In the late 1990s and early 2000s, part of Apple’s print advertising included magazine inserts. These inserts were “mini-magazines” within magazines. They were glued with a pliable rubber cement that could be easily removed.
This magazine insert’s cover is all white with black text (in Apple Myriad Bold) that asks, “What’s the difference between a Mac and a PC?” Inside, the left panel answers with the question: “Where do we begin?” and the copy:
“PCs are for the stuff we have to do, like pie charts and spreadsheets. Macs are for the stuff we want to do, like photos, music and movies. On a PC, viruses and crashing are “normal.” On a Mac. Everything just works the way it should. And unlike PCs, a Mac comes ready to do all the things you want, the day you bring it home. Sound like differences you could get used to? Read on.”
The right panel of the insert provides a 5.375-inch square “insert-with-in-an-insert” accordion-folded brochure glued in place. Panels feature either full-color iMac screens showing Mac features, photos of other Macs (MacBook, MacBook Pro, Mac mini), and one panel has the headline, “Why you’ll love a Mac.” followed by additional text.
The back cover features two quotes from prominent journalists.
Folded, the insert measures 7.75 x 10.75 inches. Fully unfolded, the inside brochure measures 32.25 inches wide.