Good riddance, don't let the doorknob hit you on the way out, etc.

I remember when Dilbert was funny-ish, circa 1993. Then gradually stopped being funny, circa 1995-97. Then turned actively un-funny and offensive by about 2000. This is LONG overdue.

(Seriously, working from home is definitely not for everyone: you can gradually lose your grip on consensus reality and be captured by some really weird and unfortunate echo chambers. Scott Adams is a perfect example: it wasn't inevitable that he'd end up here, but the seeds were planted in fertile soil early on.)

@cstross

The sad thing is, his strips were occasionally still amusing. And more creative than Peanuts, (still in the Washington Post!) and the daily Doonesbury (also in the WaPo.)

@wiredog @cstross "Scott Adams has fewer new ideas than Charles Schulz" is low-key funny af.