. It can be harder to feel connected to others and even depressing, because the world in general is short on nuance while the world of magazines and journals offers it in spades. Still, it’s worth it.<p>I highly suggest visiting a Barnes & Noble or another retailer with a big magazine section, and checking out what they have to offer in person. Many stores also carry more serious academic journals (I recently discovered the Cato journal) as well as literary journals that can be a great way to discover rare gems.