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Which are the "best?" Specifically those that would allow one to become a part of a greater community.

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This probably should be Community wiki'd? stackoverflow.com/questions/128434/… – George Stocker Nov 19 '08 at 20:49
It looks like they already closed another question like this? stackoverflow.com/questions/300414/… – George Stocker Nov 19 '08 at 20:51
What is your point Gortok :) It was closed due to the moderator not realizing the distinction between journals and magazines (or at least in the context of that question). Thus, the note to the moderators. – SoloBold Nov 21 '08 at 21:38
This question would have been perfect for the upcoming Computer Science Stack Exchange. So, if you like to have a place for questions like this one, please go ahead and help this proposal to take off! – Raphael Dec 3 '11 at 17:50
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9 Answers

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If you can justify the cost yourself or have an affiliation with some institution to pay for it, an ACM membership with the digital library subscription gives you a print copy of CACM, plus online access to more journals, conferences, and other pubs than you will ever find time to read.

Springer-Verlag also has a web subscription (even more pricey though) to its Lecture Notes in Computer Science series, which is somewhat less cutting-edge than many journals, but tends to have many good introduction/overview/survey type materials which are great for anyone who wants to keep up on areas without necessarily following all the current research.

You should definitely check out any local libraries you have access to...most publicly funded university libraries provide some level of service to the general public and may have current subscriptions as well as extensive collections of past issues of journals. This is way more economical than paying for lots of reprints of anything older you want.

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Communications of the ACM

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I still read Dr Dobbs, but Mostly I read either books (more in depth coverage) or on the web (easier to find, more diverse topics).

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IEEE Computer

SIGPLAN Notices

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ACM Queue, another offering from ACM has content that's more practical than academic (unlike Communications of the ACM). Dr. Dobb's is another such magazine.

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I hate to say it, but journals just don't cut it for me anymore. I used to read several, but have found that an RSS aggregator with some good blogs plus twitter has been MUCH more useful to me than journals. Often, the same guys write in journals AND blogs, and the blog writing is much more prolific.

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From the IEEE publications I would suggest the following:

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Byte Magazine

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Also I like C/C++ Users Journal

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