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List of Dilbert characters


This is a list of characters that have appeared in Scott Adams' Dilbert comic strip.

Primary characters Edit

Dilbert Edit

The main character in the strip, Dilbert is a stereotypical technically-minded single male. Prior to October 2014, he was usually wearing a white dress shirt, black trousers and a red-and-black striped tie that inexplicably curves upward; since then, he has worn a red polo shirt with a name badge on a lanyard around his neck. Dilbert received his master's degree in electrical engineering from MIT; he understands engineering well and has good ideas, but has a poor social life. Neither attractive nor blessed with tremendous social graces, Dilbert is capable, but ignored at work and struggles with his romantic life. While he is frequently seen having dates with eligible women, his dates almost invariably end in disaster, usually in surreal and bizarre ways. Dilbert loves computers and technology and will spend much of his free time playing with such things. He had a girlfriend named Liz for a little over two years, but she started dating other men, stating that she would still date Dilbert, but date other men at the same time.

Pointy-haired Boss Edit

The oblivious manager of Dilbert and the other engineers,[1] and sometimes the main antagonist of the strip; his real name is never mentioned. Scott Adams states that he never named him so that people can imagine him to be their boss. First mentioned on 20 April 1989,[2] he was depicted as a stereotypical late-middle-aged balding middle manager with jowls;[3] it was not until 21 October 1991[4] that he developed his signature "pointy hair" and the jowls disappeared. He is hopelessly incompetent at management, and often tries to compensate for his lack of skills with countless group therapy sessions and business strategies that usually never bear fruit. He does not understand technical issues but always tries to disguise this, usually by using buzzwords he also does not understand. The Boss treats his employees alternately with enthusiasm or neglect; he often uses them to his own ends regardless of the consequences to them. Adams himself wrote that "He's not sadistic, just uncaring". His level of intelligence varies from near-vegetative to perceptive and clever, depending on the strip's comic needs. His utter lack of consistent business ethics, however, is perfectly consistent. His brother is a demon named "Phil, the Prince of Insufficient Light", and according to Adams, the pointy hair is intended to remind one of devil's horns.

Wally Edit

One of the oldest engineers, Wally was originally a worker trying to get fired to obtain a large severance package. He hates work and avoids it whenever he can. He often carries a cup of coffee, calmly sipping from it even in the midst of chaos or office-shaking revelations. Wally is extremely cynical. He is even more socially inept than Dilbert (though far less self-aware of the fact), and references to his lack of personal hygiene are not uncommon. Like the Pointy-Haired Boss, Wally is utterly lacking in ethics and will take advantage of any situation to maximize his personal gain while doing the least possible amount of honest work. Squat and balding, Wally is almost invariably portrayed wearing a short sleeved dress shirt and tie. Adams has stated that Wally was based on a Pacific Bell coworker of his who was interested in a generous employee buy-out program—for the company's worst employees. This had the effect of causing this man—whom Adams describes as "one of the more brilliant people I've met"—to work hard at being incompetent, rude, and generally poor at his job to qualify for the buy-out program. Adams has said that this inspired the basic laziness and amorality of Wally's character. Despite these personality traits, Wally is accepted as part of Dilbert, Ted, Alice, and Asok's clique. Although his relationship with Alice is often antagonistic and Dilbert occasionally denies being his friend, their actions show at least a certain acceptance of him. He has openly admitted that all his good ideas are about coffee, that sometimes include sabotaging rival companies coffee so they only have decaf.

Alice Edit

One of the more competent engineers. She is often frustrated at her work because she does not get proper recognition. She believes it is because she is female, though in reality it is likely because she has a quick, often violent temper, sometimes putting her lethal "Fist of Death" to use, even with the Pointy-Haired Boss.

Dogbert Edit

Dilbert's anthropomorphic pet dog is the smartest dog on Earth. Dogbert is a megalomaniac intellectual dog, planning to one day conquer the world. He once succeeded, but became bored with the ensuing peace, and quit. Often seen in high-ranking consultant or technical support jobs, he constantly abuses his power and fools the management of Dilbert's company, though considering the intelligence of the company's management in general and Dilbert's boss in particular, this is not very hard to do. He also enjoys pulling scams on unsuspecting, and usually dull customers to steal their money. However, despite Dogbert's cynical exterior, he has been known to pull his master out of some tight jams. Dogbert's nature as a pet was more emphasized during the earlier years of the strip; as the strip progressed, references to his acting like a dog became less common, although he still wags his tail when he perpetrates his scams. When an older Dilbert arrives while time-traveling from the future, he refers to Dogbert as "majesty", indicating that Dogbert will one day indeed rule the world...again, and make worshipping him retroactive so he could boss around time travelers.

