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In 2003, Macworld began publishing as a digital version in addition to the print edition. [2] On September 10, 2014, IDG announced it was discontinuing the print edition and laid off most of the staff, while continuing the digital version. [3]
The signature hardware announcement of the show was the Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh, a limited edition model designed to mark the 20th anniversary of the founding of Apple Computer. [17] That August, Macworld in Boston featured Steve Jobs' first appearance at the exhibition as interim CEO, [18] and came on the heels of the release of Mac OS 8.
Macworld Australia (ISSN 2200-2375) was the Australian version of the Macworld brand and magazine, carrying a combination of licensed content from the US and UK publications. It was the longest running Apple magazine outside the USA: running from 1985 (a year after the Apple Macintosh computer was introduced) to 2018.
To defray Macworld exhibition costs, Casady Co shared exhibition floor space with Greene Johnson, Inc. which sold Spellswell, a stand-alone spelling checker for the Macintosh. Along with exhibition floor space, Casady Co shared the company's credit card merchant account so that Greene Johnson could sell their software.
MacCentral was a web site that provided news and information covering the Apple Macintosh, originally as an independent entity and later as the news service for Mac Publishing Web sites, including Macworld.com and Playlist, before being subsumed by Macworld's own brand. Co-founder Jim Dalrymple
Before the popular use of the internet, early Apple-related publications were available in traditional print media form, often but not always moving later to online publication. MacLife (stylized as Mac|Life ) is a San Francisco -based American publication, originally known as MacAddict between September 1996 and February 2007.
[4] [5] The new magazine had physically larger print editions than the old magazine, was focused on the creativity of Mac users, and no longer came with a CD-ROM. In April 2023, MacLife issued its last print edition and switched to a digital-only format.
The online edition of MacWEEK continued for several years, originally under the editorial management of MacWEEK staff members and later under the management of former Macworld editors. It was later shuttered in favor of Mac Publishing's Macworld and MacCentral sites.