Network Computing

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Network Computing is an online technical news publication that began as a printed magazine.[1] During that period, Advertising Age ranked it among the Top 300 print magazines.[2] and advanced in 1995 from #146 to #133 with a circulation of 38,500. It still has trade show affiliations.

History

Summarize
Perspective

The print magazine's resources including six evaluation labs.[citation needed]

  • May 1997 through 2000 – The worldwide regional publications of LAN Magazine were renamed to the already existing Network Magazine. Networkmagazine.com and lanmag.com now redirect to informationweek.com[3][4][5][6]
  • June 2004 - All security-related topics centralized within CMP under Network Computing umbrella.[7]
  • July 2004 - The print magazine was one of approximately 1,500 included on a US Postal Rate Commission survey regarding postal rates.[8]
  • September 2005 – Network Magazine (networkmagazine.com) was renamed IT Architect (itarchitect.com).[9][10][11] The offline publication was shut down after the March 2006 issue.[12] ITarchitect.com now redirects to InformationWeek.
  • June 2006 – The company announced that offline publication of Network Computing would be merged with Information Week. Online, Network Computing (networkcomputing.com) would provide technical content, whereas informationweek.com would provide news.[13] UBM renamed CMP Media to CMP Technology.[14]
  • 2008 – CMP Technology was restructured into four independent operating divisions under the common banner of UBM.
  • 2009 - Network Computing given own (revived) online identity[15]
  • 2013 – Parent UMB announced that "print publications will end production as of July 1."[16]
  • 2018 - Network Computing owner UBM (since 2008) merged with London-based Informa.
  • 2020 - web site cookie analytics for Network Computing to be handled by internal UBM unit named informationweekanalytics.com[17]

Affiliations

Although Network Computing has its own editorial/content unit

  • Marketing/Advertising functions for Network Computing are handled by Informa's Informationweek unit.[18]
  • it also has an affiliated conference, Interop[19][20][21]

Online

Their Twitter account began in December 2008. A 2009 headline in Advertising Age announced "TechWeb revives 'Network Computing' online."[22]

Awards

The magazine gives awards for companies, products and services in various categories.[23]

References

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