Asok Edit

A young intern, he works very hard but does not always get proper recognition. Asok is intensely intelligent but naive about corporate life; the shattering of his optimistic illusions becomes frequent comic fodder. He is Indian, and has graduated from the Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT). The other workers, especially the boss, often unwittingly trample on his cultural beliefs. On the occasions when Asok mentions this, he is normally ignored. His test scores (a perfect 1600 on the old SAT) and his IQ of 240 show that he is the smartest member of the engineering team. Nonetheless he is often called upon by the Boss to do odd jobs, and in meetings his ideas are usually left hanging. He is also seen regularly at the lunch table with Wally and Dilbert, experiencing jarring realizations of the nature of corporate life. There are a few jokes about his psychic powers, which he learned at the IIT. Yet despite his intelligence, ethics and mystical powers, Asok sometimes takes advice from Wally in the arts of laziness, and from Dilbert in surviving the office. As of February 7, 2014, Asok is officially gay, which never impacts any storylines but merely commemorates a decision by the Indian Supreme Court to uphold an anti-gay law.[5]

Ted Edit

An engineer who is often seen hanging out with Wally. He is referenced by name more often in older comics, but he is still seen occasionally now. He is a friend of Dilbert and Wally, but is not seen interacting with Alice or Asok as much. He has been accepted into Dilbert's clique. He has been fired and killed numerous times (for example, being pushed down a flight of stairs and becoming possessed), so it is likely that he is rehired and brought back to life in a similar way to the other main characters who die and come back. In addition to this, he is often promoted and given benefits over the other employees. Ted has a wife and kids who are referenced multiple times and seen on at least one occasion. Scott Adams refers to him as Ted the Generic Guy because whenever Scott needs to fire or kill someone, he uses Ted, but slowly over time Ted has become his own character. Ted appears in an episode of the series "Y2K", and is mentioned in "the Little People".

Secondary characters Edit

Loud Howard Edit

Another coworker who became a regular character in the TV series, despite appearing in just a few comic strips on 21 April 1995 and 17 March 2006, and again by popular request on 11 October 2006. Loud Howard is incapable of speaking quietly, and in the TV series his overpowering voice often breaks anything and everything around him, including people's eardrums. It has also shattered glass, caused his fillings to vibrate so hard they fall out of his teeth, slammed people against the wall and rendered his sneezes powerful enough to strip a person's flesh from their bones. He lives by an airport, which likely accounts for his loud voice.

In the strips, his loud voice is represented by huge lettering and his comically huge mouth (when talking), which takes up most of the available panel space and is therefore difficult to sustain as a running joke. Howard as a recurring character is better-suited to the animated series, where his voice actor, Jim Wise, can speak as loudly as necessary.

Loud Howard made a reappearance on May 24, 2012, where he meets Topper and they both have a shouting match right outside Dilbert's cubicle.

Carol Edit

The bitter secretary of the Pointy-Haired Boss, who hates her boss and all of her co-workers. Initially a minor character in the strip, her character grew enough in popularity over the years that Adams started creating complete storylines for her. Her character was based on all the bad experiences Adams ever had with any secretary.[6] Several strips feature Carol menacing or attacking co-workers with a crossbow (Known as the "Secretary with a Crossbow"). Carol frequently attempts to put the Pointy-haired boss in situations where he will be killed; she states this to the boss directly on numerous occasions. She has, for example: encouraged him to buy a build-it-yourself helicopter kit; scheduled his business trips via third world countries experiencing rebel insurrections; caused him to crash his car by sending him texts marked 'crisis' so that he will answer them while driving; scheduled 'walking meetings' so that his lack of physical coordination may cause self-injury, for example by falling off a bridge, and holding a press conference stating that her boss is an infamous serial killer. Carol's two young, poorly behaved children also make appearances in the strip. She is voiced by Tress MacNeille in the animated TV series.

