Randall munroe who is megan




















Life is real. And when you get married, your spouse has already loved other people, and is probably still fond of most of them. I believe that comic is what we hu-mons call a joke.

Oh that. It would be amusing, though, to contribute our most creepy XKCDs. So he'd like to do more comics about gender issues, for instance, but he has trouble making them funny instead of just saying what he thinks. I had been looking at the reddit questions and wondering whether they would ask some of these more awkward and uncomfortable questions if they earned a place in the top ten. Sure seemed like it!

Randall said that he originally chose the name Megan for the female stick figure just because it was a name, not after anyone; he just needed a name sometimes to make the joke work. And the comics that, to us, seem to reflect his current love life are really reflective of his love life from two years ago, now that he's had enough time to move past it and find it funny.

And of course, they're not just based on his own experiences but things he's heard or thoughts he's had. He tries to keep from inserting too much of himself and his friends into the comics because then his friends start getting e-mails about things that happened in the comics since people read into them.

He just tells them he works in computers. Random comment placed here because I forget where it goes: he said that people assume he's an expert on everything he writes comics about when, in fact, he just reads the first paragraphs of Wikipedia entries.

Like, the above-the-line paragraph before it goes into any useful detail. But he told us the story of someone he calls Fistsize Ball of Energy Girl, who sent him a tale of experiencing a fistsize ball of energy that ended with, "You know science. Please expain it to me. But what he was most fascinated by was She didn't even see it; she just felt it. In any case, that girl holds a special place in his heart. Munroe: You have a ball pit and we are all jealous. These colorful spheres are made of plastic, which - while fantastic throw people into - seems to be pretty good at collecting all sorts of dirt and such by way of static electricity.

How do you keep your balls clean? He explained about the ball pit and how it basically functioned like a couch. You could play Mario Kart while in the ball pit, for instance. As for keeping it clean, he discouraged participants from engaging in heavy petting while in the ball pit. In the front row was Donald Knuth. I was more impressed that he got a very nice e-mail from Apparently he is secretly a really nice guy, shhh. He had pretty much already addressed this earlier, so he expounded and reiterated that the more personal comics are generally on a two-year lag.

All right all right all right. It was time Alexis read the question while Randall scribbled notes and did mad calculations. Oh, shit, at one point earlier he did hold up his notebook to show his doodles and such, but I didn't get a picture. Alexis couldn't pronounce some of the Romanian towns. I couldn't believe he was actually reading the whole thing. It was hilarious. But Randall was ready! He could do this! But seriously, you guys. He went into a very long and involved response to the question, evaluating the different choices.

It was great. When he got to the section about where to stay, he said that he wouldn't sleep on the beach or a random hostel. Instead, though, since the questioner seemed to be an Internet-savvy geek, he would make sure his plight got out to the larger geek community so that they could— "I see what you did there," he commented, amused, and continued.

Now I honestly wonder whether the scary Romanian question has some basis in reality. He even addressed the bonus question, attempting to generalize the problem and identify its complexity.

The whole thing was epic. But there was still one more question. Randall went back to his table to do more signing. Lauren was glad not to have to hold her phone up anymore. I felt it. It was pretty warm. I had thought she was part of the earlier trio, but it seemed she was actually on her own, and she continued to talk to me as if I were some sort of interesting person to talk to or something.

I asked if she was in the city, and she was. I was in Oakland. She had not been to Oakland but a few times. Wait, how long had she been here? Only a few months. I'd been here three years. She'd been here three months. Well, she should come over to Oakland. She lived not too far from the Mission; I should come over to the Mission. I do, frequently! Dan appeared, and I introduced him, but he was only there to say goodbye, loser.

Lauren needed some water, and I could use some too. We got some water by the bar and talked more about Comic-Con and how exhausting it was. She told me about New York Comic-Con. I didn't know where to look when talking. Was I supposed to look her in the eye the whole time? Isn't eye contact supposed to be good? I seemed to be unable to make eye contact, instead shifting my focus every which way. I feared that if I made eye contact, she would smile, and then I would smile, and then she would smile, and I would smile, and we would be caught in an Infinite Smile Loop.

That doesn't sound so bad now that I think about it. Bestselling author and cartoonist Randall Munroe explains how to predict the weather by analyzing the pixels of your Facebook photos. A fresh book full of wit, charm and imagination, this book is timelessly simple. Fourteen situations are photographed on full-page-sized flaps. Lift the flap, and each is resolved in a frequently hysterical, and always satisfying way.

When xkcd creator Randall Munroe first posted a new installment of his webcomic titled "Time" on March 25, it looked deceptively simple: a picture of two black and white stick figures, a man and a woman, sitting wordlessly on the ground.

For any task you might want to do, there's a right way, a wrong way, and a way so monumentally complex, excessive, and inadvisable that no one would ever try it. Python is a programming language designed specifically to make it easy to write clear, readable programs. Dynamic typing and significant whitespace are two controversial features of Python, which make some people—like Cueball's friend—hesitant to use the language.

What is the longest possible sunset you can experience while driving, assuming we are obeying the speed limit and driving on paved roads?

It's not actually an acronym. It's just a word with no phonetic pronunciation — a treasured and carefully-guarded point in the space of four-character strings. According to the xkcd FAQ, the name "xkcd" doesn't stand for anything. It was published by G.



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