Better yet, buy the copy and read it whenever you like.

2600 is pretty much supported by subscriptions and t-shirt sales, they
have no advertisers in the mag, so if you like what you read, buy a
copy.

While I get the feeling that a lot of the old-timers ( :] ) think that
2600 is for hacker-punks or communists or whatever, the truth is that
2600 is a quality publication with quality articles and it would be a
real shame to see it dry up....

~k

On Tue, 2009-05-05 at 11:32 -0400, Nick Floersch wrote:
> For those of you who consider yourself above 2600 magazine and eschew
> it because of either thinking it is only for script kiddies or radical
> leftists or communists....
> 
>  
> 
> There is an article in the most reason 2600 by Bre Pettis. Bre is one
> of the U.S. founders of Hackerspaces ... he and another guy were
> pretty much the first two people to setup Hackerspaces in the U.S. ...
> and they did it simultaneously after coming back from a Chaos Computer
> Club meeting in Germany.
> 
>  
> 
> Anyway... he was tapped to write the "Hacker Perspective" column in
> this issue and he focuses on the history and current state of rapid
> prototyping, along with lots of suggestions for ways to do it
> yourself... and of course he mentions Hackerspaces.
> 
>  
> 
> So thumb through a copy the next time you are in Borders or B&N.
> 
>  
> 
> -Nick
> 
> 
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