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Welcome to nickpeers.com!
Welcome to the homepage of
Nick Peers, freelance writer, editor, sub and trainer. I
have 13 years experience writing for a wide variety of
magazines (37 at the last count), and currently specialise
in writing for PC titles, including PC
Answers, PC Plus, plus the official
Microsoft-licensed titles for Windows XP and Vista (UK and
Australian editions). Those 37 titles have been spread
across ten publishing houses worldwide.
My apprenticeship was served at Future
Publishing between 1994 and 2002, where I worked as disk
editor, features editor, production editor, deputy editor
and finally editor across a number of titles, including
Cult TV, ST Format and finally PC Answers,
where I spent two years as editor. During my stewardship the magazine
grew its circulation to over 40,000 and saw its subscriber
base rise by 50 per cent during a period when most PC magazines
saw their reader numbers drop sharply.
Since going freelance in January 2003 I've
launch-edited Windows XP Answers, served as
Contributing Editor on the Microsoft Windows XP Magazine
in Australia and answered well over one thousand reader queries for
PC Answers and Microsoft Windows XP Magazine in
their respective sections. In all, I've estimated that I've
written over 4,000 pages of copy in my career so far - most
of that since I went freelance over five years ago.
What's new
I'm currently lucky enough to be writing regularly for four
publishing houses over eight titles covering a wide range of
different subject matter. There's obviously computers, with
Computeractive, PC Answers, plus the official
Microsoft Windows XP and Vista titles. I also
contribute to two genealogy titles, Your Family Tree
and BBC Who Do You Think You Are? I'm even writing on
country matters for BBC Countryfile Magazine, plus am
contributing once again to the official Birmingham City
match-day programme, Blues News.
Recent highlights: a top 10 UK rural TV
locations for Countryfile was followed up by a
feature on 10 classical pieces inspired by the
British countryside. I
recently submitted a Masterclass for Computeractive
on creating a customised Windows XP installation disc
containing the Service Pack 3 update, and continue to
contribute regular workshops.
Microsoft Windows Vista Magazine has
recently commissioned me for a regular ongoing Q&A column
for the magazine and web site, while Microsoft Windows XP
Magazine now employs me as a technical consultant. I
also continue to write regularly for PC Answers and
Your Family Tree, and have just received my first
commissions for BBC History magazine (click
here), pieces on Clare Priory and - next year - Easton
Lodge for its Footsteps
section.
I am writing - alongside Joe Cassels -
material for email newsletters on behalf of two clients for
GGMR (click
here).
I
recently featured in two video clips that appeared as recorded inserts for Joe Cassels' Edinburgh Fringe
show, Is Your Mobile On? Click
here to see the video clips.
Many of my old PC-based articles are now
online at
SupportPCs - see here
for a full list. I've not added anything lately, but am
currently redesigning the site from the ground up to make it
easier for my Joe and I to get our content online - you can
see how I'm getting on by clicking
here
(at present, only the Q&A and Tutorials sections work, and
are very much work in progress!). I've also recently started adding new items
to the Humour section of the site in the form of various
spoof quizzes - click
here. Also find
out what work has recently been published
here, and what's coming soon
here.
Hire me
If you're interested in using me as a
writer or editor, please check out the links to the left of the page
to find out more about how I could contribute to your title.
My particular fields of expertise lie in computing (both PC
and Mac), cult television and science fiction, history and
football. I pride myself on making sure my articles are
tested, accurate and easy to follow - an editor recently
commissioned me for a cover feature “because our readers
find your style very clear and accessible” while another
magazine praised me for a recent submission with the
following: “Great work as always, Nick. Fast, efficient,
clean and on time.” But you don't have to take their word
for it - you can see a number of my articles online at
Support PCs. This copy is the unedited, raw version -
three years as a production editor taught me a lot about
writing plain, accessible, accurate English.
I specialise in writing tutorials, tips and
technical support articles for home PC users, but also write
regularly in the genres of football, environmental matters
and genealogy, and am happy to turn my
attention to new challenges. I've written features and group
tests on gadgets for BBC Focus magazine and
Charged! magazine in Dubai (I actually wrote Focus'
Tried and Tested pages for 18 months before work pressures
forced me to give it up), and recently wrote an article on how alcohol
affects the brain for the BBC's Mindgames magazine.
I'm also contributing to the official match-day magazine for
Birmingham City FC - I wrote a Media Watch column for two
seasons (2002-3, 2003-4) before the programme was given to a
third party to produce. The programme went back in-house for
the 2007-8 season, so I resumed my Media Watch column, and
will be reprising this for the coming season too. The photo on the right is the second shirt I received on
the hallowed St Andrew's pitch as a thank you for my
contributions back in 2004.
I've also written articles on science fiction
- I've interviewed Rob Grant (Red Dwarf), Yeardley Smith
(The Simpsons) and Oliver Postgate (Bagpuss) for SFX
and Cult TV magazines. I also write articles on
genealogy for Your Family Tree on a regular basis. My
love of sci-fi manifested itself with a web site that has
grown from an article I wrote for Cult TV magazine: visit
the Highlander A-Z
here. I'm also helping to run the aforementioned Support
PCs site (here)
with fellow writer, Joe Cassels.
About the site
I registered nickpeers.com in late 2002.
Since it went online the site has been redesigned twice. As
I'm not a proficient Web designer, I employ the use of
templates, which enable me to concentrate on the site's
content. The current template is called Black on White, and
is available from
Colligan Web. The site is used for both my professional
and personal output. Constructive criticism is always
welcome!
Regards,