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Examples of computer humour include: "Any key", taken to mean pressing the (non-existent) "Any" key rather than any key; April Fools' Day Request for Comments; Bastard Operator From Hell, a fictional rogue computer operator; Blinkenlights, a neologism for diagnostic lights; Bogosort, a portmanteau of the words bogus and sort
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources. Internet An Opte Project visualization of routing paths through a portion of the Internet General Access Activism Censorship Data activism Democracy Digital divide Digital rights Freedom Freedom of information Internet phenomena Net ...
User Friendly is set inside a fictional ISP, Columbia Internet. [2] According to reviewer Eric Burns, the strip is set in a world where "[u]sers were dumbasses who asked about cupholders that slid out of their computers, marketing executives were perverse and stupid and deserved humiliation, bosses were clueless and often naively cruel, and I.T. workers were somewhat shortsighted and misguided ...
The ‘Slightly Twisted’ page has been a mainstay of Facebook for a very long while. Originally created in late October 2016, over the years, the page has grown by leaps and bounds.
Webcomic artists use many formats throughout the world. Comic strips , generally consisting of three or four panels , have been a common format for many artists. Other webcomic artists use the format of traditional printed comic books and graphic novels , sometimes with the plan of later publishing books.
Webcomic sources: A page maintained by this project that provides a list of reliable and unreliable sources in the field of webcomics. If you would like to start a discussion on whether a particular source is reliable, either add it to this page or the project's talk page. Wikipedia:Webcomics are no good as sources, an essay.
A scene from the webtoon Tower of God, a third-generation webtoon An example of a modern Korean webtoon viewed through a webtoon viewing interface (Amazing Rumor by Jang Yi in Daum Webtoon) With the advent of the smartphone and tablet, webtoons have also migrated to new platforms such as apps.
xkcd, sometimes styled XKCD, [‡ 2] is a serial webcomic created in 2005 by American author Randall Munroe. [1] The comic's tagline describes it as "a webcomic of romance, sarcasm, math, and language". [‡ 3] [2] Munroe states on the comic's website that the name of the comic is not an initialism but "just a word with no phonetic pronunciation".