I've got a few of the bongos dream dorm posters in storage, last offer was $300 a-piece, I've held on to them and given them as gifts for people impossible to find gifts for.
This is meta-vintage for me, because I have not looked at Print magazine in years.
This was a staple when I studied graphic design in college, but as I transitioned to UI design, it just slipped out of my mind. And here I see at the top of the article they’ve been acquired by a collective of designers to keep it going, which is a great outcome versus just fading away.
My recollection is that in the '90s it was on the order of seven or eight dollars a copy? $7.50 maybe? Not cheap for a magazine in those days. But I don't remember exactly. Back when I was doing more graphic design work, it was pretty essential reading. But after the content started getting more digital-oriented and I was doing more editorial work, I wasn't following it as closely. Glad to see it still exists sort of, because the editorial content was always top-notch.
Thanks for the high-res link. Surprisingly our computers still do these things, after forty some years. Yet their ancestors did the same job while holding "2,400 double spaced pages or 30,000 names and addresses."
Yes. It is a weird historical artifact of terminology. We had lots of “personal computers” before IBM made theirs. After that, IBM’s offering became the product most associated with the term. It is a weak example of genericide.
The content is great, but am I the only one that’s annoyed by those gnarly red image overlays on the mobile website breakpoint that (accidentally) activate as you scroll down?
The Apple II interaction ad with an Apple on the kitchen table (also one on the wall!) is delightful for both of its naivete (in the last the past 20 yrs or so, an ad agency would be put through the ringer for the husband plays with cool devices wife does the dishes) and power (showing a gadget unknown to most people in a familiar setting).
The funny thing is that a lot of "home computer" ads continually promised that it would be easier to balance your checkbook or evaluate your stock portfolio using these machines. Perhaps that was aspirational advertising or something, but the actual implementation of those tasks on the Apple wasn't really that great.
Things finally broke loose when VisiCalc showed up in 1979.
All of those ads also show a vague bar graph or a line chart... I wonder if anyone EVER actually used any software that rendered those charts in their home :)
https://www.cultofmac.com/218211/check-out-the-posters-matt-...