CIO (magazine)
From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
Categories | Business magazine |
---|---|
First issue | 1987 |
Final issue | November 2015 (print) |
Company | IDG |
Country | United States |
Based in | Needham, Massachusetts |
Language | English |
Website | cio |
CIO is a magazine related to technology and IT. The magazine was founded in 1987 and is now entirely digital. The name refers to the job title chief information officer.
CIO is part of Boston-based International Data Group's enterprise publications business.
Background
[edit]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
[edit]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
[edit]Coverage includes
References
[edit]- ^ 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.
- ^ Maryfran Johnson (October 29, 2015). "Our farewell issue of CIO magazine". CIO. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
- ^ Josh Fruhlinger (March 24, 2010). "10 Ways Microsoft Tried and Failed to Rule Mobile". CIO.
- ^ "CIO Magazine Brief: Extreme Protection that Eliminates Data Loss".
Learn how a new approach to Oracle database backup and recovery eliminates backup overhead and lets you recover mission-critical databases to any point in time
- ^ "Biggest Delays to Digital Transformation".