George William Wakefield

George William Wakefield (13 November 1887, Hoxton-12 May 1942, Norwich Hospital) was a British comics artist and illustrator. He is best remembered for his Laurel and Hardy comics published by Amalgamated Press' Film Fun from 1930 to his death.

Bibliography

  • Gifford, Denis (1976). "Wakefield, George William". In Horn, Maurice (ed.). The World Encyclopedia of Comics. New York: Chelsea House. pp. 689–690. ISBN 0877540306.
  • George William Wakefield on Lambiek.
gollark: I mean, they might be reading your crypto secrets out of RAM, and... do you just assume that *some* of them won't be evil and just rerun the computation if the result don't match, or something?
gollark: If you don't trust your compute nodes, you basically can't do anything.
gollark: > The Internet Computer is a decentralized cloud computing platform that will host secure software and a new breed of open internet services. It uses a strong cryptographic consensus protocol to safely replicate computations over a peer-to-peer network of (potentially untrusted) compute nodes, possibly overlayed with many virtual subnetworks (sometimes called shards). Wasm’s advantageous properties made it an obvious choice for representing programs running on this platform. We also liked the idea of not limiting developers to just one dedicated platform language, but making it potentially open to “all of ’em.”How is *that* meant to work?
gollark: ... "internet computer"? Oh bees.
gollark: https://git.osmarks.tk/mirrors/rpncalc-v4
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.