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Still Pumped From Using The Mouse

Still Pumped From Using The Mouse

List Price: $10.95
Your Price: $8.21
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Stereotyping at its best--- intelligent, light, funny!
Review: "Dilbert" lovers will see more of Scott Adams' comic commentary on the lives of technical personnel, the marketing group, management and everyone else in the work culture. As always, Dilbert and his circle of socially-handicapped peers in the technical profession live absurd ways at work and lead boring lives elsewhere. The pun and punch is when the characters seem to do or say something wrong and a problem occurs, and what they resort to in response is usually impractical or otherworldly, almost always hilarious and downright funny. It's a great show-- how Adams half-despises people, half-worships his dog, and half-murders members of the rodentia family. Beyond that, it's all for laughs.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Hillarious Classic Dose of Dilbert
Review: But I don't expect anything more from a book of purely comic strips... and it was a blast back to the past for me, when I used to work for the nation's biggest telco. :-) Must be why I love Dilbert so much!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Entertaining, but short
Review: But I don't expect anything more from a book of purely comic strips... and it was a blast back to the past for me, when I used to work for the nation's biggest telco. :-) Must be why I love Dilbert so much!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: DISAPOINTMENT YET STILL FUNNY
Review: HAVE FUN WITH THIS BOOK IT IS A-OKAY AND I LOVED IT. BUT IT NEEDED MORE DOGBERT AND MORE WOMEN

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I Worked for a Pointy-Haired Boss Once...
Review: I didn't fully appreciate the humor behind Scott Adam's strip until I moved to the Bay Area and got to experience the tech industry first hand. At my previous job it seemed liked I was actually working for the pointy haired boss.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Dilbert, again
Review: More ... fun isn't a word that comes to mind as useful with Dilbert, a mouthless drone in a world of cubicles and petty politics where stupid managers are out-thought by blobby dogs. For the average person, Dilbert is baffling, but for those of us whohave endured the cubicle world, Dilbert is more of a journal than a comedic view. For those still trapped in the cubicle world, it's amost a religious excercise -- or psychological relief. One wonders if Scott Adams' departure from that square-edged world will take the edge off of his mouthless, bent-tied engineer

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best of the Dilbert books.
Review: Right up there with "Clues For The Clueless", "Shave the Whales", and "Bring Me the Head of Willie The Mailboy", this is one of the funniest of Scott Adams's Dilbert books. An excellent blend of the just generally silly (Ratbert gets lost in a hole in the fabric of space) and social commentary (a little girl gets help from Bob the dinosaur punishing adults who are ruining the world by giving them wedgies), there's a chuckle in here for every mood.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Funny as hell!
Review: Still Pumped From using the mouse by: Scott Adams is one of his funnier books. That is all

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Hillarious Classic Dose of Dilbert
Review: This book is a classic compilation of comic strips in the days that were not so focused on business. Dogbert can be seen more than the current strips doing other things besides consulting, and a glimpse of Dilbert's personal life is seen. Alice, Catbert, and Asok were not characters yet, and the boss hadn't been quite fully developed, but getting there. However, the pointy-haired boss is still a main and hillarious character, along with Dilbert's lazy colleague, Wally, and the many annoying co-workers that fill up the office.


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