Omni Year 1984 Magazine Back Issues
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- Computers That Can Film Insanity
- Video Supergames
- The Worst Scientific Achievements Of 1983
- Secret Mantras
- Finding God In An Atom
- Weird Lab Animals Olympics 2084
- Taping Alternate Universe
- Human Hibernation: Cure For Aging And Obesity?
- Killer Robot Intelligent Cells
- Plus : Frank Herbert's New Dune Novel
- World's Most Mysterious Pape Airplane: Cutout Model Inside
- Brain Pacemakers : Pleasure On Command
- Palm Readers At The Pentagon: Why The Military Is Serious About Esp
- Museum Of The Impossible
- Arthur C. Clarke: Mars Or Bust!
- Righteous Stuff: How Astronauts
- Find God James Watson: Creating New Life Forms Chemical Sex
- And Designing Your Own Molecules
- Riding Comets To The Stars
- Circuits Maximus: A Portfolio Of Robotoons
- God On A Chip
- Create Your Own Reality: The Science Of Make - Believe
- Exclusive Star Wars
- How The U.S.S.R. Could Destroy The U.S. Satellite Defense System
- Extraterrestrial Life: New Hope In Our Own Solar System
- Latest Kinsey Report: Drugs VS.SEx
- Mystery Of The 500--Year-Old Inca Child
- Photographing Invisible Worlds
- That Make Us Tick
- Space Phones
- Dawn Of Time
- Alien Animals & Psychic Power For Hire
- Special Anniversary Issue
- Love, Work, & Play In The 21st Century
- Featuring: Ronald Reagan, Gerard O' Neill, Ray Bradbury, John Nausbity, And Stanley Milgram
- Electronic Soul: Immortality Becomes Technically Possible
- Superwomen Of The Future
- Dune: Sneak Preview
- Arthur C. Clarke's 2010
- The Film And Beyond
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OMNI was a science and science fiction magazine published in the US. It contained articles on science fact and short works of science fiction. The first issue was published in October 1978, the last in Winter 1995, with an internet version lasting until 1998.
OMNI was launched by Kathy Keeton, long-time companion and later wife of Penthouse magazine publisher Bob Guccione, who described the magazine in its first issue as "an original if not controversial mixture of science fact, fiction, fantasy and the paranormal". Before launch it was referred to as Nova, but the name was changed before the first issue to avoid a conflict with the PBS science show of the same name, NOVA.