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As a print magazine, it had the largest audited circulation (both total and newsstand) of Macintosh-focused magazines in North America, more than double its nearest competitor, MacLife. In 1997, the Ziff-Davis-owned MacUser magazine was consolidated into Macworld within the new Mac Publishing joint venture between IDG and Ziff-Davis. [1]
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Macintosh magazines" The following 16 pages are in this ...
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.
Steve Jobs delivers the 2005 keynote address. Attendees at Macworld Expo 2006 in the Moscone Center. The first Macworld Expo occurred in 1985 in San Francisco.The conference itself was created by Peggy Kilburn, [9] who helped to increase the size and profit of the event during her tenure (1985–1999).
The Headlands Press produced books and negotiated publishing contracts for them with major publishers. [4] Many of the books were designed by Howard Jacobsen and produced by his company, Community Type and Design. This list is arranged by year of book publication: The New Games Book; Edited by Andrew Fluegelman and Shoshana Tembeck.
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
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The fonts were jointly developed by Robin Casady and Richard Ware. Casady Co first advertised in the January 1985 issue of Macworld magazine. 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.