Hi All, 12 months ago I started to buy LXF mag off the shelf, and have done ever since, changing from PCW that I had read most months for the past 20 years. I found the content much more readable than the much more technical Linux Magazine.
I do wish there was wider content and greater publicity though. I emailed the editor and later his brother offering content on a subject I felt confident to write about but got no reply from either. I also find the magazine has numerous spelling gaffes and often repeats pretty much the same content within an issue. There is much that could be done (in my eyes) to improve the mag. As a British magazine it has a great potential to be a promotional power for all things Linux. In the UK we have a slightly opportune position that publicity can generally reach everyone within the country. Take the Sunday papers; The Sunday Times reaches the 4 corners, and will dish out CD or DVD almost every week. If LXF put a DVD of a couple of distros including the nation's favourite an a minute one like DSL they could market it as an ultimate PC saviour disk. Able to help recover files on unbootable Windows machine and a safe, free and with the longest term of support in the light of the regular loss of support for past Windows OSes. I would rather not have a DVD for 10 out of 12 months if they put it into a Sunday paper once. I have mentioned this in the past for Canonical to consider but LXF would be a better promoter, able then to offer a paper based support that could see their sales rocket. One problem is that LXF sees itself less of a newbie helper and more for seasoned users. Credit due, they do repeatedly put in beginners guides that are better than most, however they need to develop content that will appeal to people that need a reason to change OS. I am not so worried about the price tag, but more content and varied content would encourage greater readership. I do not wish to seem despondent, I will continue to buy LXF in preference to any other mag and I think much of the comments here should be echoed in the LXF forums. I hope someone at LXF Towers will open an ear! Adria ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Sat, 16 Aug 2008 21:19:40 +0100 From: Andrew Oakley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: [ubuntu-uk] stickers free with Linux Format Magazine this month To: British Ubuntu Talk <ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed As a subscriber I also received the stickers, and was very impressed and very, very happy. Sean Miller wrote: > two back the man said "blimey! ?5.95? that's expensive" -- and it is, ... > I don't actually NEED any of the stuff on the DVD most months - it'd > be nice to have the option to not receive it. Yes, yes, yes. > Why do I want a copy of Mandriva 2000 if I'm happily running Ubuntu, > or OpenSUSE or whatever else (which I could download anyway).... Well, I can kind of see the point in encouraging people to try other distros, especially the special-purpose ones such as Damn Small Linux. But it's a British magazine. We've all got broadband. I live in an extremely rural area, and even I can get 2Mbit/sec. They should replace the DVD with their own in-house TinyURL and just let people download what they need. The DVD goes in the bin same-day every issue, the only exception being Ubuntu 8.04 and even that went in the bin once 8.04.1 came out. If they offered me a sheet of stickers every issue, instead of the DVD, I'd still be happy to continue paying subscription price. How people justify paying 6 quid for the mag off the shelf in Whsmiths (whom I note have stopped placing the punctuation in their shop signs, which since they are a bookseller can only be deliberate, so presumably are now pronounced "wuhh-smiths" rather than "W. H. Smiths") I can't fathom. I want to encourage everyone, of any technical aptitude, to try Linux, and I hate people who are condescending to the technically inexperienced, but the sensible attitude is, if the reader is such a newbie that they can't figure out how to download and burn an ISO, they really, really shouldn't be upgrading or replacing their operating system, they should get someone else to do it for them before they brick their PC. Frankly I'm amazed that the DVD doesn't garner a billion "Your DVD hosed my PC" letters each month (although perhaps it does, and they censor them). Therefore shipping a DVD is at best superfluous for experts and at worst highly damaging for newcomers. Using such a DVD to justify a 6-quid pricetag on what should be a 4-quid mag is ridiculous. Thankfully the subscription discount is significantly large enough for me to ignore this. -- Andrew Oakley -- ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/