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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 ...
David Bunnell. David Hugh Bunnell (July 25, 1947 – October 18, 2016) was a pioneer of the personal computing industry who founded some of the most successful computer magazines including PC Magazine, PC World, and Macworld. In 1975, he was working at MITS in Albuquerque, N.M., when the company made the first personal computer, the Altair 8800.
Website. www .pcworld .com. ISSN. 0737-8939. OCLC. 1117065657. PC World (stylized as PCWorld) is a global computer magazine published monthly by IDG. [2] Since 2013, it has been an online-only publication. It offers advice on various aspects of PCs and related items, the Internet, and other personal technology products and services.
In September 1983, Norton started work on The Peter Norton Programmer's Guide to the IBM PC. The book was a popular and comprehensive guide to programming the original IBM PC platform (covering BIOS and MS-DOS system calls in great detail). The first (1985) edition was nicknamed "the pink shirt book", after the pink shirt that Norton wore for ...
PC Ace. Personal Computer News (United Kingdom) Popular Computing Weekly (United Kingdom) The One. The Rainbow. RUN. SunWorld, about Sun Microsystems computers (United States) UnixWorld, about Unix operating system (United States) Verbum, desktop publishing and computer art focused magazine of the 1990s.
0010-4841. Computerworld (abbreviated as CW) is an ongoing [7] decades-old professional publication which in 2014 "went digital." [2] Its audience is information technology (IT) and business technology professionals, [8] and is available via a publication website and as a digital magazine. As a printed weekly during the 1970s and into the 1980s ...
Because it was the first to emulate APL\1130 performance on a portable, single-user computer, PC Magazine in 1983 designated SCAMP a "revolutionary concept" and "the world's first personal computer". [34] [35] The prototype is in the Smithsonian Institution.
Based in. London. ISSN. 0142-0232. Personal Computer World ( PCW) (February 1978 - June 2009) was the first British computer magazine. Although for at least the last decade it contained a high proportion of Windows PC content (reflecting the state of the IT field), the magazine's title was not intended as a specific reference to this.