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ANALOG Computing
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ANALOG Computing : ウィキペディア英語版
ANALOG Computing

''ANALOG Computing'' (an acronym for Atari Newsletter And Lots Of Games) was an American computer magazine devoted to the Atari 8-bit home computer line, published from 1981 until 1989. ''ANALOG'' had a reputation for publishing fast and smooth machine language games, whereas most listings in the other Atari magazines of the time were written in Atari BASIC. Such games were accompanied by the assembly language source code. Originally the title as printed on the cover was ''A.N.A.L.O.G. 400/800 Magazine'', but by the eighth issue it changed to ''A.N.A.L.O.G. Computing''. Though the dots remained in the logo, it was simply referred to as ''ANALOG'' or ''ANALOG Computing'' inside the magazine.
''ANALOG'' was co-launched by Lee H. Pappas and Michael DesChesnes, with the first issue being January/February 1981. It was published bi-monthly until November/December 1983 and then monthly from January 1984 on, interrupted once for approximately six-months in late 1986-early 1987. In 1988, it was sold to LFP, Inc. It continued to run until its final issue in December 1989, totalling 79 issues.
In addition to articles and reviews, ''ANALOG'' published games and other programs as type-in listings. While the programs were covered under the magazine's copyright protections, users were granted the right to type them into their computer for personal use, so long as they were not sold or copied. ("Reader Comments," ''ANALOG'' #2, page 5).
==Atari ST coverage==
When the Atari ST was announced, coverage stayed in the previously 8-bit-only magazine, and Pappas launched ''ST-Log''. In 1989 LFP Inc. announced it would merge ''ANALOG'' and ''ST-Log'' into one Atari resource. Instead, both magazines were dropped less than a month later and the staff merged into another publication owned by Pappas, ''Video Games & Computer Entertainment''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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