Thomas Jefferson is without a doubt an important man in American history. He was only a young man but was chosen to draft the Declaration of Independence. That document outlined the reason when the Thirteen Colonies deserved to be independent from the tyrannical British Empire. This comic shows the eloquent approach of Jefferson and how he might have handled it today.
Whether you are a morning person or not coffee is a wildly popular drink. This comic shows a red-eyed Sun with a hot cup of coffee. The caption says, “If this is only my first cup proceed with caution.”
A comic asking why some of the important irrational math constants are irrational, which means they have an infinite number of non-repeating digits. Includes pi, Euler's constant, square root of 2, and the Fibonacci number sequence.
This comic lists some important temperatures, including water ice, liquid oxygen, nitrogen, and helium, and the coldest: Democrat and Republican relations.
Many spiders recreate their webs every morning so those webs are always construction zones (kind of like U.S. roads). This comic shows a spider displaying a construction zone sign.
Kids love asking lots of questions, especially if they think they are being annoying. This comic shows what would happen if you actually answered them.
This comic shows the *Nix network commands that simulate what a web browser does when you visit a site.
Cockroaches surviving a nuclear holocaust: comic manna. This comic shows a sentient cockroach explains his single lament. It is a rework of a comic originally created in 2013.
“Hello World” is one of the most common programs, typically being the introductory program to a new language. This comic uses CSS and a little JavaScript to make one of the ugliest “Hello World” examples.
This comic shows a silly and convoluted JavaScript algorithm to use bit shift operators to spell “NO SHIFT”. Nerdy developers/programmers might enjoy it.