ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Writing

A Review of Scientific American Magazine

Author : Jason Canon
From Quantum Black Holes to Neuromorphic Microchips Scientific American Magazine has the coverage to keep your young or mature science enthusiasts learning and growing. This magazine never fails to deliver thought provoking stories targeted to the audience that is driving the latest innovations and changes around the globe. There is little surprise in the statistic that over 90% of Scientific American readers are passionately in love with the magazine.

Scientific American features authoritative articles written by the scientists who are doing the research. It is edited, however, so that any interested layperson will feel right at home reading about the latest scientific discoveries. The magazine only employs mathematics sparingly where necessary to support the text. This is one reason that makes Scientific American more comparable to say Popular Science than the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) publications.

This magazine is heavily weighted with content and consistently light on the advertising, making it an excellent read. The SciAM Marketplace section in the back nicely integrates the latest technology gadgets in without ever creating the atmosphere of a sales pitch. Furthermore, the majority of full page and other advertisers leave you with a “we get it” impression by incorporating some elements of scientific interest.

Scientific American is the oldest continuously published magazine in the United States. It has been reporting about developments in science and technology for more than 150 years. A restless inventor named Rufus Porter founded the publication in 1845 as a weekly that was titled "The Advocate of Industry and Enterprise, and Journal of Mechanical and Other Improvements."

Scientific American can boast that in addition to the likes of Albert Einstein, Francis Crick, Jonas Salk and Linus Pauling, more than 120 Nobel laureates have written for the magazine. Most of them wrote about their prize-winning works years before they were recognized by the Nobel Committee.

Year after year when asked “what would you like for your birthday” I am proud to be among those who respond “another subscription to Scientific American.”

The complete review of Scientific American Magazine, including photographs, can be found online at: http://magazines.canon.org.

©2005 Peach ePublishing, LLC


About the Author

Jason Canon has authored numerous technical research papers including: photonic switching, gigabit networking, VoIP E9-1-1, and others. He is an expert author for EzineArticles.com. E-mail Jason Canon at jmc@canon.org.

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Direct Sales Reps CAN Write Articles - Here's How!
  2. Speakers and Trainers - The Internet is Your Biggest Megaphone
  3. Creating Your Perfect Article Summary – 7 Tips
  4. Mumblings
  5. Self-Examination
  6. The Writer and the Web
  7. What Nationally Published Columnist, Cindy Laferle Has To Say About Writing & Journalism
  8. Starting a Local Writer's Group
  9. Putting The Critics In Their Place
  10. The article about nothing
  11. Words Matter
  12. Indispensable elements of a powerful law essay
  13. Article Marketing 101: The Perfect Author Resource Box
  14. Getting Looked Over, Without Getting Overlooked: Writing for Scanners and Skimmers
  15. How to Position Yourself to be an Expert
  16. Increasing Web Traffic With Original Articles
  17. Success Starts with Articles
  18. Finding Your Way Through Online Articles
  19. Technical Writing for the Terrified
  20. Got Lingo? The Terminology Of Marketing With Articles
  21. How To Identify Your Own Style Of Writing
  22. How to Use Articles to Generate Free Traffic to Your Website
  23. Writing Helpful Help – A Minimalism Checklist
  24. Power Writing 101: Tips and Tricks to Get You Taken Seriously!
  25. How To Write Thank You Letters With Class
More related feeds
The High Cost Of Science
Again, much of what you can find online will also be found in the magazine, but sometimes the articles are slightly more in depth. Over the years I have subscribed to National Geographic, Scientific American, Astronomy and others. ...

Internal Disagreement at APS
The following article has not undergone any scientific peer review. Its conclusions are in disagreement with the overwhelming opinion of the world scientific community. The Council of the American Physical Society disagrees with this ...

Women's brains ARE different from men's, and here's scientific proof
Increasingly, however, these assumptions are being challenged, according to a review of recent neurological research appearing in this week's New Scientist magazine, and it is becoming clear that the brains of men and women show ...

Things Read, Found Online: Is It OK to Be A Luddite?
The phrase was first popularized a hundred years ago by the historian Arnold Toynbee, and has had its share of revisionist attention, lately in the July 1984 Scientific American. Here, in "Medieval Roots of the Industrial Revolution," ...

A Review of Scientific American Magazine
From Quantum Black Holes to Neuromorphic Microchips Scientific American Magazine has the coverage to keep your young or mature science enthusiasts learning and growing. This magazine never fails to deliver thought provoking stories ...

I hate to say I told you so...
“One of the most useful journal articles I came across was a comprehensive review of some 400 scientific papers on the health impacts of organic foods, published by Faidon Magkos and colleagues in 2006 in the journal Critical Reviews in ...

Advice Pool: A Review of Scientific American Magazine at www ...
This magazine never fails to deliver thought provoking stories targeted to the audience that is driving the latest innovations and changes around the globe. There is little surprise in the statistic that over 90 of Scie.

Magazine Rack - Issue 26
Kurt Andersen in New York Magazine: I'm not totally sure we can; Emily V. Driscoll in Scientific American: Unorthodox sex in the animal kingdom; Robin Lane Fox in FT Arts & Weekend: A thoroughly modern emperor; Jeremy Harding in London ...

Let the Games Begin! [Scientific American Magazine]
This issue, we’re looking at the upcoming summer Olympic Games in China, taking a career break to travel the world, and review of the film “A Map of Saturday”. Beijing is preparing itself for the world’s spotlight this July as host of ...

A Review of Scientific American Magazine
It is edited, however, so that any interested layperson will feel right at home reading about the latest scientific discoveries. The magazine only employs mathematics sparingly where necessary to support the text. ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved