The Crumb version of the drawing has better anatomy. In particular, the chest is in roughly the right place.
In the Catwoman cover, her chest, shoulders and arms are drawn as if she were leaning backwards, while the rest of her is drawn as if she were leaning forwards. She also seems to have an extra joint in her hips.
I still buy music, though it is usually in the form of DRM-free MP3s from Amazon instead of actual CDs. It's important to me that the creators get paid.
I do still buy a few CDs a year, but almost as a physical souvenir of the albums I really liked, rather than as the primary listening format.
The reason HyperCard didn't set the world on fire was simple: it didn't scale up very well. If you tried to build something ambitious with it, it just got slower and slower.
Now I think their case has merit.
If this kind of thing has been going on for years as alleged in the comments, shame on the school district.
It's neat looking, too bad the name is so crass.
In the Catwoman cover, her chest, shoulders and arms are drawn as if she were leaning backwards, while the rest of her is drawn as if she were leaning forwards. She also seems to have an extra joint in her hips.
I do still buy a few CDs a year, but almost as a physical souvenir of the albums I really liked, rather than as the primary listening format.
It does have lots of calories, though. That's why I don't keep OJ around most of the time.