The magazine followed the trends of the microcomputer industry at the time. Initially it covered a broad range of systems including
Commodore PETs and the
Tandy TRS-80 as well as
single-board computers such as the
UK101 and
Nascom 2. Later in its life it focussed more on business computers such as the
ACT Sirius 1 and the
IBM PC. Towards the end of its life, reflecting their dominance in the small computing marketplace, it covered the IBM PC and compatibles almost exclusively, with the occasional
Apple Mac or small
UNIX workstation piece. The editors were: • 1978 —
Dennis Jarrett (main magazine),
Nick Hampshire (Computabits) • 1979-1983—Peter Laurie • 1984 —
Jack Schofield The initial publisher in 1978 was Wim Hoeksma, who died in 1981. Chris Hipwell was its publisher in the early 1980s. Tom Maloney was advertising manager. The cover price in 1978 was 50p; in June 1980 it rose to 60p, June 1981 80p, 1984 85p and 1985 £1.
Your Computer was a spin-off from
Practical Computing. == Concept and design ==