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The publisher sold PC Gaming World to Computec Media a month after the purchase, [27] citing its lack of synergy with VNU's existing brand. [32] This transition was set to be completed in October 2000. [27] According to Golem.de , Computec planned to fold PC Gaming World together with its own PC Gameplay magazine, [27] which it launched in 2000.
PC Ace was a partwork magazine published by Eaglemoss Publications, between 1999 and 2001. It was aimed at those aged between 10 and 14, providing information on how to operate a personal computer . Readers of the magazine were assisted in part by a cartoon mouse named Ace, who featured throughout the magazine's pages.
[3] [4] [5] A Player's Choice Edition was released in September 1998 [6] for both DOS and Microsoft Windows. Burnout was licensed by the Hot Rod magazine. Although the name suggests otherwise, the game is not a part of the Burnout series, which would begin 3 years later in 2001.
AVG PC TuneUp has features for PC maintenance, optimization, updates, to free up hard-drive space, and to uninstall unwanted applications. [4] The "Automatic Maintenance" tool removes tracking cookies, cache files, old files from removed applications, and fixes issues with the Windows registry. [4]
Smartphone & Pocket PC was a magazine published every two months by Thaddeus Computing and covered Windows Mobile devices, software, and accessories. It included news, tips, articles, reviews, how-tos, and an enterprise section.
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Windows 98 is a consumer-oriented operating system ... Multiple monitor support allows using up to nine multiple monitors on a single PC, ... "PC Magazine". Vol. 17 ...
Frederic Emery Davis (born June 17, 1955), known as Fred Davis, is a veteran US technology writer and publisher who served as editor of A+'' magazine, MacUser, PC Magazine and PC Week; personal computer pioneer; technologist; and entrepreneur involved in the startups of Wired, CNET, Ask Jeeves, Lumeria, Jaduka, and Grabbit.