Computer Life [1] [2] was a magazine which focused on computers. The New York Times called it "an endless array of permutations that marry the term PC to some older, less-capitalized form of existence" [2] because of its coverage of "the culture of computers." [1] Amidst "hundreds of computing magazines" its focus was Generation X. [3]
Ziff Davis began publishing the San Francisco monthly in 1994. [1] Advertising revenues had increased by 1996, but not in proportion to "the increase in overall spending." [2] Part of this was attributed to major portions of some company's ad budgets focused on television. [2]
When it first came out, Family Life was "the largest start-up ever undertaken" by Ziff Davis. This was the era when the magazine's big brother was "No. 1 in total advertising, ahead of Forbes and Business Week." [4] By 1998 it had been renamed; [5] it was subsequently closed by Ziff Davis.
Computer Life [1] [2] was a magazine which focused on computers. The New York Times called it "an endless array of permutations that marry the term PC to some older, less-capitalized form of existence" [2] because of its coverage of "the culture of computers." [1] Amidst "hundreds of computing magazines" its focus was Generation X. [3]
Ziff Davis began publishing the San Francisco monthly in 1994. [1] Advertising revenues had increased by 1996, but not in proportion to "the increase in overall spending." [2] Part of this was attributed to major portions of some company's ad budgets focused on television. [2]
When it first came out, Family Life was "the largest start-up ever undertaken" by Ziff Davis. This was the era when the magazine's big brother was "No. 1 in total advertising, ahead of Forbes and Business Week." [4] By 1998 it had been renamed; [5] it was subsequently closed by Ziff Davis.