Register a SA Forums Account here!
JOINING THE SA FORUMS WILL REMOVE THIS BIG AD, THE ANNOYING UNDERLINED ADS, AND STUPID INTERSTITIAL ADS!!!

You can: log in, read the tech support FAQ, or request your lost password. This dumb message (and those ads) will appear on every screen until you register! Get rid of this crap by registering your own SA Forums Account and joining roughly 150,000 Goons, for the one-time price of $9.95! We charge money because it costs us money per month for bills, and since we don't believe in showing ads to our users, we try to make the money back through forum registrations.
 
  • Post
  • Reply
Poil
Mar 17, 2007

Pastry of the Year posted:

Garfield Classic (June 12, 1988)


VRMM! I've always loved that image for some reason. :D

Shouldn't that say quicksnow?

Adbot
ADBOT LOVES YOU

Shaman Tank Spec
Dec 26, 2003

*blep*



Discendo Vox posted:

My thesis defense involved several hours of scrutiny. It was by no means theater - students in my department have failed the defense in the recent past. If my thesis had involved an external physical object as an example, it is indeed possible the committee would have examined it directly. Different departments do things differently. Holbrook's work is full of bullshit, but the basic idea of the defense procedure isn't a case of bullshit.

That's interesting. Without disclosing more personal information than you're comfortable with, can you say what field your degree is in, or what degree it is you got? I imagine there is a world of difference between, say, an MSc in computer science (which is what Guy seems to be getting) and a MoA in Modern Dance or Sculpting or something.

It is worth clarifying that my experience is specifically in the natural sciences.

CommonShore
Jun 6, 2014

A true renaissance man


I also defended my master's thesis (Humanities). The difference between the MA and the PhD is that an MA was read by an internal committee whereas the PhD had an external examiner.

Rand Brittain
Mar 25, 2013

"Go on until you're stopped."
The main thing about "securing" the internet of things that Holbrook is missing is that most of these devices are, in addition to being very poorly secured, going to be loyal to their corporate masters and not to the person who bought them.

Sundae
Dec 1, 2005

CommonShore posted:

I also defended my master's thesis (Humanities). The difference between the MA and the PhD is that an MA was read by an internal committee whereas the PhD had an external examiner.

Same (STEM M.Eng). Nobody except my chair showed for the defense, but in theory yeah.

goatface
Dec 5, 2007

I had a video of that when I was about 6.

I remember it being shit.


Grimey Drawer
Did he do brain surgery on these apparently sapient kitchen appliances, or did he secure them by telling them not to talk to Russians?

Evil Mastermind
Apr 28, 2008

The Dinette Set stays loyal.


Working Daze remembers it has a character that's a medusa. And yes, she turns people into stone.


Super-Fun-Pak Comix is an implied threat.


Cul De Sac loves special features.

Endless Mike
Aug 13, 2003



Star Wars turns out to be a headhunter





Huxley
Oct 10, 2012



Grimey Drawer

Evil Mastermind posted:

Cul De Sac loves special features.


Huxley fucked around with this message at 17:42 on Jan 5, 2020

readingatwork
Jan 8, 2009

Hello Fatty!


Fun Shoe
Old School Peanuts (May 10, 1951)




Calvin and Hobbes (Nov 18-19, 1986)






Robbie and Bobby (Dec 17-18, 2014)



Shaman Tank Spec
Dec 26, 2003

*blep*



goatface posted:

Did he do brain surgery on these apparently sapient kitchen appliances, or did he secure them by telling them not to talk to Russians?

Knowing Holbrook's dumb bullshit he probably gave them a lecture inside the Virtual Internet School as his avatar, I dunno, "animatronic chess horse" or something.

Selachian
Oct 9, 2012

Rhymes with Orange



Retail



Get Fuzzy 1/4/00



Now I want a meatball sub. Sigh.

Discendo Vox
Mar 21, 2013

We don't need to have that dialogue because it's obvious, trivial, and has already been had a thousand times.

Der Shovel posted:

That's interesting. Without disclosing more personal information than you're comfortable with, can you say what field your degree is in, or what degree it is you got? I imagine there is a world of difference between, say, an MSc in computer science (which is what Guy seems to be getting) and a MoA in Modern Dance or Sculpting or something.