Ratbert Edit

A rat formerly used as a laboratory test animal. A cheerful character and something of a nitwit though he does make the occasional brilliant observation. He usually gets all the lowest jobs but has been seen as a consultant before. He has made the pointy-haired boss fall under his consultant spell. Dilbert originally disliked Ratbert for being a rat, but Ratbert is later accepted as a member of the family. He was not originally intended as a regular character, but because of his popularity with readers he was kept.

Ratbert first appeared on July 23, 1990 (1990-07-23). He was not originally intended to be a regular, instead being part of a series of strips featuring a lab scientist's cruel experiments (Ratbert's name at this stage was XP-39C²). Ratbert soon realized that he was the subject of a hideous macaroni and cheese experiment (the scientist made him eat huge amounts of it and writes in his notebook that it causes paranoia in rats[7]) and escaped, eventually finding a refuge in Dilbert's house. He was not initially accepted by the residents, especially Dilbert, who was highly prejudiced against rats. However, he finally allowed Ratbert to become a permanent member of the household.[8]

Ratbert chose his name through a discussion with Dogbert. Dogbert suggested names such as 'Rodney the Rodent' and 'Vernon the Vermin'. XP-39C² suggested the name 'Bill the Rat' before finally settling on 'Ratbert'.[9]

As a simple rat, and having been specially bred to be susceptible to peer pressure, Ratbert is very gullible and innocent, although optimistic. Sometimes his actions can become quite annoying, such as doing "rat dances". Like Dogbert, he has made inroads into business, once working as an intern, a concierge, a consultant (with an "external brain-pack" tied to his torso, which was actually a slab of liver[10]) and vice-president of marketing (for which he was hired on the basis of his week in a dumpster at Procter & Gamble). He also became CEO after a series of strips that involved the previous CEO jumping into a volcano and the first replacement (a vampire) burning up due to daylight. Ratbert was fired for varnishing employees for use as office furniture. He received a severance package of $100 million, the corporate jet, perpetual benefits and a salary of $1 million per year.

Ratbert's biggest ambition in life is to become loved and accepted. He tries to impress those he considers his friends on various occasions, and nearly always fails miserably. Just as Dogbert protects Dilbert on numerous occasions despite his contempt for him, so do Ratbert's friends and family. Ratbert is friendly with Bob the Dinosaur, and is also good friends with Mister Garbage Man, who tries—and fails—to enlighten Ratbert on the complexities of the universe.

Catbert Edit

The company's evil feline Human Resources director. Although he was originally just supposed to be around for a few strips, the fans named him and demanded more of him.

An unnamed cat appeared in two 1992 strips as the companion of Dilbert's "perfect romantic match"; he or she strongly resembled the later Catbert design. The real Catbert, unnamed, first appeared in a series of comic strips from September 12 to 16, 1994, when he attacked Ratbert and rebooted Dilbert's computer before Dogbert finally kicked him out of the house. Reader response asked for "more Catbert," despite the cat never having been named, and Adams decided to bring him back as the "evil director" of human resources. Catbert appeared again on March 20, 1995,[11] when Dogbert hired Catbert to handle downsizing (a process that leads to Alice and Wally running for the new org chart [12] and colliding so hard that they ended up wearing each other's clothes, backwards[13]).

With the help of his "random policy generator",[14] he comes up with sadistic, illogical, and often evil policies to force on the employees, such as permanently branding them,[15] requiring them to schedule sick time before they actually get sick,[16] replacing the health plan with Google,[17] and making time spent in the bathroom count as "vacation".[18] He also has the help of his "Life Suck 3000" (to suck the life force out of employees faster than normal),[19] and his library of HR binders that give strategies on downsizing and hiring of morons specifically.[20] He often works in tandem with the Pointy-Haired Boss, though on occasion he even harasses him with his policies.[21][22] Catbert typically celebrates the creation of a new evil policy by purring loudly, hugging himself,[23] doing the "evil dance"[24] or by occasionally laughing himself fuzzy.[25]

He often abuses workers by doing things like sending Wally home for wearing shorts, even though Wally's pants reach his ankles.[26] He also claws up employees, once batted Dilbert's head off,[27] hid Asok the intern in his litter box, and pulled some strings to get Wally moved to a window cubicle (so as to use Wally's head as a bed to lie on while warming himself in the sun[28]).

Catbert's more cat-like traits include use of the litter box, purring, and lying on warm or sun-heated surfaces.

