Update: I've added some comments from Scott Adams that came in by email after this posted. How does a comic strip upgrade to Web 2.0? The answer may well be the direction that Dilbert creator Scott ...
Scott Adams is asking paying members of his subscription channel on locals.com to help him rename his cartoon strip Dilbert, now that it will be moving to a subscription only paywalled publisher.
An interview with Dilbert creator Scott Adams, whose Dilbert 2.0: 20 Years of Dilbert, will be published by Andrews McMeel. PW: Where did Dilbert (and, for that matter, Dogbert) come from? Did he/they ...
•The first “Dilbert” comic strip appeared April 16, 1989, in only about three dozen newspapers. •“Dilbert” was rejected by every major syndicate before being accepted by United Media. •In 1993, Scott ...
April 9, 2009 If you're a modern office worker, the chances are you'll know Dilbert, the most photocopied, pinned-up, downloaded, faxed and e-mailed comic strip in the world. Many Dilbert readers, ...
Scott Adams, the wry genius who, for 20 years has delivered daily doses of workplace farce via his “Dilbert” comic strip, is struggling with a case of writer’s block. And quite frankly, he’s ticked ...
Two anthologies of Doonesbury and Dilbert comic strips will be available in digital format for the first time as a Kindle Fire exclusive, Amazon announced today. This is the result of a deal between ...
NEW YORK — The comic strip “Dilbert” disappeared with lightning speed following racist remarks by creator Scott Adams, but it shouldn't come as a shock to anyone who has followed them both. Adams, who ...
Today Amazon has announced that two anthologies of the Doonesbury and Dilbert comic strips are available exclusively on Kindle Fire. These comic collections are available in full color and displayed ...
Dilbert discovers that the office is inhabited by a race of former employees who have been "downsized" (literally shrunken down to size after they've been laid off) after finding all of his belongings ...
NEW YORK — The comic strip “Dilbert” disappeared with lightning speed following racist remarks by creator Scott Adams, but it shouldn’t come as a shock to anyone who has followed them both. Adams, who ...
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