A collection of over 150 cartoons from ComputorEdge Magazine by Jim Whiting and Jack Dunning about the trials and tribulations of using computers and the Internet. Cartoons include Death getting his identity stolen, nagging PDF files, the biker gang's Web designer, eBay for dogs, Apple iPokes, user-unfriendly software, and many more silly technological situations. This book A collection of over 150 cartoons from ComputorEdge Magazine by Jim Whiting and Jack Dunning about the trials and tribulations of using computers and the Internet. Cartoons include Death getting his identity stolen, nagging PDF files, the biker gang's Web designer, eBay for dogs, Apple iPokes, user-unfriendly software, and many more silly technological situations. This book represents over three years of brain straining and pencil breaking in order to grind out one cartoon per week. By now, some of them may seem dated, but at this point so do we. (Interestingly, things have not changed that much after all.) Looking back at the cartoons in this book, it is noted that some of them are really stupid while a couple are quite clever. We'll leave it to the reader to figure out which is which. If one of these frames makes you smile (or even groan), then we have done our job. As of this digital printing we continue to pump out one cartoon a week at ComputorEdge Online.
That Does Not Compute!: Computer and Internet Cartoons from ComputorEdge
A collection of over 150 cartoons from ComputorEdge Magazine by Jim Whiting and Jack Dunning about the trials and tribulations of using computers and the Internet. Cartoons include Death getting his identity stolen, nagging PDF files, the biker gang's Web designer, eBay for dogs, Apple iPokes, user-unfriendly software, and many more silly technological situations. This book A collection of over 150 cartoons from ComputorEdge Magazine by Jim Whiting and Jack Dunning about the trials and tribulations of using computers and the Internet. Cartoons include Death getting his identity stolen, nagging PDF files, the biker gang's Web designer, eBay for dogs, Apple iPokes, user-unfriendly software, and many more silly technological situations. This book represents over three years of brain straining and pencil breaking in order to grind out one cartoon per week. By now, some of them may seem dated, but at this point so do we. (Interestingly, things have not changed that much after all.) Looking back at the cartoons in this book, it is noted that some of them are really stupid while a couple are quite clever. We'll leave it to the reader to figure out which is which. If one of these frames makes you smile (or even groan), then we have done our job. As of this digital printing we continue to pump out one cartoon a week at ComputorEdge Online.
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Serena –
I have to wonder what the author/editor was thinking when the last third of a book is comprised of the index of the cartoons just seen and biographies of the creators along with their contact information in case the reader wishes to employ them as freelancers in the capacity of their current jobs. Too few cartoons to make this book more than merely an okay read for me.
Katie –
Quick, humorous read
Helder Martins –
Scott McCloud –
Luna Maris –
James E. Harper Jr. –
Glenn Campbell –
Ed –
Tim Kretschmann –
Luc Schots –
Edward Gray –
Lone Gunmen –
Gail –
Thorsten Lockert –
Daniel –
Rolana –
Francesco –
Adam Taylor –
Elaine –
Gene Sorrell –
Bob –
Alishea –
Kristian Yasko –
Alex Hübner –
James E Dixon –
Michael –
Roy Hudson –
Stella Asanova –
Sean P Green –
Tom Sands –