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- PC Magazine's
most famous gaffe occurred in January 1989
when the annual Technical Excellence Award was
rendered on the cover as "Technichal
Excellence."
- PC Magazine was responsible for
the development of PC Labs, which was the first comprehensive
laboratory for benchmarking software and hardware. The "lab"
workers even wore white coats in the beginning.
- The magazine has undergone four
major redesigns in its history, in January 1986, June 1989, July
1992, and February 2000. The original "PC" logo, which was
replaced by a variation similar to the current one in 1986,
resembled an old-fashioned dot-matrix printout.
- The Editors' Choice award was
known as the Editor's Choice award until many people complained
that the latter was grammatically incorrect.
- The PC Magazine utilities began
as printed lines of code in the back pages of the magazine.
Users were expected to type this code into editors and compile
it themselves. When PC Magazine launched its Web site, and for
some years thereafter, the utilities were available for free
download, but now they are distributed on a paid-for basis.
- PC Magazine was once known for
its colorful three-dimensional bar graphs, which were considered
visually attractive but allegedly also confusing. The graphs
were abandoned in the 1992 redesign.
- From its inception in mid-1987
to the June 1989 redesign, the After Hours section was printed
"backwards" in that the first page of the section was actually
the last page of the magazine. This had the advantage of
allowing a person to flip the book over, open the back cover,
and begin reading the reviews in their logical order.
- For a time in the late 1980s and
early 1990s, PC Magazine ran a proprietary online service on
CompuServe called PC MagNet. This was an offshoot of an earlier
effort called the PC Magazine Interactive Reader Service.
- For many years, the magazine's
Pipeline and now-defunct Trends section listed the top-10 and
then top-15 best-selling software packages. From 1988 to 1992,
this list was conveyed through a colorful but bizarre bar-graph
display that included lines tracking the five-week selling
history of each package. In the March 1997 15th-anniversary
issue, an editor admitted that "we didn't understand it either."
- The magazine was once so thick
that it included an index of advertisements and a separate index
of advertisers in addition to an index of editorial reviews.
These indices were in addition to the standard table-of-contents
at the front of the magazine.
- To commemorate the launch of
IBM's PS/2 machines in the summer of 1987, PC Magazine ran a
playful cover with the name "PS" Magazine.
- During the 1980s, the magazine's
writers and editors used the XyWrite III word processor, even
though the official Editors' Choice award went to WordPerfect.
(For several years in the mid-1980s, the magazine divided its
blockbuster word processor reviews into different sections for
"professional," "corporate," and "personal" word processors.)
- John C. Dvorak's column is
probably the most popular feature of the magazine, and messages
from his fans and detractors have been a constant presence in
the Letters section since the mid-1980s.
- PC Magazine was known for a
while to consistently misspell Apple's 'i' products; "iMac"
would be spelled 'Imac', 'iPod' as 'Ipod' and so on. Whether
this was a deliberate action isn't known.
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