It is worth clarifying that my experience is specifically in the natural sciences.

Social science. My program also had a humanities side, which had similarly (arguably much more intensive) rigorous defenses.

Vargo
Dec 27, 2008

'Cuz it's KILLIN' ME!

FrumpleOrz posted:

Frazz gently caress oofffffffffffffffff


lol, what the gently caress, are you trying to say these two things somehow offset each other? Shut the gently caress up, Frazz.

BCN


Phoebe


Wallace


Curti... what the gently caress

Safety Dance
Sep 10, 2007

Five degrees to starboard!

Vargo posted:


Curti... what the gently caress


Now I'm super invested in whatever Michelle gave Curtis. Spill the beans, Billingsley!

Vargo
Dec 27, 2008

'Cuz it's KILLIN' ME!

Safety Dance posted:

Now I'm super invested in whatever Michelle gave Curtis. Spill the beans, Billingsley!

It's extremely weird because this is the last strip before the Pixel-Anne Lee story:


Which seems to imply that the story was the gift. But then you get yesterday's strip saying Michelle got him something else and his mom gave him the book?

It is incredible how bad of a storyteller Billingsley is.

Sundae
Dec 1, 2005

Vargo posted:

It's extremely weird because this is the last strip before the Pixel-Anne Lee story:


Which seems to imply that the story was the gift. But then you get yesterday's strip saying Michelle got him something else and his mom gave him the book?

It is incredible how bad of a storyteller Billingsley is.

I'm betting it's going to be a framed "selfie"of her, but one of the ones Curtis took of her that she found flattering. There was an arc about that some billion years ago or so. It'd fit form for the character.

Powered Descent
Jul 13, 2008

We haven't had that spirit here since 1969.

goatface posted:

Did he do brain surgery on these apparently sapient kitchen appliances, or did he secure them by telling them not to talk to Russians?

I "secured" my devices (a couple of cheap Foscam clones that I got years ago so I could look in on the cat while I was out) by setting up my router to deny them access to the Internet. Boom, all attempts to call home to whatever that IP address in China is are stymied, and I can still reach them when I'm away from home via a nice simple SSH tunnel.

I can haz master's degree now? Or do I still need to work in DNA-that's-indistinguishable-from-magic?

Kennel
May 1, 2008

BAWWW-UNH!
Surgeon's Tales feat. the majestik møøse

Åland is an island group between Sweden and Finland.




Nancy


Dustin


1997 Viivi & Wagner

Zinkraptor
Apr 24, 2012


Yelyektioee Yayestsolts Ieetl is a very bizarre name for a business, especially since it mixes the Russian and English alphabet, but I suppose that's to be expected considering the name of the strip

I don't speak Russian and my "translation" of the name is probably very very wrong but you get the idea

Murdstone
Jun 14, 2005

I'm feeling Jimmy


Look! A kinda good Macanudo!

F Minus



Mark Trail



Does it appear to anyone else that you're supposed to read the top left panel, then the top part of the big right panel, then the bottom left panel, then the bottom of the right? That's not what comic strips are supposed to do but it doesn't seem to work any other way.

Mary Worth



The Phantom



*The Ghost Who Steals Culturally Important Artifacts and Human Remains!

Pooch Cafe



Rex Morgan MD



"Eat, my pretties!"

Andertoons



Popeye's Cartoon Club



Flash Gordon



That story seemed longer than the usual one, but that may be because it was boring.

Julet Esqu
May 6, 2007





"Also your doctor declared you to have menopause without doing any sort of test to confirm, and then said 'Good luck with that, you old bag, bye lol!' without offering any sort of advice or treatment to help with your symptoms, even though they seem extensive. So also don't give up on finding a different doctor!"