Some of his own strategies have been known to backfire on him, like the August 2007 strips where he made the employees wear brain monitoring helmets when he suspected they were thinking about pleasant stuff rather than work. Wally, naturally, was the first whose helmet went off, and when Catbert went over what he was thinking about he went metaphorically "blind",[29] possibly with the same reaction the Pointy-haired boss afterwards had: "I was happier not knowing."[30]

His more evil nature is also kept in with the TV series, voiced by comedian, Jason Alexander, with a notable example being his forging a confession in Dilbert's name claiming Dilbert had been responsible for pilfering dry erase markers as well as using his computer for X-rated sites (as well as completely unrelated crimes such as the Lindbergh kidnapping and the shooting of Larry Flynt), as well as publicly announcing Dilbert's "signing" of the confession with permission given to the other employees to treat Dilbert like a pariah.[31]

Dilbert's mother Edit

Dilbert's mother (known by fans as "Dilmom") is a homely and intelligent woman. She used to think Dilbert worked at a railroad because he is an engineer. She is often selfish and openly uncaring towards her son; in the TV series she states that, although she loves him, she does not actually like him (but she does like Dogbert). The comic often shows her and her son passive-aggressively attempting to get out of seeing each other. She has nearly the same level of technical knowledge as Dilbert, although she has him do technical work for her. She is obsessed with Scrabble and has been accused of cheating with "counterfeit vowels". (This is a reference to Scott Adams' own mother.) She is voiced by Jackie Hoffman in the TV series. Her husband has been missing for years, at a 24-hour "All-You-Can-Eat" restaurant in the local mall (he will not leave until it is all he can eat); in the animated series, she was touched by a surveillance video of him, given to her by Dilbert and Dogbert.

Dilbert's mother's name appears in the April 12, 2006[32] and the May 31, 2009 [33] strips. She is also called "Dilmom" in the TV series episode "Hunger", by Dogbert and later a TV announcer.

Phil, the Prince of Insufficient Light Edit

A parody of Satan (the "Prince of Darkness"), Phil ("Prince of Insufficient Light and Supreme Ruler of Heck") is a minor demon who punishes people for small crimes by "darning them to heck" with his "pitch-spoon". Such crimes include using copier paper for the printer, stealing a chair from another cubicle, and finishing off the last coffee from the coffee maker without making another pot. As a minor demon, Phil's punishments are annoying, rather than tormenting, such as being forced to sit at a secretary's desk and be teased by coworkers, or being forced to sit among the accountants at lunchtime and listen to their boring conversations, or, in one strip, "using the spoon" (which involved spooning with said person). Phil was eventually revealed to be the Pointy-Haired Boss's brother. Adams is inconsistent with his depictions of Phil, who sometimes has horns and sometimes does not, and sometimes carries a pitchfork rather than a spoon. Adams has stated that the inconsistency is because he sometimes forgets that Phil is not supposed to have a cape or a pitchfork. He also drank milk.

Bob the Dinosaur Edit

A vegetarian dinosaur who tries to avoid using modern technology and seems proud of his low-tech lifestyle. He was found after Dilbert calculated that dinosaurs could not be extinct, and they therefore must be in hiding. Bob was found hidden behind the couch. Bob has a wife (Dawn) and son (Rex), who also live in Dilbert's house, but they are seen far less frequently than he is, since most of his time is spent at Dilbert's office, where his wedgie duty is constantly needed while working with incompetent co-workers, salesmen, or clients. He has also revealed that, being a dinosaur, he is of course mistaken for a COBOL programmer. Bob likes to nap and eat carrots. In the television series, he appears in the intro and the episode "The Little People".

Mister Garbage Man Edit

Dilbert's garbageman is frequently described in the comic as "the world's smartest garbageman". He appears for the first time in the strip of December 5, 1989.[34] He occasionally solves extremely complex problems for Dilbert and in various strips has developed several futuristic inventions. He once returned Dilbert from the dead by repairing the cloning device that Dilbert had thrown into the garbage.[35][36][37][38] In the TV show, it is revealed that he is the only garbageman for the whole city and is able to collect for all houses through "shortcuts" (i.e. wormholes).

Tina Edit

Tina is a technical writer who was introduced both to add more females to the cast and to satirize the technical writing profession of the late 20th century. Tina was portrayed as a frustrated feminist, always on the defensive about her skills and her value to the company.[39] She never appears in the TV series, but she appears in some of the animated shorts.

