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.
Everyone knows what WTF stands for. In this nerdy comic for *Nix command line users it standards for Whereis Tsort Find. It shows the help information for each of the commands.
Web development like most development/programming projects have pitfalls that other projects do not have to deal with. People can have an idea of what goes into building a house but since the development/programmer population is small compared to the overall population there is not as much understanding.
Cataclysms, especially caused by asteroid impacts, are among my favorite comic topics. I also enjoy the idea that the only survivors would be cockroaches. This cockroach expresses what it was hoping for rather than an impact.
A comic that lists what your beliefs say about you for the following subjects: luck, Santa, science, magic, stock market, peace, god, and government.
This comic shows the *Nix network commands that simulate what a web browser does when you visit a site.
Sometimes the best way to define something is by describing what it is not. This comic uses that idea to define: darkness, quiet, vacuum, chaos, and politics.
Standing on a soapbox is associated with a speaker elevating their importance, typically for a political speech, by standing on a box. This comic shows what can happen when stepping off of the soapbox.
Another comic on popular motivational posters. This is my take on the saying about grabbing life by the horns before asking what to do then.
In the dark ages of RPGs you were on your own to find your quest objectives. There is nothing wrong with that for the serious gamer but it is a huge obstacle for the casual gamer. So game developers added HUDs (Heads-Up Display), maps, and quest markers to make it easier to find your objectives. In this comic the HUD vanishes.