COMPUTE!’s Gazette Issue #13 Physical Edition

$14.95

COMPUTE!’s Gazette – Issue #13 (July 2026): Year One: one full year of COMPUTE!’s Gazette. A founder’s retrospective, the Callback 8020 verdict, In Memoriam Bobby Prince, Synapse Software, the debut 640K Club, plus Gremlin’s lost games, Commodore Corner, GEOS, Tandy, FujiNet, and more.

94 in stock

SKU: VOL2-ISSUE7-#13
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COMPUTE!’s Gazette — Volume 2, Issue 7 (July 2026)

“Year One” — One Year of COMPUTE!’s Gazette Magazine: From a Half-Formed Idea to Thirteen Issues and Counting.

A year ago this magazine didn’t exist — not as a website, not as a subscriber list, not as a single printed page. It began with a Commodore 64 pulled out of storage, an enormous thrift-store LaserJet wrestled into a truck bed, and a question that wouldn’t let go: whatever happened to COMPUTE!’s Gazette? This anniversary issue marks one full year of bringing the magazine back, with a founder’s retrospective that tells the story honestly — the good, the hard, and the parts no one could have planned for — while looking ahead to year two.

Inside this 100-page issue:

  • Year One: Loading Complete — Edwin J. Nagle’s founder retrospective on how a simple newsletter quietly became a magazine, the deeper history of the “Gazette” name (from Len Lindsay’s 1978 PET Gazette through Tom Halfhill’s recollection of the “Commodore Gazette” working title), and why a name that never belonged to a single machine was always a community bulletin at heart.
  • Flipped Off: The Community Weighs In on the Callback 8020 — The cover story. A measured, unrushed verdict on Commodore International’s clamshell “not-dumb dumbphone,” from CEO Peri Fractic’s digital-wellness pitch to the “cash grab” backlash, the late-June price cuts and the remanufactured-memory controversy, Leonard Tramiel’s blessing, and whether a browser you can’t steer is a feature or a wall.
  • In Memoriam: Bobby Prince (1945–2026) — A tribute to the lawyer-turned-composer who gave Wolfenstein 3D, Doom, and Duke Nukem 3D their definitive sound, whose Doom tracks entered the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry weeks before his death.
  • The Rise and Fall of Synapse Software — The story of Ihor Wolosenko, the Star Raiders-obsessed co-founder who came to computing from psychology and theater, and the studio behind Blue Max, Shamus, and a database package that began it all.
  • The 640K Club — The debut of a new beat covering the IBM PC and its descendants, led by Microsoft’s open-sourcing of 86-DOS (recovered byte-for-byte from printouts in Tim Paterson’s garage), Ted Fried’s XTMax software-defined ISA card, and new “runs on an 8088” games and applications.
  • The Gazette Wire — David Simmons on a wave of new releases, including Petal Panic from the A Pig Quest team (Antonio Savona and Hobbit/Alain Mauricet) and Stormbeard.
  • Games / Reviews — The Gremlin Archive — A deep dive into Games That Weren’t and Mark Hardisty’s A Gremlin in the Works, unearthing unreleased C16/Plus-4 curiosities like Dork’s Dilemma, Tycoon Tex, and Tour de Force.
  • Insight: ATARI — John Zielke and Jerry White on backing up floppies with the A8PicoCart (no FujiNet or KryoFlux required), building a better Atari character set one descender at a time, and getting started with Atari LOGO.
  • Commodore Corner — Peri Fractic concludes the Italy trip: gondolas, canals, a hug in St. Mark’s Square, Mike’s “SELL US AMIGA” email, and the whispered future of Amiga’s custodianship.
  • The GEOS Column — Bruce Thomas continues his tour through the surprisingly deep world of GEOS.
  • Dialed Back — Rob Sherman on BBS culture, then and now.
  • Content Corner — Brian P. Cox on the unlikely chain of people and podcasts — Stan Veit, David Greelish, Randy Kindig — that preserved a slice of computing history.
  • Programming / FujiNet & Digest — Thomas Cherryhomes on network-aware BASIC work, plus Dan Sanderson’s Digest exploring IFF-ILBM graphics and the “Four-Byte Burger” on the MEGA65.
  • Tandy Land — Ian Mavric on Tandy Assembly’s new home, decoding TRS-80 catalog numbers, and the Tandy 1000.
  • Micro Missions — Two new programming challenges from The Evil Professor.
  • Plus Letters to the Editor, Editor’s Notes (with a first hint at the cross-platform “relay server”), type-in program listings, and the news and reader correspondence that make the Gazette what it is.

Retro computing for Commodore, Atari, Amiga, Commander X16, MEGA65, and beyond.

Additional information

Weight .6875 lbs
Dimensions 9 × 12 × 1 in

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