Elbonians Edit

People from a fictional Fourth World nation, used as a parody of outsourcing. Their culture is radically different from Western culture, and their patriarchy often annoys Alice. Their country is covered in waist-deep mud which they keep wet using expensive bottled water, as revealed in one strip. The main vehicle of their national airline is essentially a giant slingshot. At one point, the French declared war on Elbonia because they tried to launch a satellite with the town slingshot, thereby flattening the French Embassy before Dilbert can intercede; Elbonia ultimately benefited from the war, because the sale of pieces of French bombs became a significant part of the national income. At another time Dogbert lobbied Switzerland to "liberate" Elbonia's oil. Dogbert once became the king of Elbonia, but Dilbert convinced him to abdicate. Elbonia was first described as an Eastern European nation that had recently overthrown communist rule. Scott Adams stated in Seven Years of Highly Defective People that Elbonia was created to allow for a foreign nation inoffensive to people outside the United States, and is based on the average American's perception of any country without cable television.

Accounting trolls Edit

Sadistic trolls from the accounting department whose bodies are 95% saliva. As Dogbert shows, their brains are so hard-wired that seeing someone wearing a baseball cap backwards causes their heads to explode (which he called "paradigm shifting without a clutch"). The trolls' accounting offices resemble a cavernous Hell. They were originally ruled by a witch who turned Dilbert into an accounting troll, but was destroyed when Dilbert, assigned to budget erasing, erased the accounting department's budget. The trolls are rarely given names, but occasionally a troll by the name Nordlaw is referenced. The first troll introduced in the comics was named Bradley. Their original name was Erv.

Minor recurring characters Edit

Ming Edit

"Web Mistress", occasionally dates Mordac

Mother Nature Edit

Mother Nature, the ruler of the Earth, judges the characters (usually Dilbert) about how they treat nature.

Company Lawyer Edit

The company's lawyer. He claims he could have been in almost any legal profession, yet still ended up there. The Pointy Haired Boss uses his bitterness to shut down any project he dislikes.

Mordac Edit

A senior system/network administrator or manager at Dilbert's company, Mordac the Preventer of Information Services (also known as Mordac the Refuser) strives to make the use of the company's computing resources as difficult and frustrating as possible. In most cases, the ridiculous or over-the-top restrictions he introduces are explained as in line with the company's IT policy (then again, he might be the one writing that policy). In one strip he claimed to have lost the file containing his job description and that he has been "winging it" for five years. There have however been cases — for instance, when he made obscure changes to the network without testing just before allegedly leaving for a three-week vacation on a Russian submarine above the Arctic Circle — when his actions could only be explained by malice. His motives are unclear, although his demeanor suggests he simply takes pleasure using his management and technical powers to make the users of "his" systems suffer. On one occasion, he was attacked while confronting Dilbert by Catbert, as he had made Catbert's personal printer a shared device. In more recent strips he looks different. He has pointed ears and hairstyle much like a Vulcan. He appeared once with a sidekick, "Walter the Budget Man", in the "Merger" episode of the animated series. Here he was voiced by Maurice LaMarche.

Topper Edit

A relatively frequently recurring character in the strip. Whenever anyone mentions in Topper's earshot any difficult task he or she accomplished, he barges into the conversation with a smug facial expression, exclaiming, "That's nothing!" He then proceeds to top the other's statement with his own, obviously implausible or downright ridiculous, claim (e.g. insulating his house with cheese, implanting himself with insect organs so he can spin silk, or passing a gallstone so big it became the Secretary of Labor in Clinton's administration). He seems to be genuinely offended when the others express disbelief in his purported exploits. He allegedly cannot start a conversation, as he claims that it "ruins his system."

Dadbert Edit

An unseen character in the comic strip, although he does appear in the animated series, in which his face is hidden in a fashion similar to some of the humans from "Tom and Jerry" or Wilson from "Home Improvement". He left the family during a trip to the mall in 1992 (1979 in the TV series) in order to visit a 24-hour all-you-can-eat restaurant. He refuses to leave until he is sure he has had all he can eat.

Liz Edit

Dilbert's girlfriend from 1994 to 1996. He met her at a soccer game,[40] where she rebounded a ball off his head to score a goal. Liz would constantly taunt Dilbert about their comparative levels of attractiveness and his obsession with technology, though Dilbert always took such comments in stride. Adams admitted in Seven Years of Highly Defective People that "Liz never really clicked with me", and eventually had her break up with Dilbert, after she started dating other men. She is Dilbert's longest relationship.

