Monday, November 16, 2009
January 30, 1952: Schroeder gamely fights typecasting
We know it's Schroeder because of the musical notation in the first panel, but this is a side of the kid seldom seen.
Labels:
bang,
charliebrown,
guns,
hockey,
onomatopoeia,
pretend,
rifle,
schroeder,
typecasting
Sunday, November 15, 2009
January 29, 1952: Snoopy's Pride
Snoopy doesn’t stoop to begging for treats... unless someone else might get it instead.
What kind of candy is this that it’s equally suitable for kids and dogs?
Saturday, November 14, 2009
January 27, 1952: Blind Man’s Bluff
>
I expect a lot of kids today have never heard of this game, either.
I just like this one, it’s mostly a collage of smaller jokes, like “At least I’ll be near home!” and “What trees?”
I expect a lot of kids today have never heard of this game, either.
I just like this one, it’s mostly a collage of smaller jokes, like “At least I’ll be near home!” and “What trees?”
Friday, November 13, 2009
January 25, 1952: Charlie Brown figures it out
That is an excellent point. Special deals provided by companies tend to be cunningly arranged so that they sound great but only a tiny portion of respondents will ever be able to cash in. Those boxtop deals were fairly common at the time, but only bulk buyers would be able to take advantage of them. Most of them had no use for a tricycle, or whatever else was being offered, either.
Just so you know, I had to restrain myself from making a reference to the movie Punch Drunk Love here.
Thursday, November 12, 2009
January 24, 1952: Hammer-Klavier
German is a funny language when you think about it. I guess it is somewhat less funny when you try to spell something in it.
Schroeder gets annoyed with the other kids fairly often. ‘tis the curse of the misunderstood genius, I guess.
Labels:
anger,
charliebrown,
condescension,
german,
hammerklavier,
music,
patty,
piano,
pride,
schroeder
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
META: (last one I hope) Image fixing done
RSS will be back on in a short while. Have a look around if you like to reassure yourselves the strips are here. Sadly there was no way I could discover for saving the number of post flags (like interesting, funny, weird) and all those counts have reset to zero. At least all your comments have been saved, and no one needs to refollow!
Someone suggested uploading the strips to the blog, but that makes me a bit more nervous from a legal standpoint. Comics.com explicitly makes the strips available via embedding, so I figure I'm safe there. Still, if this happens again I probably will start hosting them locally; they don't seem to have gone after the Comics Curmudgeon.
Someone suggested uploading the strips to the blog, but that makes me a bit more nervous from a legal standpoint. Comics.com explicitly makes the strips available via embedding, so I figure I'm safe there. Still, if this happens again I probably will start hosting them locally; they don't seem to have gone after the Comics Curmudgeon.
Labels:
meta rss imagebreak fix
META: Warning to RSS readers, image fixing about to begin
This is to warn everyone reading via RSS that I'm about to do the image fix. To try to reduce the number of duplicated feed entries, the feed will be off for maybe half an hour or so. If tomorrow night rolls around and you don't get a new comic them Something Went Wrong and you should resubscribe.
In any case, there will be some duplicated feed entries. Unfortunately, I do not know of a way to prevent Blogger from reposting those once the feed is turned back on.
Here we go!
In any case, there will be some duplicated feed entries. Unfortunately, I do not know of a way to prevent Blogger from reposting those once the feed is turned back on.
Here we go!
Labels:
meta warning rss imagebreak
META: More on the Image Break
I have figured out a way to fix all the links in one fell swoop. However, it is fairly drastic mojo. It will likely remove any flags (funny, cool, interesting, etc) that have been set on posts. Trial runs have indicated that it probably will not erase comments, but it might result in some strange feed behavior. I am not doing it immediately, but will probably do it in the next few days.
For those of you interested in what this entails....
A quick Google search didn't turn up many promising avenues. An Ask Metafilter thread from 2005 said it might require hacking the Blogger API to implement changes of this magnitude.
It turns out that it doesn't require going quite that far. It is possible to export all of the posts of a Blogger blog into an XML file, and then import it later either to the same blog or a different one. While it is on the local machine passing it through a quickie Python script easily fixes the links, once I get the old URL format solidly recognized (for the record, Comics.com's new URL system is rather simpler than the old one). It turns out that even comments get exported to the archive file.
The problems arise from the fact that, while I can restore the blog posts to a new blog then change its address to match the old one, not all of the old blog's settings get restored. The kinds of issues this produces ranges from minor (having to reupload the banner) to somewhat harsh (anyone following the blog will have to refollow).
The alternative is to delete all of the posts on the current blog and reimport them from the hacked backup. This should be safe since I have the blog backed up. It will keep all of the settings and followers, but I don't know if it will do something nutty like resend all of the pages as new RSS entries.
Will probably take action on this in a day or two.
For those of you interested in what this entails....
A quick Google search didn't turn up many promising avenues. An Ask Metafilter thread from 2005 said it might require hacking the Blogger API to implement changes of this magnitude.
It turns out that it doesn't require going quite that far. It is possible to export all of the posts of a Blogger blog into an XML file, and then import it later either to the same blog or a different one. While it is on the local machine passing it through a quickie Python script easily fixes the links, once I get the old URL format solidly recognized (for the record, Comics.com's new URL system is rather simpler than the old one). It turns out that even comments get exported to the archive file.
The problems arise from the fact that, while I can restore the blog posts to a new blog then change its address to match the old one, not all of the old blog's settings get restored. The kinds of issues this produces ranges from minor (having to reupload the banner) to somewhat harsh (anyone following the blog will have to refollow).
The alternative is to delete all of the posts on the current blog and reimport them from the hacked backup. This should be safe since I have the blog backed up. It will keep all of the settings and followers, but I don't know if it will do something nutty like resend all of the pages as new RSS entries.
Will probably take action on this in a day or two.
January 23, 1952: Schroeder’s first multiword utterance is in German
Schroeder gets way into his playing in this one. His holding out his arms in the last panel is hilarious.
Also, I laughed out loud when I noticed how Schulz signed this one.
Labels:
charliebrown,
german,
gimmick,
hammerklavier,
meta,
music,
piano,
schroeder,
signature
META: Comics.com's continuing confounding
A comment on the last post notes that the images have stopped working again. And lo, the reason for this seems to be that Comics.com has changed their image hosting, thus breaking all the links of anyone who uses their old embed code.
I could (and for now, will) just use their new embed code, but this poses a problem. What if Comics.com decides to do this again in the future? And what am I going to do about all the posts that I have already made?
I have found that the new code is the same as the old code, just with a different URL. I have figured out how to change the address from old to new with a simple paste. But the site has almost 250 strips already, and each one of those is its own paste. That is basically a whole afternoon down the tubes, with no guarantee that they won't do this again at some later date.
I am looking into solutions. For now, I have fixed the last two posts and the few that are in the queue. I'll see what I can do about the others later....
I could (and for now, will) just use their new embed code, but this poses a problem. What if Comics.com decides to do this again in the future? And what am I going to do about all the posts that I have already made?
I have found that the new code is the same as the old code, just with a different URL. I have figured out how to change the address from old to new with a simple paste. But the site has almost 250 strips already, and each one of those is its own paste. That is basically a whole afternoon down the tubes, with no guarantee that they won't do this again at some later date.
I am looking into solutions. For now, I have fixed the last two posts and the few that are in the queue. I'll see what I can do about the others later....
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