TOPIC: COMPUTER MAGAZINE
A belated goodbye to PC Plus magazine
13th October 2012Last year, Future Publishing made a loss, so something had to be done to address that. Computer magazines such as Linux Format no longer could enclose their cover-mounted discs in elaborate cardboard wallets and moved to simpler sleeves instead. Another casualty has been one of their longest standing titles: PC Plus.
It has been around since 1986 and possibly was one of the publisher's first titles. It was the late nineties when I first encountered and, for quite a few years afterwards, it was my primary computer magazine of choice every month. The mix of feature articles, reviews and tutorials covering a variety of aspects of personal computing was enough for me. After a while, though, it became a bit stale and I stopped buying it regularly. Then, the collection that I had built up was dispatched to the recycling bin and I turned to other magazines.
In the late nineties, Future had a good number of computing titles on magazine shelves in newsagents, and there did seem to be some overlap in content. For instance, we had PC Answers and PC Format alongside PC Plus at one point. Now, only PC Format is staying with us and its market seems to be high home computer users such as those interested in PC gaming. .Net, initially a web usage title and now one focussing on website design and development, started from the same era and Linux Format dates from around the turn of the century. Looking back, it looks like there was a lot of duplication going on in a heady time of expanding computer usage.
That expansion may have killed off PC Plus in the end. For me, it certainly meant that it no longer was a one-stop shop like Dennis's PC Pro. For instance, the programming and web design content that used to come in PC Plus found itself appearing in .Net and in Linux Format. The appearance of the latter certainly meant that was somewhere else for Linux content; for the record, my first dalliance with SuSE Linux was from a PC Plus cover-mounted disk. The specialisation and division certainly made PC Plus a less essential read than I once thought it.
The current economic downturn coincides with significant shifts in publishing. Digital publishing is expanding beyond just websites, which likely contributes to Future's recent financial results. The perceived lack of importance of a title like PC Plus can lead to its discontinuation, though I believe past overexpansion was the primary cause. Perhaps a single Future computing magazine with in-depth reviews, tutorials on programming and open-source software, and consolidated content from other magazines could have changed things. However, even that might not have been commercially viable. Consequently, the present situation is different, and PC Plus is no longer a magazine I read monthly. Its disappearance from newsstands, even though it fell off my reading list some time ago, is regrettable.