Dawn and Rex Edit

Introduced in 1989, Bob and Dawn came into the strip after Dilbert figured out that not all dinosaurs could be extinct. Dawn was Bob's "mate." Rex was hatched shortly after the introduction of Bob and Dawn. The two characters appeared much less frequently than Bob and have not been seen in a Dilbert strip since September 20, 1997.

The C.E.O. Edit

The Chief Executive Officer (C.E.O.) of the unnamed company that Dilbert works at has been shown to be incompetent to some level (though not as much as the pointy haired boss) and often at meetings makes a desperate attempt to seem like, as the pointy haired boss put it, "just plain folk". Since 2003, the C.E.O. has been drawn as a young bald man with a big head.[41]

The Company Robot Edit

The Company's Robot was bought by the pointy haired boss to replace Wally. All it was supposed to do was drink coffee and look at inappropriate Web sites, which Wally admitted was all he did. It was hacked by Dilbert and Wally to make it disgruntled, to make sure Wally kept his job. The robot has appeared on occasion since, especially when plotting for robots to take over the world.

Bearded suspender guy Edit

An old-style computing guy who likes to reminisce about the old days, he's a UNIX user and software architect to whom both Wally and Alice have taken exception. He has appeared with white, black and brown hair, but all appearances include suspenders. He is widely rumored to be based on computer scientist and cryptographer Igor Faynberg (a Bell Labs Fellow), who admits that this may be the case, but has no memory of having met Adams.

Zimbu the Monkey Edit

A monkey that works at Dilbert's office, who is always a better employee than Dilbert due to his tail, which enables him to be more productive by using his tail to control the mouse and his hands to type. He appears in the episode "Y2K" voiced by Tom Kenny.

References Edit

  1. ^ Search Results for The Boss
  2. ^ Dilbert Comic Strip on 1989-04-20
  3. ^ Dilbert Comic Strip on 1989-07-31
  4. ^ Dilbert Comic Strip on 1991-10-21
  5. ^ "Dilbert Comic Strip on February 07, 2014".
  6. ^ Adams, Scott: Seven Years of Highly Defective People, page 227. Andrews McMeel Publishing, 1997.
  7. ^ Dilbert, July 24-27 1990
  8. ^ Dilbert, December 25 1990
  9. ^ Dilbert for July 31, 1990
  10. ^ Dilbert, May 9-14 1994
  11. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. March 20, 1995. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  12. ^ "Dilbert Comic Strip on 1995-03-21 | Dilbert by Scott Adams". Dilbert. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  13. ^ "Dilbert Comic Strip on 1995-03-22 | Dilbert by Scott Adams". Dilbert. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  14. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. July 13, 2007. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  15. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. August 6, 2000. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  16. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. October 25, 2007. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  17. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. February 18, 2007. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  18. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. March 22, 1998. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  19. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. April 17, 2001. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  20. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. February 6, 1997. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  21. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. March 3, 2005. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
  22. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. May 8, 2014. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  23. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. May 27, 2003. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  24. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. September 27, 2001. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  25. ^ "Dilbert comic strip". Dilbert.com. August 25, 1997. Retrieved July 19, 2012.
  26. ^ "Dilbert Comic Strip on 1998-12-31 | Dilbert by Scott Adams". Dilbert. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  27. ^ "Dilbert Comic Strip on 2008-03-21 | Dilbert by Scott Adams". Dilbert. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  28. ^ "Dilbert Comic Strip on 1997-01-01 | Dilbert by Scott Adams". Dilbert. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  29. ^ "Dilbert Comic Strip on 2007-08-30 | Dilbert by Scott Adams". Dilbert. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  30. ^ "Dilbert Comic Strip on 2007-08-29 | Dilbert by Scott Adams". Dilbert. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  31. ^ Dilbert Season 1 episode 7: "Little People" (1999)
  32. ^ Dilbert comic strip for April 12, 2006
  33. ^ Dilbert comic strip for May 31, 2009
  34. ^ "Dilbert comic strip for December 5, 1989". Dilbert.com. 1989-12-05.
  35. ^ "Dilbert comic strip for October 3, 1990". Dilbert.com. 1990-10-03.
  36. ^ "Dilbert comic strip for October 4, 1990". Dilbert.com. 1990-10-04.
  37. ^ "Dilbert comic strip for October 5, 1990". Dilbert.com. 1990-10-05.
  38. ^ "Dilbert comic strip for October 6, 1990". Dilbert.com. 1990-10-06.
  39. ^ Before the late 20th century, technical writing was dominated by males writing to military specifications. These "MIL-SPEC" writers gave way to a mixed environment in the late 20th century, when writers began to address the needs of personal computer users. Thereafter, the profession became more gender balanced.
  40. ^ Adams, Scott. "Dilbert". Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  41. ^ Adams, Scott. "03/20/2003". Dilbert. United Features Syndicate.

