Back to today

Dilbert cartoon first published on Wednesday 30th March 1994

Dilbert//1810, first published 32 years ago on Wednesday 30th March 1994


Tags

use tail operate mouse engineers no tail rocky new programmer


Open source transcript

ZIMBU, YOU'RE NOT SUPPOSED TO USE YOUR TAIL TO OPERATE THE MOUSE.

IF TAILS WERE A NATURAL ADVANTAGE FOR ENGINEERS THEN EVOLUTION WOULD PROVIDE US ALL WITH TAILS!

DILBERT, I DON'T BELIEVE YOU'VE MET ROCKY , OUR NEW C PROGRAMMER

collated from github.com/jvarn/dilbert-archive


AI Analysis

Comic Strip Title: "Tails of Evolution"

Summary:

The comic strip features Dilbert, a bespectacled engineer, engaged in a conversation with Zimbu, a monkey-like creature, about the potential benefits of tails for engineers. Dilbert proposes that if tails were a natural advantage for engineers, evolution would have provided them with tails. Zimbu agrees and suggests that Dilbert meet Rocky, their new C programmer, who has a tail.

The comic strip is a humorous commentary on the idea that evolution would have provided engineers with tails if they were beneficial. It pokes fun at the notion that humans lack tails, despite being the dominant species, and highlights the absurdity of the situation. The strip also showcases Dilbert's quirky personality and his tendency to think outside the box. Overall, the comic strip is a lighthearted and entertaining take on the concept of evolution and the human body.

generated by llama-3.2-11b-vision-instruct


Accompanying textual content, such as title, tags and transcripts, is shown here if we have it. Not every comic has all of these, and they seem to be a bit hit and miss even on the official website.

Jokes and Humour
Get your Dilbert fix on paper
  • Dilbert: Shave The Whales by Scott Adams

  • Random Acts of Catness (Dilbert Book) by Scott Adams

    • The Dilbert Future: Thriving on Business Stupidity in the 21st Century: Thriving on Stupidity in the 21st Century by Scott Adams

    • The Office Is a Beautiful Place When Everyone Else Works from Home (Volume 49) (Dilbert) by Scott Adams

Search the Dilbert Archives