COMPUTER SHOPPER Magazine (2009) FINAL YEAR Issues Your Are Bidding On A Issues from JANUARY & FEBRUARY & MARCH & APRIL 2009 FINAL ISSUE APRIL 2009 NO LONGER PUBLISHED. GET THIS RARE LAST YEAR SET. Average Magazine Condition is vf or better. Photo is stock. FREE PC MAGAZINE JANUARY 2009 ISSUES ABOUT WINDOWS 7 WITH BIN ONLY. Computer Shopper was a monthly consumer computer magazine published by SX2 Media Labs. The magazine ceased print publication in
April 2009. [1][2] The publisher continues to run ComputerShopper.com,
a related website. Computer Shopper magazine was established in 1979
in Titusville, Florida. It began as a tabloid-size publication on yellow newsprint that primarily
contained classified advertising and ads for computers (then largely kit-built,
hobbyist systems), parts, and software. The magazine was created by Glenn
Patch, publisher of the photo-equipment magazine Shutterbug Ads, in
the hopes of applying its formula to a PC-technology magazine. The magazine rapidly
expanded into the then-burgeoning area of popular factory-built computers such
as the TRS-80, as well as models from Apple, Atari, Texas Instruments, and others. For a time, it was a popular[citation needed] source of information for users of these
soon-to-be-outmoded home
computers. Then, as the white boxIBM PC compatible business exploded in the mid-1980s, it
became a source of shopping info (having both editorial content and
direct-sales advertising) for the clone-PC revolution. Dell and Gateway sold
their wares through ads in the pages of Computer Shopper. In August 1984, the
first perfect-bound issue of Computer Shopper debuted
(at 350 pages), and the phone-book-size magazine regularly topped the 800-page
mark during the early 1990s. It was during this time that the magazine was sold
to Ziff Davis Publishing - first as a limited partnership, then solely owned. It was later sold, in
2000, along with Ziff-Davis' ZDNet Web site,
to CNET. CNET sold Computer Shopper to
new owners, SX2 Media Labs, in 2006.[3] In April 2009, SX2 Media Labs discontinued the print
version of the magazine.
The business continued on as a Web entity, ComputerShopper.com, which was subsequently reacquired by Ziff-Davis, Inc., in 2012.[4] Shipping is $25.0, For payment I accept Paypal, or (Other Arguments Can Be Made). Check out my feedback profile and bid with confidence *every bin is for one set only. any questions email me. |