On Sunday 23 September 2001 15:49, you wrote: > Hey everyone, > > I was filing some old issues of Linux Journal the other day and noticed > (perhaps not surprisingly) that the thickness of the magazines directly > tracks with the high-tech bubble and bust of the last few years. My first > issue is from March 1998 and runs 95 pages. It looks like the largest copy > is from approx. Nov. or Dec. 2000. The Sept. issue of this year is about 90 > pages. A quick look through the advertisers index shows that all the > companies who used to have multi-page ads have disappeared (e.g., > V.A. Linux, Penguin Computing, the various distros). > > None of this is terrible unexpected, of course, but seeing the issues all > lined up on the shelf makes the trend more dramatic. > > -Tim > > -- > Tim Wilson | Visit Sibley online: | Check out: > Henry Sibley HS | http://www.isd197.org | http://www.zope.com > W. St. Paul, MN | | http://slashdot.org > wilson at visi.com | <dtml-var pithy_quote> | http://linux.com > > _______________________________________________ > tclug-list mailing list > tclug-list at mn-linux.org > https://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list Of course if you want to track back even further I have some issues from 1996 and 1997 around somewhere. :-) That's when it was stapled not glued. -- Jack Ungerleider jack at jacku.com