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Newspaper Magazines

Input

The complete computing course

Marshall Cavendish's 1984 part-work magazine that provided comprehensive computing education across 52 weekly issues.

commodore-64sinclair-zx-spectrumbbc-micro britishpart-workeducationalmarshall-cavendish 1984–1986

Overview

Input was a British part-work magazine published by Marshall Cavendish from 1984. Sold weekly at newsagents, the 52 issues built into a comprehensive computing education covering programming, hardware, and applications across multiple platforms.

Part-works were a distinctly British phenomenon - magazines sold progressively that collected into reference sets. Input was the definitive computing part-work, teaching an entire generation to program.

Fast Facts

  • Publisher: Marshall Cavendish
  • Issues: 52 weekly parts
  • Years: 1984-1986
  • Price: ~£1.25 per issue
  • Binders: Available for collection
  • Platforms: Multi-platform (Spectrum, C64, BBC, etc.)

Content Structure

Each issue covered:

  • Programming lessons - BASIC, progressing to advanced
  • Type-in programs - Working code to enter
  • Hardware explanation - How computers work
  • Applications - Word processing, databases
  • Conversion tables - Multi-platform support
  • Reference sections - Built into complete guide

The Part-Work Model

Part-works had unique characteristics:

  • Weekly purchase - Affordable £1-2 each
  • Progressive learning - Built skills over time
  • Collection incentive - Complete the set
  • Binders - Organise into reference books
  • Newsagent distribution - Widely available

Educational Approach

Input provided:

  • Structured curriculum
  • Multi-platform coverage
  • Beginner to advanced progression
  • Practical projects
  • Reference material

Collected Value

A complete Input collection became:

  • Programming textbook
  • Hardware reference
  • Software guide
  • Application tutorials

Many kept their collections for years.

Other Computing Part-Works

Input wasn’t alone:

  • The Home Computer Course (Orbis)
  • Computer Tutor (Marshall Cavendish)
  • How to Program Your… series

Legacy

Part-works demonstrated that:

  • Progressive learning worked
  • Affordable weekly cost enabled access
  • Multi-platform coverage was valuable
  • Reference collections had lasting use

See Also