I have to agree about the value of magazines. For about £3 I would get a magazine with some articles that do not interest me ( for example I am not into carving), some articles featuring things I could never hope to make with my skills, some which are trivial, as in the OP post, and if I'm lucky, some articles of real interest. Obviously I would not buy such a magazine if I could browse it first, but if I had a subscription then I'd be stuck with it. So for years now I have not bought magazines. Books on the other hand are usually pretty good value, especially when bought second hand. Plus books tend to be more dedicated to a particular area of woodworking, so you can choose the area of interest. I say usually good value, but I have some which are pretty poor.
I have one on built in cabinets - think 10 chapters on the same basic kitchen unit type carcasses with minor variations for bedroom, cellar etc. I have another on outdoor structures, again repetition, repetition, repetition. My worst of all is an A to Z of the most moronically obvious workshop hints under the name of inventive jigs and fixtures. Each page has an accompanying picture, so there is a picture of a can of WD40 and a plane - the tip being to use WD40 for removing sticky labels from, um, planes ( did you guess that?). There is also a picture of a group of tins with nails, screws etc in. This time the tip is - if it's a rainy day, why not use the time to sort through your tins of oddments and put them into separate tins? I really needed those pictures, they helped me enormously to understand the concepts. What really amused me was the comment on the cover to the effect that this book was not designed for beginners, but for the more advanced woodworker. (All 3 are American books, strangely).
Sorry for the essay.
K