Kids, Code, and Computer Science magazine is a bi-monthly online and print magazine about learning to code, computer science, and how we use technology in our daily lives. The magazine includes hard to find information, for example, a list of 40+ programming languages for education, coding schools, summer tech camps, and more.
While the magazine is written to help kids ages 8 and older learn about programming and computer science, many readers and subscribers are parents, teachers, and librarians who use the articles to learn alongside their young kids, students, or library patrons. The magazine strives to provide easy to understand how-to information, with a bit of quirky fun.
The magazine also has won several awards The magazine also is a member of the Computer Science Teachers Association (CSTA).
This information is excerpted from website.
Make: magazine brings the do-it-yourself mindset to all the exciting projects in your life and helps you make the most of technology at home and away from home. Projects in the magazine range from old-school balsa wood and tissue-paper airplanes to what to do to keep aging high-tech gadgets alive to building autonomous robots from junk. Originally published as a quarterly, Make: has evolved to a six-issue-per-year publication. It is a hybrid magazine/book (known as a mook in Japan). It follows in line with the Hacks books and Hardware Hacking Projects for Geeks, but it takes a highly visual and personal approach. Make: is the first magazine devoted to DIY technology projects. Make: has a devoted audience of tech-savvy, DIY enthusiasts who are shaping the future with their innovative projects and ideas.