Commodore Power/Play: Difference between revisions - Wikipedia


Article Images

Content deleted Content added

m

(25 intermediate revisions by 10 users not shown)

Line 1:

{{Short description|US computer magazine}}

{{Infobox Magazine

| title = Commodore Power/Play

| image_file = Commodore Power-Play February–March 1986.jpg

| image_caption = ''Commodore Power/Play'', February/March 1986 issue

| editor =

| frequency = Bi-monthly

| circulation =

| company =

| firstdatepublisher = Commodore =Business 1982Machines

| country founded = [[United States]]1982

| languagecountry = [[EnglishUnited language|English]]States

| website language = English

| based = [[West Chester, Pennsylvania]]

| issn =

| finaldate = October/November 1986

| finalnumber = Volume 5, Number 5 (Issue 23)

}}

'''''Commodore Power/Play''''' was one of a pair of computer magazines published by [[Commodore Business Machines]] in the [[USA|United States]] in support of their [[8-bit]] [[home computer]] lines of the 1980s. The other was called ''Commodore Interface'', changed to just ''Commodore'' in 1981, ''Commodore Microcomputer'' in 1983, and finally to ''Commodore Microcomputers'' in 1984 and for the rest of its run. The two magazines were published on an alternating, bimonthly schedule.

==History and profile==

''Power/Play'' was started in 1982 as a quarterly publication.<ref>{{cite book|author=Roberto Dillon|title=Ready: A Commodore 64 Retrospective|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ecuoBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA113|accessdate=February 12, 2017|date=December 3, 2014|publisher=Springer|isbn=978-981-287-341-5|page=113}}</ref> The magazine was targeted at the home computer user, emphasizing [[video games]], educational and hobbyist uses of the [[Commodore 64]]/[[Commodore 128|128]] and [[Commodore VIC-20]] models.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.commodore.ca/manuals/c64_programmers_reference/c64-programmers_reference_guide-00-toc_introduction.pdf|title=Commodore 64 Programmers Reference Guide|quote=When it comes to entertainment, learning at home and practical home applications, Power/Play is THE prime source of information for Commodore home users}}</ref> ''Commodore Microcomputers'' initially served Commodore's business customers using the [[Commodore PET|PET]] and [[Commodore CBM-II|CBM]] lines but as the business market segments standardized on [[CP/M]] and later [[MS-DOS]], the coverage of the two magazines essentially overlapped, until the November 1986 issue, when both magazines were switched from a bi-monthly to a monthly schedule and retitled ''Commodore Magazine''.<ref>[http://amr.abime.net/issue_2672 Issue 2672]</ref>

==References==

{{reflistReflist}}

==External links==

* [httphttps://www.scribd.com/doc/14501153/Commodore-PowerPlay-1985-Issue-17-V4-N05-Oct-Nov Oct/Nov 1985 issue]

[[Category:American{{Commodore bi8-monthlybit computer magazines]]}}

[[Category:American video game magazines]]

[[Category:1982 establishments in Pennsylvania]]

[[Category:1986 disestablishments in Pennsylvania]]

[[Category:Bimonthly magazines published in the United States]]

[[Category:Commodore 8-bit computer magazines]]

[[Category:Defunct computer magazines published in the United States]]

[[Category:AmericanHome video gamecomputer magazines]]

[[Category:Magazines established in 1982]]

[[Category:Magazines disestablished in 1986]]

[[Category:Magazines published in Philadelphia]]

[[Category:Quarterly magazines published in the United States]]

[[Category:Defunct video game magazines published in the United States]]

{{Commodore 8-bit computer magazines}}

{{compu-mag-stub}}