EasyEW
Mar 8, 2006

I've got my father's great big six-shooter with me 'n' if anybody in this woods wants to start somethin' just let 'em--but they DASSN'T.
Sally Forth



Peanuts (January 7, 1973)



Funky Winkerbean



Crankshaft



9 Chickweed Lane



Thanks to Public Domain 2020, the hiatus is over and now it's time to return to Life (With Skippy). (January 4, 1924)



What I coughed up as an introduction last year is still a decent place to start:

Me last year posted:

Before the name was bolted to the legacy of the Time-Warner media megalith, there was a whole other Life Magazine, a weekly that was effectively the American answer to Punch. While there were written pieces, the founder was a professional illustrator and it was one of the first periodicals to use a new high quality printing process, so the big draw was the art. Life v.1.0 was the launching point for Charles Dana Gibson, who eventually became a big enough deal that he bought the magazine, and his Gibson girls. Over the years, its pages hosted Robert Ripley, Norman Rockwell, Palmer Cox, H.T. Webster...and, eventually, some dude (and (no fooling) future Olympic medalist in drawing and watercolors) named Percy Crosby.

While Crosby was churning out newspaper features at a pretty good clip in the teens and twenties, magazines were the prestige gig, especially in one that cost you 15 whole cents at the newsstand. As subject matter goes, he'd been gravitating towards kids, particularly urban and slum kids, in his frequent Life contributions, so when he pitched a regular feature to his editors, that's what he brought to the table. "I drew up three pages and thought of forty-four names (among them Beanie and Jumper)—Skippy last on the list. A minor editor put his oar in and suggested Tiny Tim. I bristled with [sic] such uncalled-for interference, and... the thought flashed through my mind: '[The title] had to be Skippy and nothing else!'"

The editors were high enough on Skippy that they introduced the new feature with a full-page ad.

And that brings us to year two. Welcome back.



Elsewhere In The Magazine (because this era of Life drew in a lot of top-drawer talent):



Crosby again, when he wasn't drawing kids.



Don Herold, who we were introduced to last thread, fixes a furnace.



Rodney Thomson, who had a decades-long run with Life.



Alice Harvey, and if Thomson is the old guard, Harvey is downright modern by comparison. What really jumps at me, though, is The New Yorker launched in 1925 and lifted a lot of people out of Life to help launch the new magazine. Harvey found a home at the new magazine, and (in case you didn't click that link) Harold Ross, New Yorker co-founder, called her "one of the three or four pathfinders in what is called the new school of American humor". "I remember seeing it and being encouraged by it when I was thinking of starting The New Yorker. It had a lot to do with convincing me that there was a new talent around for a magazine like this."


(August 17, 1922)

So yeah, she established the New Yorker style years before there was a New Yorker, which not only makes her quite worthy, but means she's got a lot to answer for.

Continuing our scan of the before-Skippy times gives us Ellison Hoover's contribution to a newspaper "burlesque" issue. (September 7, 1922)



Alias: Buster Brown: Through a quirk in early 20th century intellectual property laws, Richard Outcault managed to escape his first employer with one of his world-famous characters, and the judge said he could do that as long as he didn't use the name on the masthead. So for awhile, there were two competing Buster Browns circulating in the world, but the non-Outcault one was just unspeakably off. Never settle for substitutions. (March 15, 1908)





And now a confession: I skipped two of these last week on purpose. The way I've always approached posting old stuff, especially when the project is going back either to the beginning of a thing or a fixed starting point in its history and discovering it with the rest of you, is to present history as it was, not as we wish it was. It was an approach that made sense to a few folks around here several years ago, and in the not too distant future I'm going to make a fistful of words to clarify it a little bit better than I have in the past. I'd rather punch a Nazi than be confused for one, but I'd still like the option of being able to make sense of history, especially now that some of our idiot neighbors seem hell-bent on dragging everyone back to their revisionist version of the past at blistering speed.

But last week a few too many intolerance brushfires popped up in our own backyard to ignore (you might know what I'm talking about, but you're blessed if you don't), and the next couple of Buster Browns that were in the queue had a side character who, especially in full color, rendered in a way I just couldn't bring myself to post, especially with (gestures wildly at everything else).

For those who want the full set, they're from February 23 (e: and here's the link to the source, since Imgur seems to think it's porn) and March 1, 1908. Also, it took three hours to write the last two paragraphs and I still think I got it wrong.

EasyEW fucked around with this message at 02:57 on Jan 6, 2020

Powered Descent
Jul 13, 2008

We haven't had that spirit here since 1969.

