12 comments

[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 32.5 ms ] thread
Apparently it actually goes to mid-2009.
Thanks, I edited the title to reflect that.
Who else immediately looked up their birth-month issue?
I looked for the issues discussing the first airplanes.
I immediately went for the personal computer articles. October 1977 "New home computers can change you lifestyle."

May 1977 has an article on assembling you own computer (IMSAI)

I'm a color junkie so I started poking around in the 1920s and it's really cool to see there have always been ads to become this or do that to make more money.

Rollerblades are in this issue too.

Wooo. Popular Science is all I had to read when I was a kid. It's precisely the reason I got into science and engineering.

Now I have something to read for the next year :)

This just makes me sad that as a kid I never tried to order the parts for my very own jet powered helicopter.
Oh great. Hundreds of issues touting airships as the Next Big Thing.
May 1920, p. 27: "Dare We Use This Power? Sir Oliver Lodge says atomic energy will supplant coal"

..."I hope that the human race will not discover how to use this energy," he says, "until it has brains and morality enough to use it properly, because if the discovery is made by the wrong people this planet would be unsafe."

How long does copyright apply on magazines ? If the magazines are older than xx amount of years they are in the public domain, right ?