I also spend a lot of time browsing and reading interesting articles, particularly on HN and want to replace some of that with 'offline' alternatives. When it comes to other hobbies (sports, music) I have found some great magazines still in circulation that can work as alternatives to browsing online.
I'd love to hear your suggestions for tech related magazines, ideally things I can subscribe to and get monthly/quarterly. These should be varied enough to cover the kind of topics we see here on HN daily as opposed to super general tech news type magazines.
Wired -- has slipped a bit, I worry they have lost the will to cover cutting edge.
Smithsonian -- a wide variety of topics, some tech, some archeologh etc.
Smithsonian Air & Space -- (now quarterly :-() which has good space technology as well as interesting stories of both military and civilian aircraft.
Science News -- which culls from a lot of journals and finds interesting papers to highlight (I will often follow up on an article by writing to the researchers for copies of their papers)
Popular Science, Popular Mechanics -- These have become remarkably similar in their content focus, that said they keep me up to date on a lot of commercial gizmos that I might otherwise miss in the noise.
QST (part of the ARRL membership) -- Which is all about Amateur Radio and so it hits a lot of interesting topics as I continue to explore software defined radios both in theory and in practice.
I use Scansnap scanner and paper guillotine to save articles that I find either particularly interesting, or I am curious if they will go anywhere. There are many interesting "over night" revolutions that appear years earlier as some sort of "wouldn't it be cool if ..." article. Indexing them is a pain, my indexing foo is weak :-).
From a pop science perspective, I've always enjoyed The Economist; they have a technology quarterly as well as a section in every issue.
Anyway, Pop Mec was the best ever. Miss it more than I can say.
2600: https://www.2600.com/
If you speak Polish, "Programista" is a pretty good programming magazine: https://programistamag.pl
I was a subscriber before I wrote for them, and it’s articles are far and away more information dense than almost all other kids magazines.
[0] - https://beanzmag.com/
Wired and other leftovers aren't technical, but there's occasionally good material about computing & society in it (not enough in an average issue to buy it, IMHO). The magazines listed in the other comments that are okay are generally more hardware project focused rather than software technology focused.
If you read other languages, in German there is c't and iX, which are still okay (but were also better in the past, things seem to get dumbed down more and more in general).
Quanta Magazine has excellent content for the math/science inclined : https://www.quantamagazine.org/
Same with nature.com
ScientificAmerican or Science
Makezine for those who like building
For print-only, I would recommend books like:
* Alice and Bob Meet the Wall of Fire which is Quanta's book
* Best American Science Writing
All of these can probably be found for free at your local library
>Paged Out! is a free experimental (one article == one page) technical magazine about programming (especially programming tricks!), hacking, security hacking, retro computers, modern computers, electronics, demoscene, and other similar topics.
they also sell on Amazon.
Someone collected the most interesting stories and printed it and shipped it out. I think in the end it wasn’t sustainable, sadly.
I don’t find much about it online but I still have many copies.
For audio, the US-based audioXpress is similar. Hobby articles with a bit of a trade magazine slant to the ads and editorial content.
QEX is the best of the ham radio magazines still standing.
Elektor is fair, on par with Circuit Cellar and Nuts and Volts. Weren't they publishing in the US for a while?
The content is really of very high quality, on a subject that is often butchered in mainstream media.
The Internet Archive is one of the most valuable resources in existence, and not only for tech magazines and websites.
Wired - same
2600 - hacky vibe
Low Tech Magazine - name tells everything
Social Studies of Science - STS academic journal
About CACM:
I wasn't sure what I was expecting, however "Communcations of the ACM" is utterly disappointing as a magazines. A lot of opinions, outdated "news", litte to no technology at all.
It's also politically inconsistent: there still are statements about mr Ullman receiving some award despite having issued some discriminatory statements (about Iranin people IIRC) yet the ACM is very happy to publish a whopping FIFTY (!!!) pages marketing stunt about China (November 2021 issue) while staying absolutely silent about the uyghur genocide currently going on and the total lack of press freedom and LGBTQI+ rights.
About XRDS:
I only received one issue so far, and albeit very disconnected from technology at least had articles posing interesting questions ("has computing become a toxic endeavour?").
C&EN
The Jan/Feb 2021 edition has an interesting article on Netflix's use of FreeBSD. [2]
(Not to be confused with the BSD Magazine which is paywalled. [1] I can't comment on its quality as I've not read any.)
[0] https://freebsdfoundation.org/our-work/journal/browser-based...
[2] (PDF) Page 21 of https://freebsdfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/jan...
It's quarterly i think? The format is "150 page book of essays around a theme"
Computer Shopper
The Industry Standard
MSDN Magazine