In an early review of the new IBM PC,
Byte reported that
PC: The Independent Guide to the IBM Personal Computer "should be of great interest to owners". The first issue of
PC, dated February–March 1982, appeared early that year. (The magazine was at first advertised as
PC Guide. The word
Magazine was added to the name with the third issue in June 1982, (who also helped Bunnell found the subsequent
PC World and
Macworld magazines). David Bunnell, Edward Currie and Tony Gold were the magazines co-founders. Bunnell and Currie created the magazine's business plan at
Lifeboat Associates in New York which included, in addition to
PC Magazine, explicit plans for publication of PC Tech,
PC Week and PC Expositions (PC Expo) all of which were subsequently realized. Tony Gold, a co-founder of Lifeboat Associates financed the magazine in the early stages. The magazine grew beyond the capital required to publish it; to solve this problem, Gold sold the magazine to
Ziff-Davis, moving from California to
New York City. By February 1983 it was published by PC Communications Corp., a subsidiary of Ziff-Davis Publishing Co., Bunnell and his staff left to form
PC World magazine. The first issue of
PC carried an interview with
Bill Gates, made possible by his friendship with David Bunnell, who was among the first journalists and writers to take an interest in personal computing.
Early transition to square binding By its third issue
PC was
square-bound, because it was too thick for
saddle-stitch. At first the magazine published new issues every two months, but became monthly as of the August 1982 issue, its fourth. In March 1983 a reader urged the magazine to consider switching to a biweekly schedule because of its thickness. Although the magazine replied to the reader's proposal with "Please say you're kidding about the bi-weekly schedule. Please?", after the December 1983 issue reached 800 pages in size, as of the 17 January 1984 issue
PC began publishing new issues every two weeks, each about 400 pages in size. In January 2008 the magazine dropped back to monthly issues. Print circulation peaked at 1.2 million in the late 1990s. In November 2008 it was announced that the print edition would be discontinued as of the January 2009 issue, but the online version at pcmag.com would continue. By this time print circulation had declined to about 600,000. In the December 2022 issue, it was announced that the issue was the last one following the magazine format, and focus was shifted to the pcmag.com website. The magazine had no
ISSN until 1983, when it was assigned , which was later changed to .
PC Magazine uses
Google Books as the official archive of its 27 years as a print publication.
PC Magazine is not to be confused with the earlier magazine named
Personal Computing (also called
Personal Computing – The Magazine), published by Hayden Publishing, which had a publication period spanning from January/February 1977 to approximately 1986. == Editorial leadership ==