There's a circumstantial alignment of concerns. But tech is about as related to business as cooking is: both can be vital to businesses on both a minor and industrial scale (and more people eat than use computers), & certain segments are more integrated than others.
But restaurant reviews don't focus on catering & cookbooks don't focus on fast food, because the focus is on the end user in the normal case.
& it's strange, since tech is more like cooking (i.e., most people who code aren't professionals even if most code is written by pros, there's a long shallow climb in difficulty/exclusivity between amateur & professional, & the industry has many varied important organizations instead of a few very similar ones).
Seeing Wired cover Zuckerberg feels like seeing the CEO of McDonalds on the cover of a cookbook.
What makes it stranger is that in the 70s & 80s there *was* a trade/hobbyist division in tech mags, even though the industry was much more movie-like in the 70s (with micros being the indie scene but the real players being the seven dwarves, and with even playing with micros being a big investment)