Product Description News of tomorrow, today. Stay informed with WIRED. WIRED explores the ways technology is changing our livesโfrom culture to business, science to design. By subscribing, youโll ensure that we can continue producing great stories for years to come. .com Review A helicopter on Mars. What to expect post-Covid. The next electrifying/terrifying leap in A.I. explained. WIRED gives you up-to-the-nanosecond coverage of how technology and the people behind it are changing the world around you. For less than $1 a month, get unlimited access to best-in-class reporting on science and technology, games and gear, and the visionaries and changemakers making it all happen. Catch up to the future on your terms with the WIRED print edition and full access to the archive of stories on wired.com. Stare the future right in the eye.
D**N
Loosing its edge.......
For many years wired was THE magazine of a technological future, presenting technologically driven material as a world changing force. This was nerdiness without submission, and one could be interested in technology without retreating from the world. The world was becoming technology.There was plenty of technocratic bombast, many things that were written about died in the cradle, and Wired was as closely linked to the dot-com boom as any publication, but few magazines could grasp the present, and grasp ideas of the future so well as Wired.Wired also had a countercultural edge because it, simply because the people involved with it were willing to play with, or at least touch, any interesting and new idea that fell within Wired's orbit. This was not a magazine for everyone, but it fit its niche well.Lately something in the tone of the magazine seems to be changing. Rather than reporting from the inside of the technologically driven world, it seems as if Wired is increasingly chasing celebrities, and involving itself with things that are trendy in the media world.Wired is not gone, per se, but frankly, when you see Martha Stewart on the cover, apparently because she is famous, and has hired people to integrate, in no novel or overwhelming way, a website with her other media activities, it is safe to say that Wired is becoming disconnected with its audience. While many articles are still interesting, the number of good ones is declining, and the tone of the magazine has shifted. One gets a strong feeling reading it that many of the staffers used to work at Cosmopolitan or Time, and are really more interested in faddish popular crisis and fashion than they are in technology. I can't yet say that Wired is bad, and there is no good substitute for it that I know about, but unfortunately, it seems as if the magazine is heading downhill.
S**J
Was a gift
Person says a gift they seem to like it a lot
S**.
my favourite mag used to be better but is still quite good
Wired used to be a lot better than it is now. They seem to be more formulaic with their selection of articles these days whereas 5 or 7 years ago they where more organic and risky. there may have been a dud issue once in a while but their topics made me contemplate ideas and parts of society or technologies that I either didn't know to exist or wrongly thought that I wouldn't be interested in. Now they have some mandatory topic categories that they need to cover in every issue. They even have an obligatory crime/suspense article which while mildly interesting seems to have no place in wired. The media/entertainment section is tired. I skip it completely. I think Wired doesn't know what it wants to be. Is it for geeks or nerds? I serves both of us better than any other magazine out there, don't get me wrong, but I fear it is on a trajectory that will ultimately cause me to not renew one year.If you are trying to decide wither or not to subscribe, just go to a bookstore and read a copy. If you like it, it is pretty much the same every issue. different content but same formula.
A**I
Great magazine for Kindle with fringe negatives
Wired on Kindle is great. The articles offer a fascinating look into the future, the writers know their stuff, the graphics are top-notch. For $5 a year (the selling point), you couldn't get a better subscription deal!That said, there are some negatives. Firstly, you can't get the magazine on desktop. Which is a bummer because I'm not too keen to squint at tiny sans-serif text on a mobile screen (the images and graphics also don't get their due).To read legible, large text, you have to switch between 'Magazine Mode' (where you are looking at a magazine page about the size of your mobile screen) or Text Mode (plain, colorless but readable text). There is no middle ground feature which sucks.Bottom line is it's just $5/year. You can't do better than that so I guess the cons are worth the price.
T**F
Intelligent writing about a variety of subjects
Lots of great tech centric articles, but not just gear jabber - but social, politicaland genrral topics related to technology and it's role in the world. It's always an interesting read, though there seems to be a strange, thankfully infrequent, focus on sex tech. (Eeeeeewwww, seriously?)
J**.
Not the tech mag I thought it was.
I subscribed to this magazine because I am into technology and thought that this would give me insight into new advances, releases, etc. - and because there was a very palatable $8 annual subscription fee. I have received two issues now and have chosen to end my subscription because the effect of receiving each issue is not that I become educated about anything, but rather that I feel brought down a notch after being at the receipt point of an onslaught of politically biased, useless communication. Instead of focusing on the epic advances being made by the likes of Tesla, SpaceX, Google, etc., the magazine engages primarily in the now all-too-common practice of underhandedly (but quite obviously) inventing obscure but apparently heinous problems that are - apparently - attributable to the Trump Administration, or working out intelligent ways to position reality as being detestable and the result of our country's pestiferous republican infection.In short (but not that short), it is another publication that I do not wish to read due to its breathtaking adherence to a palpable agenda/narrative that pretends that the viewpoint and opinion of half of America's citizens does not matter, and that jamming useless propaganda down our throats is more important than educating us.
A**F
More than 5 stars
Some of the best and most relevant journalism out there good writing.
S**M
Don't bother paying unless you're in the USA & territories
There is really little point paying for this as:1. Almost every single article is freely available on their website2. You CANNOT use their purpose designed digital editions outside USA & territories.This defeats the purpose of paying for a Digital Edition in UK & Ireland IMHO.
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