I’ve had a bit too much Batman on the brain to think up anything significant, so here’s a hasty doodle of Bats to tide you over till my next stroke of funny:
He must be confused why the question mark is backwards. The lazy cartoonist strikes again!
You may have noticed something a little different about my last few updates. I recently decided to make the change to a Creative Commons license. I figure my comics are already running about the internet like feral children, and it hasn’t bothered me really. So why fight it? Shareing is supposed to be a good thing anyway. So long as I still get the credit, I’m happy. Be free, my little creations, go forth and pollute the internet with your punage! Given how much of my work is parody, it seems only fare I use a more open license. Where would I be if not for the creative people who came before?
Probably just making fart jokes.
It’ll take me a while to change all the old comics and such to feature the new watermark. But I figure, eh, what’s the rush?
The main page has been updated too, I thought a page that shows off several new projects at once seemed much more welcoming. Next, I fix the navigation buttons so they have more convenient placement.
I’ve also been laying ground work for the web store I keep pretending I’ll make. My recent dental dilemma has lit a fire under my ass to start making more money off my crap. T-shirts are being designed and a printing order will be placed very soon.



The Library of Congress is currently using a similar approach on Flickr by evaluating user comments ( see this image for example ). Several blogs like http://www.shorpy.com (which also uses Library of Congress material) feature dozens of user comments, which could be used to update metadata catalogues as well. Changing the Commons UI and allowing people to comment beneath content (like anywhere else on the internet) might be the most obvious thing to do; yet this kind of fundamental change is likely to be very time consuming.