They look like real magazines, with glossy covers, nameplates and a list of what you can find in each issue. And you`ll find them on the magazine rack next to the real magazines. But you won`t find ...
Computer magazines have been the kudzu of newsstands, twining their glossy path across the racks with high-tech titles aimed at the increasingly computer-literate, Web-surfing public. Though there are ...
COMMENTARY--About two years ago, I wrote a controversial column entitled "Are computer magazines dead?" At the time, traditional tech advertisers were fleeing to more mainstream pastures, new economy ...
PC World, the last surviving computer magazine from a bygone era, announced it would cease publication of print magazines with the current issue. But the rise of the Internet and digital publishing ...
Every magazine published during the Christmas season has a Christmas-like cover, so the magazine corner of bookstores and station stalls during this time will be very gorgeous. It seems that this ...
And so it came to pass that on November 19th, 2008 publisher Ziff Davis announced that PC Magazine–in the print version that gave it its name–was going to the great newsstand in the sky. When it gets ...
At its peak, Computer Shopper may have consumed more wood pulp each month than any other magazine of any sort, ever: It consistently ran over 1,000 pages oversized a month in the early 1990s. (I ...
Developments in computing come so quickly that it’s almost impossible to keep up with them. Today’s exciting new product soon becomes tomorrow’s doorstop. That’s what makes computer magazines so ...
Two venerable computer publications-- Maximum PC and MacLife—are ending their print editions this month. The titles, both published by Future Publishing, are now available in digital form only, writes ...
The US edition of PC World Magazine is to cease publication. The current magazine, dated August 2013, will be the last ever print issue. The company will continue to provide computer orientated news ...
COMMENTARY--About two years ago, I wrote a controversial column entitled "Are computer magazines dead?" At the time, traditional tech advertisers were fleeing to more mainstream pastures, new economy ...