But now in the process of cleaning it up, a lot of the insanity has been erased and it's more restrictive. And it attracted a lot of 4chan people, so it had some freaky rule 34 wtf? kind of stuff amongst the art and grafitti. It's a big grafitti space and used to have some pretty wild and crazy stuff. It has a really limited toolset, and it's big attraction was anonymous access to one large common drawing space. And it's probably the most open and anonymous of all the interactive drawing apps.Īfter that, there's Drawball. But one thing that I do like is that what tools it does have aren't restricted to a subset of users. In some ways it's pluses can be seen as iscribbles minuses, or perhaps the other way around. And it allows drawing in a manner similar to, but without some of the additional features. It's a neat web-based Joomla extension type app. So if you're fresh, you more or less have to wait for somebody who has been around longer to save your work or submit it to the gallery. Also new users have to go through a probation type period where the toolset and site features are reduced. Even though they request that users are over 16, you're still not allowed to do much of anything considered risque under their site rules. The downside is that it's a little restrictive. And it also features a chat window, so you can communicate quickly and without using up the drawing space. It's neat because not only does it allow you to share the drawing space at the same time, but it puts a username by each cursor so you can see who is drawing what. The "new" contender I found is, which is a flash based web app. So now I'll write about it but all while doing a comparison to the other ones I know. I ended up finding yet another interactive drawing program. (But I wouldn't be in the market for a car, until the stupid economy straightens out so I could get paid "real" money to work instead of the namby-pamby stingy bullshit paying jobs out there right now.) I guess if I miss a cheap pen, what would it be like if certain auto companies would disappear if I wanted to see what product they had. Sure, sometimes their quality varied, but they were consistent more than not for the cheap price. I thought they were a pretty established brand and a staple item in the writing instrument aisle. So yeah, it's really annoying.Īlso on another tangent, what happened to Bic pens. So as a consumer I'm being left uncertain or even mislead about what quality I'm getting. But Sanford does make a nice Mirado pencil, however when going back for more Mirados, there's yet another company making pencils by that name. The thing I notice is that an Eberhard Faber Ebony pencil is a lot better than a Sanford Ebony pencil. Yeah, you'd think that there wouldn't be that big a deal with some of the cheapest writing instruments around, but if you're a person who draws a lot (like myself) it's noticable. And what product is that? Pencils, of all things. That is, it's too easy for the consumer to be mislead about what they're getting. But I have found one place where it's lax to the point of annoyance. On most things, I think being a little too tight about brand identity is silly.
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