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Wired (1-year)

Wired (1-year)

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Publisher: Conde Nast Publications
Category: Magazine

List Price: $59.88
Buy New: $10.00
You Save: $49.88 (83%)

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Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 123 reviews
Sales Rank: 1

Format: Magazine Subscription, Print
Type: Consumer magazine
Subscription Issues: 12
Subscription Length: 12 Months
Issues Per Year: 12
First Issue Lead Time: 6-10 Weeks

ASIN: B00005N7TL

Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 months

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Editorial Reviews:

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Who Reads Wired?
Wired readers want to know how technology is changing the world, and they're interested in big, relevant ideas, even if those ideas challenge their assumptions—or blow their minds. Wired readers are generally familiar with computers and the Internet, but this is definitely not a computer magazine—Wired won't teach you how to upgrade your RAM. Instead, it's a magazine about science, art, adventure, online culture, business, philosophy … and bright shiny beautiful gadgets. Each month, more than 2 million smart, savvy readers come to Wired for clean, clear writing with a wry twist.

What You Can Expect in Each Issue:

  • Start: In Start, readers are treated to quick bites of information on everything from provocative innovations (in-flight Wi-Fi, anyone?) and new technologies (who won the DVD format wars?) to cultural shifts (why are Korean schoolgirls buying mini refrigerators?). Looking for tips on touching up your digital pictures or resetting a dislocated shoulder? Start has those, too. The stories are presented in smart, irreverent language with Wired's signature visual flair.
  • Test: Wired has covered gear and gadgets since its very first issue. Every month, Test gives readers the definitive take on the hottest products on the market, from the newest HDTVs to the slimmest notebook computers. The best tech writers in the business put the gear through a rigorous review and rate it from 1 to 10. Mix in Wired's trademark visuals and humor and you've got the most useful, entertaining coverage of products anywhere.
  • Play: Now that popular culture is Wired culture, this is the best place to turn for the skinny on what's cool, quirky, and fun. The section kicks off with Playlist: the top 10 newest, coolest things in the Wired world. In the rest of Play, editors delve deeper into movies, art, books, games, design, and online entertainment. Plus, it delivers the big picture so readers understand why these things matter. Wondering about cognitive science behind Halo 3? Curious about the cutting-edge engineering that goes into making a Top 40 single? The answers are in Play every month.
  • Endgame: Part contest, part game, and totally engrossing, the Endgame puzzle challenges Wired readers to think deeply, both on and off the page.
  • Features: Each month, the editors open a window to the future of technology, business, entertainment, science, and culture. We recently devoted 22 pages to the thorny questions to which scientists still don't have answers: Why do we sleep? What causes ice ages? Do forests actually speed up global warming? Other recent topics: How Apple does so well by behaving so badly; the race to build the 100-mile-per-gallon car; 12 ways to supercharge your brain; and how personal genomics could change the way you live.
Magazine Layout:
Outstanding print design is about the seamless integration of compelling stories and fresh ideas with expert typography, arresting photography, and sharp illustration. Inventive visual architecture has been part of the magazine's DNA from the beginning. Fifteen years on, Wired is still the place to turn for eye-popping images and a style that sets the pace for the rest of the magazine design world. .

Click on any image below to see select pages from Wired:



Contributors:
Wired editor in chief Chris Anderson, author of The Long Tail, writes regularly for the magazine. Among our other writers are Steven Levy, Joshua Davis, Steven Johnson, Jeff Howe, Lawrence Lessig, Daniel H. Pink, Bruce Sterling, Clive Thompson, and Gary Wolf. Contributing photographers and artists include Dan Winters, Platon, Nigel Parry, Andrew Zuckerman, Robert Maxwell, Bryan Christie, Tobias Frere-Jones, Jonathan Hoeffler, and Jason Lee.

Past Issues:


Awards:
Under the leadership of editor in chief Chris Anderson, Wired has been nominated an unprecedented six consecutive times for the National Magazine Award for General Excellence, winning the industry's top prize in 2005 and 2007. In 2008 Wired was nominated for three NMAs, for General Excellence, Design, and Best Section. In 2008 the magazine was nominated for 18 of the top awards from the Society of Publication Designers.


Product Description
WIRED uncovers the most surprising and resonant stories about the people, companies, technologies and ideas that are transforming our lives. Whether it's technology...business...global politics...new media...arts and culture...the environment...or the best new products, WIRED is there, on the front lines of the 21st Century. Find out what's next with WIRED!


Customer Reviews:   Read 118 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Hands down, my favorite magazine!   January 18, 2005
Christian Hunter (Santa Barbara, Ca United States)
53 out of 70 found this review helpful

I value my time, and, probably like you, get news and information from multiple sources (internet, magazines, newspapers, and TV being the principle venues). As far as magazines go, Wired is my favorite by far; I still look forward to getting it after 5 years, and on the off chance it doesn't arrive in the mail on time, I slap around my mailbox in dissapointment.

It's impossible to not be intrigued by whatever cutting-edge technology they're following, the stories of the pioneers who are developing it, and the social implications of their deployment.

But Wired is about much more than new and interesting technology, for me, it's about perspective. Wired always takes an adventurous and unorthodox view on todays social, scientific, and political topography. But most refreshingly, they observe the world optimistically.

How rare is that!