EasyEW posted:

Peanuts (January 7, 1973)



Kennel
May 1, 2008

BAWWW-UNH!
S O M E G I Z M O

Ghostlight
Sep 25, 2009

maybe for one second you can pause; try to step into another person's perspective, and understand that a watermelon is cursing me



EasyEW posted:



Rodney Thomson, who had a decades-long with Life.
this is so brutally naked that it's continued relevancy is not at all reassuring.


Classic Cat

Transmodiar
Jul 9, 2005

You're a terrible person, Mildred.

StrixNebulosa posted:

gently caress you. I do not want to read works by transphobes, bigots, and fuckers. gently caress off.

Then set their profile to ignore and move on.

Modesty Blaise



Yvonmukluk
Oct 10, 2012

Everything is Sinister


Palette swap posted:

Caught up this year.

You are a disgrace to your avatar. :colbert:

Professor Wayne
Aug 27, 2008

So, Harvey, what became of the giant penny?

They actually let him keep it.
My Dad is Dracula


Pickles


Zits


I'm going to be traveling a bit for work over the next month or two. Expect catch-up posts on the weekends.

Ghostlight
Sep 25, 2009

maybe for one second you can pause; try to step into another person's perspective, and understand that a watermelon is cursing me



Yvonmukluk posted:

There is a professional misconduct hearing over here with your name on it :colbert:


Nekonaughey

Angular Cyrus
May 29, 2007

everything is so much harder than it looks
King Aroo 8/16/53


They'll Do It Every Time 7/23/46


Mopsy 8/1/42

fisting by many
Dec 25, 2009




Holy crap, did Ed actually apologize for being a knob? Is that a first?

EasyEW posted:

Continuing our scan of the before-Skippy times gives us Ellison Hoover's contribution to a newspaper "burlesque" issue. (September 7, 1922)



I do not understand this at all but I like it.

Darthemed
Oct 28, 2007

"A data unit?
For me?
"




College Slice

Ghostlight posted:

Classic Cat


Brutal slam.

Sweaty IT Nerd
Jul 13, 2007

Darthemed posted:

Brutal slam.

Is it?

The_Other
Dec 28, 2012

Welcome Back, Galaxy Geek.

John Pinette did it better

Powered Descent
Jul 13, 2008

We haven't had that spirit here since 1969.


I regret nothing.

Haifisch
Nov 13, 2010

Objection! I object! That was... objectionable!



Taco Defender

EasyEW posted:

But last week a few too many intolerance brushfires popped up in our own backyard to ignore (you might know what I'm talking about, but you're blessed if you don't)
And hoo boy what a brushfire it is. :smith:


2017 Spiderman


1978 Comics




Dick Tracy


Locher Tracy


Origins of the Sunday Comics


Footrot Flats

Haifisch fucked around with this message at 05:55 on Jan 6, 2020

FrumpleOrz
Feb 12, 2014

Perhaps you have not been to the *Playground*.
The *Playground* is for Taalo and for Orz, but *Campers* can go.
It more fun than several.
You can go there for too much fun.
The Lockhorns


Brewster Rockit Space Guy


On The Fastrack I don't think Holbrook has ever actually worked in IT, right?


No Safe Havens on Sundays!

Stone Soup


Kevin & Kell Is there even a joke here?


Mother Goose & Grimm


Hagar The Horrible


Sherman's Lagoon


Frazz

Vox Valentine
May 31, 2013

Solving all of life's problems through enhanced casting of Occam's Razor. Reward yourself with an imaginary chalice.

FrumpleOrz posted:

Kevin & Kell Is there even a joke here?
I think it's just an incredibly boring spin on the turn of phrase "drone jockey". Drone jockey, drone hockey, it's...it sure is an attempt at a joke.

Adbot
ADBOT LOVES YOU

Ghostlight
Sep 25, 2009

maybe for one second you can pause; try to step into another person's perspective, and understand that a watermelon is cursing me



Who is Rudy even supposed to be talking to?
Did his girlfriend just turn around and say "Rudy, what the gently caress have we been doing here for the last couple of minutes with these hockey sticks attached to these drones above this ice? Is it some kind of drone lacrosse?"

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Post
  • Reply