RIP, David Bunnell, Founder of More Major Computer Magazines Than Anyone (fastcompany.com)
Reader harrymcc writes: David Bunnell has passed away. He stumbled into a job at PC pioneer MITS in the 1970s and went on to create the first PC magazine and first PC conference -- and, later on, PC Magazine, PC World, Macworld, and Macworld Expo. He was a remarkable guy on multiple fronts. Harry McCracken, who edited some of those magazines, shared some thoughts about why Bunnell mattered so much in a post at Fast Company.
Glossy toilet paper. For those with better tastes in wiping.
RIP, Mr Burnell
That would probably give you a lacerated anus.
"That's the way to do it" - Punch
Apparently you don't grammar.
PC Magazine, PC World, Macworld, and Macworld Expo.
thanks for 40 years of shilling some of the most unaccountable garbage in computing history, and for spearheading a magazine that had a well established policy of avoiding even remotely damning criticism of advertisers or industry leaders. thanks for not only refusing to challenge, but actively pushing the insufferable fanboy culture that apple subsists on while conveniently ignoring stories of labor abuse and exploit denial at Apple.
Yours was truly the mcdonalds of tech literature shovelled onto the desk of the CIO and into the gaping maw of the road warriors carry-on luggage. so many shops are indelibly littered with your fly-by-night huckster hardware and bloatware its a miracle modern computing hasnt come to some shuttering halt in the wake of a publication that did everything in its power to keep the playing field "windows or mac."
Good people go to bed earlier.
There are plenty for attractive women.
Actually, PC Magazine was a pretty good magazine in the 90s, when there actually was a healthy PC industry in the US - close to 100 PC companies, based not just in the Bay Area but also in the MidWest and other places in the US. I used to enjoy those magazines. PC World was much more simplistic - didn't really like that. Wasn't a follower of the Macs then, although I was somewhat interested when the Mac cloning program was on, and when there were multiple PPC OSs in contention for the Mac - Copeland, BeOS, OS/2... until Jobs returned to Apple merging NEXT along w/ it.
Some of the ZD magazines out there were pretty good - PC Magazine, InfoWorld.... The gem amongst the magazines was BYTE - that was one that I actually subscribed to annually, until one fine day, the company just went out of business.