Enter (September 1984)

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(Edited)


Cover of the September 1984 issue of Enter

Enter is a computer magazine that was targeted towards kids and published by Children's Television Workshop (later Sesame Workshop). What computer loving kid could resist a cover with the Enterprise on it? While it did have some gaming content its emphasis was on education, including programming and general computer use. It covered all of the popular computers of the day that you might find in a home including the Commodore 64, VIC-20, TI-99/4A, TRS-80, Apple II, the Atari 8-bit line, PCs (DOS), Coleco Adam, Timex and others. The September 1984 issue includes:

Features

  • The Empire's Computer Secrets - This article is pretty nifty bit of history. Part of it is an interview with Ed Catmull, at the time responsible for many of the computer effects in early Star Trek and Star Wars movies among others. He would later become co-founder of Pixar. In the image below (from this issue of Enter), Ed can be seen showing of some of the computer equipment being used for movie making circa 1984. This article also covers the game coming out of Lucasfilm including Ballblazer and Rescue On Fractalus, both initially developed on Atari 8-bit computers.


  • Ed Catmull with his toys circa 1984

  • Rock on the Road - An article about how computers are used to control light shows for various concerts including those of Genesis, Duran Duran, The Police, The Jacksons, ZZ Top, Culture Club, and Van Halen among others. Some specific equipment is covered including Var-Lites which were first used by Genesis.

  • The Write Stuff - An overview of the word processing software available for different computers along with their capabilities. Software covered includes Apple Writer IIe (Apple IIe), Atariwriter (Atari 8-bit computers), Bank Street Writer (Apple, Atari, Commodore 64, DOS), Cut & Paste (Apple IIe, IIc, Atari, Commodore 64, DOS), Easy Script 64 (Commodore 64), Electric Pencil (TRS-80 Models III and IV), Homeword (Apple, Atari, Commodore 64), Leading Edge (DOS), Letter Wizard (Atari), Oniwriter (Commodore 64), Quick Brown Fox (Apple, Atari, Commodore 64, VIC-20, DOS), Smartwriter (Coleco Adam), The Write Stuff (Apple II, DOS), and Wordvision (DOS).

  • Portable Power - An overview of a few of the newer portable computers available at the time. These include the Epson HX-20, NEC 820, Radio Shack Model 100 (I had one of these for a while), and the Olivetti M-10. These weren't like today's notebooks. They were typically all in one units with a built-in 4 to 8 line black and white LCD screen above the keyboard.


Table of Contents from the September 1984 issue of Enter

Departments

  • Feedback - Readers respond to a previous article about software piracy, a very hot topic at the time.

  • Bits - The news section, this month featuring: the Pac-Van, a mobile arcade that holds 25-30 games that could be rented for birthday parties and such; two students hack the electronic scoreboard at the Rose Bowl; Plaqueman, a new game from Home Computer Software; a sheep shearing robot...and more.

  • Ask Enter - Readers ask about compatibility, how disks work, if games are bad for your TV, and more.

  • User Views - Game Reviews
    • The Seven Cities of Gold (Apple II, Commodore 64, Atari) - A graphical adventure game by Electronic Arts that features the exploration of North and South America through 400 years of history.
    • Pitfall II: Lost Caverns (Atari 2600, ColecoVision/Adam, Atari 5200, Atari computers, Commodore 64, DOS) - A sequel to Pitfall. This was an excellent game for the time that I had for my Commodore 64.
    • James Bond: 007 (Atari computers, ColecoVision, Commodore 64, Atari 2600) - An action game by Parker Brothers based on scenes from four different Bond films.
    • Gumball (Apple, Atari) - An action/puzzle game in which you must catch different colored gumballs in the correct cart.
    • Bump 'N' Jump (Intellivision) - A port of the arcade classic that is part race part destruction derby.

  • Software Scanner - Various software reviews.
    • Run for the Money (DOS) - A game in which you have to fix your spaceship but its more about business planning than anything.
    • Peripheral Vision (Commodore 64, Atari, DOS) - Drawing software that works with a light pen.
    • Flight Simulator II (Commodore 64, Apple, Atari) - The original Flight Simulator was written for DOS based machines. The sequel is really an enhanced version of the original for various other 8-bit computers.

  • Newsbeat - The latest in computer news, featuring the new Commodore 16 and Plus 4; the new Okimate 10 dot-matrix printer; various robots and robot software; new software including Breakdance, Archon II, and more; the Atari 780 Prosystem; the MindLink system; and voice controlled laser discs.

  • Showbeat - Including a preview of a new movie featuring Atari computers, Cloak & Dagger. This movie starred Henry Thomas (Elliot from E.T.). While some will no doubt argue that this was no E.T., it was a movie I loved as a kid and probably had a bigger impact on me.

  • Pacesetters - An article about One on One featuring Larry Bird and Dr. J as well as the 17-year old programmer that wrote it.

  • Connections - Info on a Commodore 64 music contest, BBSes, new Timex hardware and software, and where you might find out of print books.

Programming

  • BASIC Training - Featuring Micro Mind Reader, a type in program that can read your mind for Apple, Adam, Atari, IBM, TRS-80 Color Computer, and Timex Sinclair.

  • BASIC Recommends - A recommendation for a BASIC programming book: 'More BASIC: A Guide to Intermediate-Level BASIC Programming'

Read more: https://www.megalextoria.com/wordpress/index.php/2017/04/27/enter-september-1984/



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6 comments
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The people doing V2K with remote neural monitoring want me to believe this lady @battleaxe is an operator. She is involved deeply with her group and @fyrstikken . Her discord is Battleaxe#1003. I cant prove she is the one directly doing the V2K and RNM. Doing it requires more than one person at the least. It cant be done alone. She cant prove she is not one of the ones doing it. I was drugged in my home covertly, it ended badly. They have tried to kill me and are still trying to kill me. I bet nobody does anything at all. Ask @battleaxe to prove it. I bet she wont. They want me to believe the V2K and RNM in me is being broadcast from her location. And what the fuck is "HOMELAND SECURITY" doing about this shit? I think stumbling over their own dicks maybe? Just like they did and are doing with the Havana Syndrome https://ecency.com/fyrstikken/@fairandbalanced/i-am-the-only-motherfucker-on-the-internet-pointing-to-a-direct-source-for-voice-to-skull-electronic-terrorism

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Love these articles. They make me wish I had kept all my old gaming and computer magazines from over the years. So much history that is simply not archived on the Internet is contained in these magazines.

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Love these articles. They make me wish I had kept all my old gaming and computer magazines from over the years. So much history that is simply not archived on the Internet is contained in these magazines.

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Internet Archive doesn't have everything but they do have a ton of magazines. I'm not sure I own any they don't have anymore. I'd love to find some of the old telephone book sized Computer Shoppers though. I don't think anybody has been dedicated enough to scan any of those.

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There was one group that did, I have long since forgotten their name (it was a website, not Retromags) that had probably 30 Computer Shopper mags available. They were torrents because of the file size so there is a chance they are still available.

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