A lot can change in 40 years.
PCWorld made its debut in early 1983, hitting the streets as a 310-page magazine brimming with essential information about IBM PCs, the long-forgotten CP/M operating system, and a 5MB hard disk that cost a cool $1,995 (or nearly $6,000 in today’s dollars). It was truly a different era. Things changed. PCWorld was there to guide you through it. We covered the clunky debut of Windows 1.0. When Tim Berners-Lee invented HTML in 1989, followed by the World Wide Web a year later, we explained why it mattered. PCWorld chronicled the introduction of graphical browsers, of Dell, of video cards, of the iPhone, of USB—and several hysterical hype cycles proclaiming the death of the PC at the hand of whatever the new hotness of the time was. Ha. The PC didn’t die and…