list, dilbert, characters, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources List of Dilbert characters news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message This is a list of characters that have appeared in Scott Adams Dilbert comic strip Contents 1 Primary characters 1 1 Dilbert 1 2 Pointy haired Boss 1 3 Wally 1 4 Alice 1 5 Dogbert 1 6 Asok 1 7 Ted 2 Secondary characters 2 1 Loud Howard 2 2 Carol 2 3 Ratbert 2 4 Catbert 2 5 Dilbert s mother 2 6 Phil the Prince of Insufficient Light 2 7 Bob the Dinosaur 2 8 Mister Garbage Man 2 9 Tina 3 Elbonians 4 Accounting trolls 5 Minor recurring characters 5 1 Ming 5 2 Mother Nature 5 3 Company Lawyer 5 4 Mordac 5 5 Topper 5 6 Dadbert 5 7 Liz 5 8 Dawn and Rex 5 9 The C E O 5 10 The Company Robot 5 11 Bearded suspender guy 5 12 Zimbu the Monkey 6 ReferencesPrimary characters EditDilbert Edit Main article Dilbert character The main character in the strip Dilbert is a stereotypical technically minded single male Prior to October 2014 he was usually wearing a white dress shirt black trousers and a red and black striped tie that inexplicably curves upward since then he has worn a red polo shirt with a name badge on a lanyard around his neck Dilbert received his master s degree in electrical engineering from MIT he understands engineering well and has good ideas but has a poor social life Neither attractive nor blessed with tremendous social graces Dilbert is capable but ignored at work and struggles with his romantic life While he is frequently seen having dates with eligible women his dates almost invariably end in disaster usually in surreal and bizarre ways Dilbert loves computers and technology and will spend much of his free time playing with such things He had a girlfriend named Liz for a little over two years but she started dating other men stating that she would still date Dilbert but date other men at the same time Pointy haired Boss Edit The oblivious manager of Dilbert and the other engineers 1 and sometimes the main antagonist of the strip his real name is never mentioned Scott Adams states that he never named him so that people can imagine him to be their boss First mentioned on 20 April 1989 2 he was depicted as a stereotypical late middle aged balding middle manager with jowls 3 it was not until 21 October 1991 4 that he developed his signature pointy hair and the jowls disappeared He is hopelessly incompetent at management and often tries to compensate for his lack of skills with countless group therapy sessions and business strategies that usually never bear fruit He does not understand technical issues but always tries to disguise this usually by using buzzwords he also does not understand The Boss treats his employees alternately with enthusiasm or neglect he often uses them to his own ends regardless of the consequences to them Adams himself wrote that He s not sadistic just uncaring His level of intelligence varies from near vegetative to perceptive and clever depending on the strip s comic needs His utter lack of consistent business ethics however is perfectly consistent His brother is a demon named Phil the Prince of Insufficient Light and according to Adams the pointy hair is intended to remind one of devil s horns Wally Edit One of the oldest engineers Wally was originally a worker trying to get fired to obtain a large severance package He hates work and avoids it whenever he can He often carries a cup of coffee calmly sipping from it even in the midst of chaos or office shaking revelations Wally is extremely cynical He is even more socially inept than Dilbert though far less self aware of the fact and references to his lack of personal hygiene are not uncommon Like the Pointy Haired Boss Wally is utterly lacking in ethics and will take advantage of any situation to maximize his personal gain while doing the least possible amount of honest work Squat and balding Wally is almost invariably portrayed wearing a short sleeved dress shirt and tie Adams has stated that Wally was based on a Pacific Bell coworker of his who was interested in a generous employee buy out program for the company s worst employees This had the effect of causing this man whom Adams describes as one of the more brilliant people I ve met to work hard at being incompetent rude and generally poor at his job to qualify for the buy out program Adams has said that this inspired the basic laziness and amorality of Wally s character Despite these personality traits Wally is accepted as part of Dilbert Ted Alice and Asok s clique Although his relationship with Alice is often antagonistic and Dilbert occasionally denies being his friend their actions show at least a certain acceptance of him He has openly admitted that all his good ideas are about coffee that sometimes include sabotaging rival companies coffee so they only have decaf Alice Edit One of the more competent