I read comics on Apple’s Vision Pro . . . It was fine

I read comics on Apple’s Vision Pro . . . It was fine

9 months ago
Anonymous $6hYC3Wwiad

https://techcrunch.com/2024/02/15/i-read-comics-on-apples-vision-pro-it-was-fine/

Few joys in this cold world can match cracking open a new comic on a lazy Sunday morning. Nothing to do, nowhere to be — just you, a mug of coffee and some sequential art. Not much has fundamentally changed about the American comic book since publishers began collecting newspaper strips as bound volumes in the early 20th century.

Sure, the content has changed radically, but at the end of the day, the basics are still there: characters and text captured in panels designed to be read in sequence. In recent decades, however, the variety of delivery methods has expanded. While the earliest webcomics date back to the CompuServe days, the rise of the digital comic book is more directly linked to the proliferation of smartphones and tablets over the past 15 years.

I read comics on Apple’s Vision Pro . . . It was fine

Thu Feb 15, 10:24pm UTC
https://techcrunch.com/2024/02/15/i-read-comics-on-apples-vision-pro-it-was-fine/ > Few joys in this cold world can match cracking open a new comic on a lazy Sunday morning. Nothing to do, nowhere to be — just you, a mug of coffee and some sequential art. Not much has fundamentally changed about the American comic book since publishers began collecting newspaper strips as bound volumes in the early 20th century. > Sure, the content has changed radically, but at the end of the day, the basics are still there: characters and text captured in panels designed to be read in sequence. In recent decades, however, the variety of delivery methods has expanded. While the earliest webcomics date back to the CompuServe days, the rise of the digital comic book is more directly linked to the proliferation of smartphones and tablets over the past 15 years.