Juiced.GS

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Juiced.GS
Juiced.GS Vol. 19, Issue 2, cover dated June 2014
Juiced Vol. 19, Issue 2 (June 2014) cover
EditorKen Gagne
Former editorsMax Jones
Ryan M. Suenaga
Staff writersIvan Drucker
Andy Molloy
Peter Neubauer
Andrew Roughan
David Schmidt
Eric Shepherd
Ewen Wannop
Geoff Weiss
Mimi Whalen
CategoriesApple II
FrequencyQuarterly
PublisherKen Gagne
First issueWinter 1996
CompanyGamebits
CountryUnited States
Based inLeominster, Massachusetts
LanguageEnglish
Websitejuiced.gs
ISSN2162-7746

Juiced.GS is a print magazine/newsletter for Apple II computer users. Although the name implies a focus on the Apple IIGS, its coverage encompasses all Apple II systems. It is the longest-running Apple II publication[1] and, since 1999, the only Apple II publication still in print as of 2024.[2]

The 20-page magazine/newsletter (with the occasional 24- or 28-page special edition) is published quarterly and mailed to subscribers around the world. Each issue covers the latest Apple II news, including new products and event coverage. There are also frequent product reviews, how-to articles, and technical articles covering programming and even hardware design. Each year's third issue features a cover photo of the staff, taken at KansasFest, and includes extensive coverage of the premiere annual Apple II event.

The publication is available only on a subscription basis, delivered to subscribers via postal mail, though free sample issues are available on the magazine's web site. Juiced.GS subscriptions are annual, currently costing US $20 per calendar year in the United States, $25 in Canada and Mexico and $28 elsewhere in the world. Its 25th annual volume is being published in 2020.

The Juiced.GS domain name could be considered a domain hack.

History[edit]

Juiced.GS was founded in 1996 by Max Jones, a senior newspaper editor and devout Apple II enthusiast. What mainly sparked the idea and incentive for creating Juiced.GS was the (then) recent demise of one of the few remaining printed Apple II publications at the time, GS+ Magazine, and he wanted to fill the void. He knew that the Apple IIGS was a very capable machine, and wanted to push its limits by publishing a professional-grade publication with it. The name "Juiced.GS" is derived from one of Max's friends who, upon seeing Max and knowing of his decked-out Apple IIGS system, loaded with peripherals, exclaimed "There's the guy with the juiced GS!"

In 2002, Syndicomm, the founding company of Apple II online resource A2Central (Archived 2009-06-26 at the Wayback Machine), took over the publication while retaining the original staff of writers. Max Jones became (and remains as) editor emeritus, while Ryan Suenaga became editor. In 2006, Suenaga moved on to other endeavors, promoting then-associate editor Ken Gagne to the position of editor-in-chief, beginning with Juiced.GS's 11th annual volume. At KansasFest 2007, Gagne and Shepherd jointly announced that Gagne would take over publishing duties as well, effective immediately. Juiced.GS is now published by Gamebits, a sole proprietorship of Gagne's.[3]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Weyhrich, Steven (April 24, 2010). "Chapter 21: Magazines". Apple II History. Retrieved June 6, 2010.
  2. ^ "Juiced.GS continues in 2024". Juiced.GS. July 21, 2023.
  3. ^ Weyhrich, Steven (April 24, 2010). "A Decade of Juiced.GS". Apple II History. Retrieved June 6, 2010.

External links[edit]