![]() Issue 18 (March/April 1983) | |
Editor | Bruce Beach |
---|---|
Frequency | Monthly |
Publisher | Bruce Beach |
First issue | November 1980 |
Final issue | August 1984 |
Country | Canada |
Based in | Toronto |
ISSN | 0821-1809 |
The TORPET was a Toronto-based computer magazine directed at users of Commodore's 8-bit home computers.
Though named for and associated with the Toronto PET Users Group (TPUG), [1] the magazine was published independently of the club as a commercial enterprise with paid writers. [2] [3] Twenty-eight issues were produced for TPUG from November 1980 to August 1984. [4]
In 1984 TORPET's owner and editor, Bruce Beach, dissociated the publication from TPUG and relaunched it as an oceanography journal, backronymming its name to Today's Oceanographic Research Program for Education & Training. [2] TPUG launched its own computing journal, TPUG Magazine, in February 1984. [5]
A 320-page anthology of The TORPET's most popular articles, The Best of The TORPET Plus More for the Commodore 64 and the VIC-20, was published in 1984 by Copp Clark Pitman. It featured type-in listings for over a thousand freeware programs, articles and cartoon strips teaching BASIC and machine language programming, memory maps, and user documentation for popular public domain software. [6]
![]() Issue 18 (March/April 1983) | |
Editor | Bruce Beach |
---|---|
Frequency | Monthly |
Publisher | Bruce Beach |
First issue | November 1980 |
Final issue | August 1984 |
Country | Canada |
Based in | Toronto |
ISSN | 0821-1809 |
The TORPET was a Toronto-based computer magazine directed at users of Commodore's 8-bit home computers.
Though named for and associated with the Toronto PET Users Group (TPUG), [1] the magazine was published independently of the club as a commercial enterprise with paid writers. [2] [3] Twenty-eight issues were produced for TPUG from November 1980 to August 1984. [4]
In 1984 TORPET's owner and editor, Bruce Beach, dissociated the publication from TPUG and relaunched it as an oceanography journal, backronymming its name to Today's Oceanographic Research Program for Education & Training. [2] TPUG launched its own computing journal, TPUG Magazine, in February 1984. [5]
A 320-page anthology of The TORPET's most popular articles, The Best of The TORPET Plus More for the Commodore 64 and the VIC-20, was published in 1984 by Copp Clark Pitman. It featured type-in listings for over a thousand freeware programs, articles and cartoon strips teaching BASIC and machine language programming, memory maps, and user documentation for popular public domain software. [6]