
Pen Computing Magazine – October 1999
Pen Computing Magazine arrived on the scene in August, 1994 and continued producing well-designed, information-packed issues for several years.
Edited by the highly-energetic and personable Conrad H. Blickenstorfer, the magazine entertainingly covered both vertical and consumer markets during the heyday of the pen computing movement.
Artifact Details
Pen Computing, Inc.
United States
English
October, 1999
USA $4.95, Canada $6.95
Perfect bound glossy color magazine (with mailing label on cover).
In this issue:
- Editorial
- Pen News
- Cool New Stuff
- In Box
- Warehousing and Distribution
- Revelations of a Hardware Junkie
- IP in the Wireless World
- Wireless Data on Handhelds and Palmtops
- The Pen Tablet for Kids: StartWriter Educational System
- Pen Lab: Intermec/Norand PEN*KEY 6640
- Putting Pen to Digital Paper
- Paperless Library
- InfoGear iPhone: Pen-Based Internet Appliance
- Windows CEntral: Free Upgrades and Other Good Stuff
- Pen Lab: Intermec/Norand PEN*KEY 602
- Pen Lab: Casio Digital Camera Card for Cassiopeia E-100/105
- Pen Lab: Fujitsu PenCentra 130
- Preview: (Symbol PPT 2700, Symbol PPT 7200, HP Jornada 430se)
- Reviews: (CallunaCard, CE Quickshots, The Sweet Sounds of Windows CE, Pentax PocketJet 200, Five Case Roundup, Palm V Modem, Tiger Woods PGA Golf Tour, goVox, Documents to GoIBM WorkPads)
- First Look: Compaq Aero 1530
- Philips Nino
- The Glassbook Concept
- Big Changes for the Little Palm
- Pen Lab: Handspring Visor
- Palm VII Wireless Applications
- Psion Launches the Impressive Series 5mx
- Psion's Newest NetBook
- Is There an IPO in DataRover's Future?
- Buyer's Guide
- The Geeks and the Chic
8" x 11" (112 pages)
Pen Computing October 1999
PER-M-0001
October, 1999
Acquired by subscription
2018-07-31
About the Organization
No organization information available.
People Associated with this Artifact
No people information available.
Associated Products
No products information available.
Editorial
Pen Computing Magazine arrived on the scene in August, 1994 and continued producing well-designed, information-packed issues for several years.
Edited by the highly-energetic and personable Conrad H. Blickenstorfer, the magazine entertainingly covered both vertical and consumer markets during the heyday of the pen computing movement.
Oral History
No oral history available.
Media
No additional media available.