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Make Magazine Subscription Now Available

Jac_no_k writes "O'Reilly's Make magazine is now taking subscription orders. They have an offer for one bonus 'mook' by using the offer code 'M5ZXML'. Their description: 'MAKE is a new hybrid magazine/book ("mook") published quarterly by O'Reilly. MAKE brings the do-it-yourself mindset to all the technology in your life. MAKE is loaded with exciting projects that help you make the most of your technology at home and away from home. It follows in line with the Hacks books and Hardware Hacking Projects, but it takes a highly visual and personal approach.'" If the quality of the magazine is the same as their technical books, this should be a worthwhile subscription.

21 of 145 comments (clear)

  1. OK, But... by Staos · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The problem here is its such a broad topic. People's interest diverge so far that it's really a much more suitable topic for a generalized search engine Google rather than a magazine format. While some people will tend to think that stuff in the kitchen is cool, others will think it should include coding. Others will want automotive and others will prefer architecture or explosives or metalwork or hide tanning or alternative energy. The Foxfire series tried to do something similar, but they also had a theme beyond just doing it yourself which was doing it the old fashioned way. That only appealed to a certain set. Coming at it from the opposite, doing it yourself and doing in the new way doesn't really seem to work as a theme.

    I think the real question is, do we still need magazines?

    --
    In Soviet russia, only old Koreans profit from pictures of Natalie Portman stored on Beowulf Clusters.
    1. Re:OK, But... by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes and No.

      Example, I no longer subscribe to any american magazines, they all have been dumbed down to the lowest common denominator so they become worthless for someone looking for technical information.. so I replace them with European magazines in English format.

      Want an Example?

      linux journal I replaced with Linux format.. I regained the technical aspect that LJ had back in the 90's. I have done the same with web development magazines and programming magazines (ok, dobbs is still useful)

      unfortunately in the US magazine sucess are measured in net profits, and making a magazine that is 100% useless to the technical crowd is more profitable than making a magazine that is pretty dumbed down.

      I have tried online "electronic" subscriptions, but find them a PITA. I can not save issues in a format that would be searchable (Ok PDF can be searchable if unencrypted) and still useable by myself in 10 years. Yes I have issues of Circuit Cellar that are over 10 years old, and yes they are very useful.

      until they fix all that is wrong with e-texts and eliminate the paranoia that if someone has an unencrypted version of an issue than the world will be destroyed online magazines will continue to fail, and print magazines will continue to be accepted.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:OK, But... by RealityMogul · · Score: 3, Funny

      You're not in the minority, lots of us have ADD.

    3. Re:OK, But... by nomadic · · Score: 4, Funny

      How about something that hasn't been done before?

      Like poking a badger with a spoon?

    4. Re:OK, But... by WinBorg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If the Mook is cool enough with lots of ideas, then a reader with an adequate IQ should be able to adapt ideas given to applications he wants to do.
      i.e. there is a mention about kite-photography, what if you have a RC plane and dont want to build a kite? is it useless information now? no, it's an idea and you adapt it to your plane.
      come on, have some spunk.

      Before you think different, think.

    5. Re:OK, But... by Usquebaugh · · Score: 3, Funny

      Prior art Dick Chenney?

    6. Re:OK, But... by parkrrrr · · Score: 3, Informative

      'twas Ciarcia's Circuit Cellar, I think.

      Circuit Cellar is a magazine in its own right, and it's not too bad (though it seems to be a bit heavy into using microcontrollers for everything.)

  2. Mook? by wackysootroom · · Score: 4, Funny

    I thought I was buying a Bagazine! WTF?

    1. Re:Mook? by RealAlaskan · · Score: 4, Funny
      I thought I was buying a Bagazine!

      No, it was an ordinary Magazine. The clerk had a cold. Didn't you notice that after she told you: ``$6.13 for the bagazine.'' she said: ``Hab a dice day.''?

  3. Animals by Admiral+Ackbar+8 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I will only purchase a subscription if every "mook" has a different animal pictured on the cover.

  4. Price by chamilto0516 · · Score: 4, Informative

    One Year - 4 Volumes $34.95
    Not bad, but not too good either. I dropped my subscriptions to Linux Journal and Linux Magazine when their prices went this high. I'll probably buy one or two off of the shelf before I decide to subscribe.

    --
    Magic Eight Ball: Outlook not so good., Hmmm, how about Excel and Word?
  5. Penthouse went bankrupt by ugmoe · · Score: 3, Funny

    If Penthouse magazine can go bankrupt even with naked boobies, what hope is there for a magazine without any boobies?

  6. Miniature Claymore Mine? by Tibor+the+Hun · · Score: 3, Funny

    out of the office supplies? Hell yeah!!!

    --
    If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
  7. sudden urge of Dr.Seuss... by zwilliams07 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Make is a mook that is really like a book but took the...

    :: head explodes ::

  8. Re:Finally, an alternative? by arturov · · Score: 3, Funny

    Scientific American. I hope people didn't think I meant something awful.

  9. No mooks by TRS80NT · · Score: 3, Funny

    I've given up fighting the word "blog" -- I just don't care anymore. The word "Mook", however, I'm ready to come out of retirement against.

    --
    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.
  10. Mook, shmook by AtariAmarok · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "Their description: 'MAKE is a new hybrid magazine/book ("mook") published quarterly by O'Reilly"

    Not sure we need another dumb-sounding buzzword for something that has been around for more than 90 years. "Afred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, "Weird Tales", "Astounding"...all of those old anthology magazines so little different from anthology books. Especially the issues with a single novella.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  11. But first by ch-chuck · · Score: 5, Funny

    Don't you have to have a subscription to "./configure" magazine first?

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  12. Feh. Subscription website sucks. by .@. · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's outsourced.

    I tried to subscribe, submitting credit card immediately.

    I got an invoice instead.

    I called them. They won't have the data until Monday, because ORA has it (supposedly). They said, "sometimes that happens with websites."

    I threw up my hands and decided to submit payment for the invoice, using a credit card.

    I filled everything out. I checked all the appropriate boxes. I hit "Submit".

    The payment page simply reloaded. No confirmation, no email, no nothing.

    At this point, I've tried to pay twice. I thought I HAD paid. Twice. If this is how ORA wants to deal with their subscriptions, they just lost one. I have better things to do than help their outsourced subscription-handling company debug their craptacular approach to accepting money.

    --
    .@.
  13. Buy the first, wait for the rest by jj00 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'll probably buy the first issue, but wait on getting a subscription.

    The problem with reading about these kinds of hacks online is that there are so many of them. I never know which ones are the most useful or the coolest. I don't know how many times I have paid little attention to an article on Slashdot, only to find it was a really cool topic when I see it on the Screen Savers.

    I'm hoping this magazine can help provide some insight, and maybe I'll learn something.

  14. Re:/.ed ORA*? Wow. by danielbwoods · · Score: 3, Informative

    Our subscription fulfillment house has processed nearly 600 subscription orders since the original slashdot. But the truth is, we should have been able to handle the load. I have been told that they in fact did identify a problem within the past hour and have corrected it. Everything appears to be running smoothly. However, if you continue to experience difficulties subscribing, please contact me directly at dan@oreilly.com. Dan Woods Associate Publisher MAKE dan@oreilly.com