Site not working for me either. Chris, I have several reasons. First, I am a bibliophile and the very idea of an ePublication is blasphemic to me. Second, I don't want to invest large sums of money to something that can be wiped out by an EMP. I have several books from the 1930s, and they are still in very good shape. Third, I dislike reading text on screen. It gives me sore eyes, aching back (I have never encountered a really convenient computer workstation) and blown nerves. Fourth, to be really feasible from PoV, the screen of the reader should be at least A3 in size to view large images in their entirety. And tell me how convenient that would be. Fifth, I want my reading device completely operable without any power, mains or battery.

PS. I do enjoy CDs or DVDs, but even those are physical storage formats.
I am entirely in your corner. On every point. One particular point I would make surrounds the activities that I engage in most often, namely research. Simply having a lot of reports, publications, texts concerning the primary focus of most of my research is far more convenient to reach and pull.
 
The magazine "The Aviation Historian" won't be published quarterly anymore.
From October 2025 onwards it will only be published annually.

Nick Stroud said:
[...]
We hope you will savour Issue 50 of The Aviation Historian, and we look forward to bringing you our first TAH Annual – plus various book and special-issue projects – in due course. Watch this space!
A very warm welcome to our 50th quarterly issue – the final one before we reinvent TAH as an annual, packaging fresh aviation history of the same superlative quality into a more hefty once-a-year volume. In my first Editor's Letter, back in 2012, I wrote that the aim of our new independent venture was "to encourage the sharing of knowledge among historic aviation's 'true believers', [and] chronicle one of human history's most compelling adventures". With the help of my longstanding (and often long-suffering) team-mates here at TAH, our invaluable Editorial Board and – crucially – you, our readers, I'm extremely proud to be able to say I think we have fulfilled those aims and created something rather special together.
[...]
We hope you will savour Issue 50 of The Aviation Historian, and we look forward to bringing you our first TAH Annual – plus various book and special-issue projects – in due course. Watch this space!
Nick Stroud, Editor of The Aviation Historian

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