CIO magazine
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Categories | Business magazine |
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First issue | 1987 |
Final issue | November 2015 (print) |
Company | IDG |
Country | United States |
Based in | Framingham, Massachusetts |
Language | English |
Website |
cio |
CIO magazine (also known as CIO.com) was founded in 1987. The magazine title refers to the job title Chief information officer. Readership includes other computer-related executives and technology decision makers.
CIO is part of Boston-based International Data Group's enterprise publications business, and does not have audited circulation numbers and cannot demonstrate their readership data is accurate.
Background
Founded 1987 in Framingham, Massachusetts as a monthly magazine at a time when the CIO title was relatively new[1] and relatively unknown in corporate America, today CIO is also noted for its CIO-100 annual awards, for those "that have distinguished themselves through the effective and innovative use" of information technology.[2]
CIO.com
In 1996, the website was launched as a companion to the magazine.
On October 29, 2015, editor-in-chief Maryfran Johnson announced that the print magazine had ceased publication.[3]
Industry coverage
Coverage includes
References
- ↑ The CIO title was defined in 1981. William H. Gruber. "Strategic information".
- ↑ "NASA Chief Technology Officer for IT Honored by CIO Magazine". June 8, 2010.
- ↑ Johnson, Maryfran (2015-10-29). "Our farewell issue of CIO magazine". CIO. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
- ↑ Josh Fruhlinger (March 24, 2010). "10 Ways Microsoft Tried and Failed to Rule Mobile". CIO.
- ↑ "CIO Magazine Brief: Extreme Protection that Eliminates Data Loss".
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- ↑ "Biggest Delays to Digital Transformation".