All right, but apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, the fresh-water system, and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?!
I used to make comics. I know that because strangers would look at my work and immediately share their most excruciatingly banal experiences with me:
— that time a motorised wheelchair cut in front of them in the line at the supermarket;
— when the dentist pulled the wrong tooth and they tried to get a discount;
— eating off an apple and finding half a worm in it;
every anecdote rounded of with a triumphant “You should make a comic about that!”
Then I would take my 300 pages graphic novel out of their hands, both of us knowing full well they weren’t going to buy it, and I’d smile politely, “Yeah, sure. Someday.”
“Don’t try to cheat me out of my royalties when you publish it,” they would guffaw and walk away to grant comics creator status onto their next victim.
Nowadays I make work that feels even more truly like comics to me than that almost twenty years old graphic novel. Collage-y, abstract stuff that breaks all the rules just begging to be broken. Linear narrative is ashes settling in my trails, montage stretched thin and warping in new, interesting directions.
I teach comics techniques at a university level based in my current work. I even make an infrequent podcast talking to other avantgarde artists about their work in the same field.
Still, sometimes at night my subconscious whispers the truth in my ear: Nobody ever insists I turn their inane bullshit nonevents into comics these days, and while I am a happier, more balanced person as a result of that, I guess that means I don’t make comics any longer after all.
All right, but apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, the fresh-water system, and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?!
Email alternatives I’ve been recommended but not personally tried — please comment if they’re also gone to the dark side somehow:
Welp, I still don’t see what’s condescending about my comment — I guess I should have put a big ol’ winky emoji at the end to signal my intended tone. As should be clear I was triggered by your escalating response to that 🤷
TBH, I’m still fairly sure you’re just playing an idiot game of oneupmanship here, but for what it’s worth I didn’t mean to talk down to you.
What I do see is you’re beating a dead horse to get one over here or get the final word. I’m not trying to “gaslight” you?
Let it go, pal. This “seeing other people’s perspectives” thing clearly isn’t for you.
Dude, condescend much?
Don’t automatically assume whataboutism on my part when
I’m sharing my personal perspective as a former creative freelancer, and
the literally first two words of my reply was “I understand”.
I understand your big picture perspective, but I’m going to guess you never tried to make a living as an illustrator?
Didn’t mean to upstage you 🙂
Might be, but any use of generative “AI” shows such poor judgement that the image alone makes his text look dubious by association.
For low end dum-dums like me, https://sabre.io/baikal/ is a simpler, but very stable caldav solution. I bet Radicale has more features, but did I mention being low end? 🙂
For a second there I thought you’d genuinely connected all your devices to a service you didn’t know the first thing about 😄
TIL Taildrop is a new(ish?) Tailscale feature that adds airdrop-alike transfer to your tailnet.
Ditto. LOS for MicroG to be exact.
Sounds low effort! The real way of turning your laptop into a typewriter, of course, is to install Linux without a desktop environment and run an editor from command line /s
At least the author of the article could be arsed flashing a custom ROM 😉
Yeah, the honest title would be “I evicted Google and I can just use my phone like I want now”.
I mean, it’s on HowToGeek, so I’ll generously think of it as onboarding another few people to custom ROMs…
I know, right? I guess they mean “free of distracting bloat”.
Lol! I (and, apparently, Molly White) thank you for your services 🙂
Yep, I’ve found my “AI” equivalent to Molly White’s Web3 is going just great site.
Imagine then doing this in a chatGPT prompt! Everything will go so much faster, even if you don’t press “send”!
I mean, we’re almost at that point 🙄
I’ve tried LocalSend for this, but I usually end up using more reliable ways like Syncthing (not instantly transfered, but at a decent speed) or sending myself the file on Element for Matrix (as good as instantaneous).