I'm abundantly aware of the misery of this planet, and in case I momentarily forget, I can cycle through any of the 10 news channels I have on TV for a stinging dose of painful reality. Wired doesn't keep you immune to the challenges of our day, but rather than "objectively" explore them, they help me view the news through a lens of productive possibility.

Valuable indeed.

In addition, every issue contains a "radar update of cool"; cool music, movies, books...cool gadgets for home and lifestyle; Wired is - aside from being my favorite magazine - also, in my humble opinion, the coolest.

Enjoy,

Christian Hunter
Santa Barbara, California






5 out of 5 stars Read about the future before it arrives!   October 26, 2003
Manny Hernandez (Palo Alto, CA)
18 out of 22 found this review helpful

I have been a consequent Wired reader since 1994. Subscribing on and off, depending on the quality of the content (the design has almost always being impeccable), I find Wired has been going through one of its best times in the course of the past year or so. Since they've always been ahead of the curve, presenting the future 'now' by means of a thoughtful combination of to-the-point introductions to a topic or piece of gear with lengthy interviews or articles dealing with the hottest topics in technology and our lives at large in the years and decades to come, it could be argued that the world -at the fast pace it is going- is providing them with an overabundance of content ideas. But as a publication, you could very well, take a very interesting topic and put together a lame writing around it, so there is great merit in what the Wired team is doing.

As an example, let me share the general layout of November 2003's issue:
-Big focus on Open Source (remember Linux and its creator, Linus Torvalds?), and how it's beginning to permeate all areas, beyond software.
-A feature on the latest on studies about sleep and wake-up drugs.
-Quite a few interesting articles on copyright infringement and what a famous media powerhouse is doing, by going in the oposite direction, becoming a P2P freedom fighter.
-The future of batteries and the electrical grid.
-Politics and how they are getting deeply affected by... blogs!
-The big bang... and why it never stopped.

And the interesting topics go on and on, written by some amazing contributors, ranging from Wired's long standing collaborators, such as Bruce Sterling, or some recently incorporated "talent", such as technology columnist Dan Gillmor or Stanford Law Professor Lawrence Lessig.

Some of you might be wondering: what's the point in subscribing to a magazine like Wired, when I can get their content online a few weeks after the magazine is out. First of all, the subscription is SO unexpensive ($1/issue) that you shouldn't be questioning it. And second, and most important, this is a magazine (like I mentioned before) that you just don't like for its content (which is indeed available online shortly after publication), but also for its splendid layout and access to advertising for last minute products, the type that a typical Wired reader would love to learn about before they become a part of the mainstream. So get going and subscribe to Wired, so you can read about the future before it arrives!


5 out of 5 stars Awesome magazine!   November 17, 2004
M. R. A Bohm (Cordova, Alaska)
8 out of 11 found this review helpful

I have been subscribing to Wired for little over a year now, and continue to be impressed by the wide range of interesting articles within the magazine.

The latest issue I received yesterday contained a CD with 12 new songs from artists such as the Beastie Boys, produced under a radical new copyright licence. Wired is fighting for free music, and the right to copy and share, and created a licence which allows Wired subscribers the right to share and copy the CD enclosed. The CD alone is worth the cost of a years subscription ~ so an awesome bonus!

Every issue holds something new - I love the way Wired is so far ahead on the technology front - reading the magazine ensures I am kept well up to date on all the latest electronic releases. Wired helps to keep me on top of the information and technology out there that is available to me - and the improvements being made to perform tasks such as surgical operations, immigration etc...

On the smaller front, Wired contains reviews on new and upcoming computer games, and also provides articles and information on historical gaming such as space invaders.

Overall, Wired is an educational, interesting, worthwhile read - I definitely recommend this magazine to anyone interesting in technology and how it is shaping our future.



5 out of 5 stars Not Fluff, Not an Electronics Buying Guide   October 13, 2003
jay kenyon (LAS VEGAS, NV USA)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

This magazine does not just high light the newest in gadgetry, but is an analysis of technology, and its social implications. It is fascinating to read the big picture, not big as in "internet" but big as in western civilication's impact on and changes caused by techonology and global communication.

Sure it shows you hot new gadgets, but it also predictions, explains and deduces what those gadget mean in the grand scheme of things.

It is always a fascinating read. Thumbs up!


5 out of 5 stars tech background not necessary to enjoy   September 27, 2002
31 out of 34 found this review helpful

You don't have to have a Ph.D. in computers, math, or engineering in order to enjoy this magazine: I don't possess such credentials, and I think Wired is outrageously good. The appeal of Wired is information on cutting-edge technology, delivered in a highly visual, understandable, and often entertaining format. A subtle sense of humor pervades the magazine with features such as "Return to Sender" - a contest in which Wired readers attempt to send the weirdest possible item in the mail to the magazine's San Francisco headquarters; or "Japanese Schoolgirl Watch" - which tracks the latest trendy gadgets favored by one of the world's most trend-obsessed demographic groups. Wired endlessly scrutinizes and ponders on the intersection of technology, humans, and society in its terrific articles. The articles are always interesting, and well-written, with topics such as artificial sight research, or the shenanigans of MIT's Blackjack Team in Las Vegas (9/02 issue); parents of extremely ill children, united via the Internet in their challenges to the medical industry (9/01); or a profile of the Ibot Transporter "inventrepreneur," Dean Kamen (9/00). Wired is a beautifully presented, outstanding magazine. Try one issue - you might get hooked!

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