lproven: (Default)
Just had to dig this out for a mate of mine and thought I'd share it.

One of my favourite webcomics from what were (for me) the early days, around 2000-2002.

Flem Comics: the site that brought you the immortal Hank, The Dancing Abortion.

Specifically, Flem on Mormon-hunting:


(From http://www.flemcomics.com/d/20020108.html)
Read more... )
lproven: (Default)
While I'm linking to old comics, every time I get asked for advice about building a home computer, this Penny Arcade strip springs to mind.



If you didn't see the strip or read the story, Dallas District Attorney Raw Sumrow used office funds to build himself a l33t b0xx0r - twin drives, seven fans, UV lights, kick-ass sound and graphics, the whole schmole - as an "office backup server". Yerse. Which was mysteriously mostly full of his own stuff. Who'da thunk it?

I must admit to sneaking admiration for his chutzpah, at least.

I also find it something of a relief, as per this recent PA strip, that I actually had to do some fairly extensive Googling to have the faintest idea what to tank Kally as a prot-specced Pally meant. There is hope for me yet.

Doubtless [livejournal.com profile] twistedanimator or [livejournal.com profile] pmcmurray could have told me in an instant. And they're meant to be growunups.
lproven: (Default)
A little more on the origins of sodomy...



(A classic from a little while ago, by Randy "Something Positive" Milholland, here.)

Currently, mostly reading Platinum Grit. Fantastic stuff; some of the best art in webcomics. As has been widely observed, there are hints of Jamie Hewlett and Tank Girl and something of Phil "Girl Genius" Foglio in Trudy Cooper's art - especially around male characters' eyes. (She's also [livejournal.com profile] _gertrude_, FWIW.) However, I also reckon there's also a Philip Bond influence disernable and more. PG is fantastic stuff. It doesn't appear often - each episode takes months to years to write and draw and quite a while to read.

It's been running since 1994, so there's a lot of back-story to read. The art is visibly a bit rougher in Episode 1, but it's good even back then. Storylines and action are anarchic, chaotic and rather random, but it's well worth your time.

The major irritation with PG is the format. I enjoy Looking For Group, by the Least I Could Do team of Ryan Sohmer and Lar Desouza, but the full-screen pop-open pages are a bit of an irritation. More vexing still is the site of the gorgeous, hallucinatory dreamworld of Ramón Perez' Kikuburi, but it winds me up that every time I have to pick "current" and then use a tiny « or » control to flip the pages.

But PG is worse. In an effort to both break out of the print-comics page-by-page mould and to use the interactiveness of a website, it's in Macromedia animated movie format. The images are still, soundless, black and white, none of which is any problem whatsoever; but the reader must use keyboard or screen controls to flip though every frame or group of frames. Occasionally, it's really visually effective, but mostly, it's a pain in the ass. Each episode can be hundreds of frames long and you can't mark your place. Worse still, the bulk of it is in the fairly obscure Shockwave format, not Flash, so unless you are on Windows or PowerPC Mac, you're probably stuffed. Linux and (I believe) Macintel boxes don't have a native Shockwave player. You can't download it or anything. Confounded compounded nuisance.

But it's still well worth reading.
lproven: (Default)
Early signs suggest forthcoming Watchmen movie may actually be half-decent. Remarkable.

(I'm still bracing myself for disappointment, mind.)
lproven: (Default)
For some reason, Nettavisen is rerunning some really early Nemi strips at the moment. Today's is one I've not seen before - original Norwegian Nemi with English dialogue!

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Liam Proven

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