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The word Magazine was added to the name with the third issue in June 1982, [6] but not added to the logo until January 1986.) [2] PC Magazine was created by David Bunnell, Jim Edlin, and Cheryl Woodard [7] (who also helped Bunnell found the subsequent PC World and Macworld magazines). David Bunnell, Edward Currie and Tony Gold were the ...
These publications appeal to a broad audience and usually include content about computer hardware and software and technology news. These magazines could also be called technology magazines because of the large amount of content about non-computer consumer electronics, such as digital audio player and mobile phones.
PC Pro is promoted as a magazine for "IT professionals, IT managers and power users." [ citation needed ] It is a fairly 'rounded' magazine as it contains information on many different aspects of IT (such as cheap hardware, extreme hardware, software, business, home, retailers) rather than just one of these areas like many UK PC magazines.
TechLife (formerly PC User) was an Australian general computer magazine, published monthly by Future Australia.. The magazine's regular content consisted of computer hardware and software reviews and previews, technology news and opinion articles, technical how-to guides, and a 'help station' feature where the magazine's contributors provide answers to technical queries from readers.
As of 2006, PC World ' s audited rate base of 750,000 made it the largest circulation computing magazine in the world. [7] On July 10, 2013, owner IDG announced that the magazine would cease its thirty-year print run. [8] The issue of August 2013 was the last printed of the magazine PC World, future issues would be digital only. [9]
Its columnists moved to Personal Computer World, the first British computer magazine. PC Magazine UK's launch edition was in April 1992, and the launch event, in March, was on a scale that no other technology magazine had experienced before or since, and was typical of the way publisher Ziff-Davis conducted business over the nine years it ...
The magazine featured articles, reviews of hardware and software, editorial content and classified advertising. It was geared more toward newer users than its sister publications, Computer Power User and CyberTrend (previously known as PC Today ).
PC/Computing (later Ziff-Davis Smart Business) was a monthly Ziff Davis publication [1] that for most of its run focused on publishing reviews of IBM-compatible (or "Wintel") hardware and software and tips and reference information for users of such software and hardware.