Saturday, May 30, 2009

Friday, May 29, 2009

Grimm GPS 11


More geek-speak: The FAA generally doesn't allow UAVs to fly inside US airspace. But that's quibbling with a story line were an abusive sentient GPS device is having a (rapidly deteriorating) romantic reltionship with a talking dog. Cartoons are great!

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Grimm GPS 10



In case you didn't know, Google Earth isn't even remotely live. Most imagery is several years old and purchased at deep discount from one of a pair of commercial satellite companies (GeoEye or DigitalGlobe). Most of the imagery in urban areas in the US is acquired with cameras/sensors on airplanes, but it's still old stuff. But that's geek-speak. In the popular culture, Google Earth is a high-resoloution live-imaging satellite owned by Google. In fact much of the press surrounding GeoEye's last satellite launch didn't even mention GeoEye, but instead reported the satellite and launch was owned/funded wholly by Google. Of course it was the first time NASA allowed any logo besides their own (and the US flag) appear on a rocket.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Grimm GPS 09



Right, so we're back to not funny and kinda scary and basically pointless. We get it, the GPS unit is insane. But how is that funny? The "sentient GPS unit" part of the gag is done and over. Several installments in the story arc have already established the GPS unit is crazy. This didn't add anything.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Monday, May 25, 2009

Grimm GPS 07


Despite the fact that this Ralph-GPS relationship went down an abusive, non-funny road last week, this week Ralph continues with her and apparently still likes her. At least this gets back into the romotely funny range. Or at least humorously disgusting.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Grimm GPS 05


OK, so Glenda the GPS has suddenly turned somewhat abusive or at least domineering in the relationship. Time to end the relationship. Whatever the case, this installment isn't even funny.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Grimm GPS 01


We had an example from Mike Peters' strip Mother Goose and Grimm a few weeks ago (during penguin week). Recently Mr. Peters went overboard and had a 2-week story arc featuring Grimm's friend Ralph the boxer and his puppy love for Mother Goose's new GPS unit. Let's settle in and have a looksee:


Friday, May 15, 2009

Super Grocery


Might as well fill out the week with one last Evil Inc. by Brad J. Guigar. This time it's the map in the last panel that gets this comic posted here. What's a super villian without a map on which to scheme?

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Super BeeGees


Same Evil Inc. comic. This is sort of a running gag for this stip: The tech support operator for the Evil, Inc. company, supplying super villians with all their super villiany needs. Let's look in on this conversation which may have been drawn for training purposes:

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Super Lost



Same story arc, same webcomic. Kind of an old joke. There are a LOT of comics out there related to asking for directions. I posted some already. Here's at least one more from Hagen Cartoons in Australia


Monday, May 11, 2009

Friday, May 8, 2009

Mapquest Lagoon



This isn't the first time Sherman and Hawthorne the crab have headed north. They did it before in the summer of 2007 when Hawthorne found an alaskan king she-crab on the internet and fell in love. They went to visit her, but when he found out that she was massively huge he beat a hasty retreat. What I don't understand is how the north pole is only 11,473 miles away, but the Bering Strait is 14,326 miles away. What sort of tropical lagoon could possibly match those directions? But a bigger problem is that 11,473 miles south of the North Pole is... Antarctica. The only clear, straight-shot oceanic path from the south to the North Pole goes through the Bering Strait. So, a ring skirting around the southern continent that would place Sherman's Lagoon somewhere in the Ross Sea, a the edge of the Ross Ice Shelf (or what's left of it). No wonder Thornton the polar bear (perpetually "hibernating" in Sherman's Lagoon) feels so at home there. But THAT's not even the biggest problem...

Nowhere is 14,326 miles due south of the Bering Strait. The maximum South to North distance, from the South Pole to the North Pole, is 12,430 miles. After that one would be traveling south again.
So those Mapquest directions don't work at all, much less for trying to triangulate the actual location of Sherman's Lagoon.

.... also, there is no "I-70 North".  US interstates are given even numbers when they run North-South and even numbers when they run East-West. I-70 runs East-West, so there isn't an "I-70 North"... well at least not in the US.  There is one in Columbia, but it's an entirely land-locked road.   And the I-70 in the US has one terminus in the middle of nowhere in Utah, and the other end in Baltimore, MD, which I suppose counts as a coastal town with a lagoon.... but it's not tropical and doesn't sport the palm trees that are often depicted.  

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Flat Lagoon



This is the Sherman's Lagoon take on the Climate Change debate. It connects to the flat earth temes explored in some earlier posts. And in this one by Steve Sack:

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Adapting Lagoon


As the story continues Sherman looks in on his perpetually vacationing polar bear buddy, Thornton, who hasn't seen the North Pole in forever:

So this would be a good place for a global warming cartoon that involves maps. Let's see... How about this:

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Google Lagoon







So the real reason I'm doing two-fers this week is that there was a recent series of map references in a story arc in "Sherman's Lagoon" by Jim Toomey. The title character Sherman the shark occasionally goes on world-tour adventures with various buddies. This time they head to the North Pole to check out Global Warming for themselves. Let's ahve a look, shall we:

This of course isn't the first time the Sherman's Lagoon crew has Google-Earth'd themselves:

Monday, May 4, 2009

Alice as Atlas






I think I'm going to do two-fers this week. First is a toon from the excellent strip "Cul-de-Sac" by Richard Thompson.


And that can reference any number of other "Atlas"- themed cartoons. Try this one by Leo Cullum from the Feb 9, 2009 issue of the New Yorker. And it, in turn, is, possibly, a play on Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged" book (this would be Atlas Slips), which is a book I should probably read but which I'm wary of reading because of some unpleasant experiences I've had with people who have read it and who evangelically recommend it:

Friday, May 1, 2009

Hedge Fund Navigation

Appropriate for the times, 'tis a criticism of the disaster that is the hedge funds market. Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller is always good for this sort of thing. I still like how ubiquitous navigation systems have become in the pop culture.