Little Bo-Peep is a nursery rhyme published over 200 years ago. This comic modernizes it by roughly reproducing it by using *Nix commands.
A nerdy way of asking about yourself using the *nix command “who”
A silly comic replacing the commonly used *nix command “ls” with “god” that is perfect for developers/programmers/IT nerds.
This comic shows the *Nix network commands that simulate what a web browser does when you visit a site.
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.
This is a nerdy take on the saying describing humans returning to their origins, “Ashes to ashes. Dust to dust.” This instead uses the *Nix special device /dev/null.
This comic uses the current popular definition of insanity to define: science, philosophy, math, religion, and politics.
This nerdy comic for developers/programmers is a play on the concept of dotting your "i"s and crossing your "t"s to make sure you are playing sufficient attention to detail to your task.
Web developers/programmers and designers need to work closely together if those duties are handled by different people. As a lead web developer I had ample opportunities of seeing the desktops of my fellow developers and the talented designers and how different their minds worked. This comic showcases the disparity in the laptop desktops. I created it with two little JavaScript-powered web pages, one for each desktop, to add emojis as the icons. I took the photos used as the backgrounds.
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.