engineers She is often frustrated at her work because she does not get proper recognition She believes it is because she is female though in reality it is likely because she has a quick often violent temper sometimes putting her lethal Fist of Death to use even with the Pointy Haired Boss Dogbert Edit Dilbert s anthropomorphic pet dog is the smartest dog on Earth Dogbert is a megalomaniac intellectual dog planning to one day conquer the world He once succeeded but became bored with the ensuing peace and quit Often seen in high ranking consultant or technical support jobs he constantly abuses his power and fools the management of Dilbert s company though considering the intelligence of the company s management in general and Dilbert s boss in particular this is not very hard to do He also enjoys pulling scams on unsuspecting and usually dull customers to steal their money However despite Dogbert s cynical exterior he has been known to pull his master out of some tight jams Dogbert s nature as a pet was more emphasized during the earlier years of the strip as the strip progressed references to his acting like a dog became less common although he still wags his tail when he perpetrates his scams When an older Dilbert arrives while time traveling from the future he refers to Dogbert as majesty indicating that Dogbert will one day indeed rule the world again and make worshipping him retroactive so he could boss around time travelers Asok Edit Main article Asok Dilbert A young intern he works very hard but does not always get proper recognition Asok is intensely intelligent but naive about corporate life the shattering of his optimistic illusions becomes frequent comic fodder He is Indian and has graduated from the Indian Institutes of Technology IIT The other workers especially the boss often unwittingly trample on his cultural beliefs On the occasions when Asok mentions this he is normally ignored His test scores a perfect 1600 on the old SAT and his IQ of 240 show that he is the smartest member of the engineering team Nonetheless he is often called upon by the Boss to do odd jobs and in meetings his ideas are usually left hanging He is also seen regularly at the lunch table with Wally and Dilbert experiencing jarring realizations of the nature of corporate life There are a few jokes about his psychic powers which he learned at the IIT Yet despite his intelligence ethics and mystical powers Asok sometimes takes advice from Wally in the arts of laziness and from Dilbert in surviving the office As of February 7 2014 Asok is officially gay which never impacts any storylines but merely commemorates a decision by the Indian Supreme Court to uphold an anti gay law 5 Ted Edit An engineer who is often seen hanging out with Wally He is referenced by name more often in older comics but he is still seen occasionally now He is a friend of Dilbert and Wally but is not seen interacting with Alice or Asok as much He has been accepted into Dilbert s clique He has been fired and killed numerous times for example being pushed down a flight of stairs and becoming possessed so it is likely that he is rehired and brought back to life in a similar way to the other main characters who die and come back In addition to this he is often promoted and given benefits over the other employees Ted has a wife and kids who are referenced multiple times and seen on at least one occasion Scott Adams refers to him as Ted the Generic Guy because whenever Scott needs to fire or kill someone he uses Ted but slowly over time Ted has become his own character Ted appears in an episode of the series Y2K and is mentioned in the Little People Secondary characters EditLoud Howard Edit Another coworker who became a regular character in the TV series despite appearing in just a few comic strips on 21 April 1995 and 17 March 2006 and again by popular request on 11 October 2006 Loud Howard is incapable of speaking quietly and in the TV series his overpowering voice often breaks anything and everything around him including people s eardrums It has also shattered glass caused his fillings to vibrate so hard they fall out of his teeth slammed people against the wall and rendered his sneezes powerful enough to strip a person s flesh from their bones He lives by an airport which likely accounts for his loud voice In the strips his loud voice is represented by huge lettering and his comically huge mouth when talking which takes up most of the available panel space and is therefore difficult to sustain as a running joke Howard as a recurring character is better suited to the animated series where his voice actor Jim Wise can speak as loudly as necessary Loud Howard made a reappearance on May 24 2012 where he meets Topper and they both have a shouting match right outside Dilbert s cubicle Carol Edit The bitter secretary of the Pointy Haired Boss who hates her boss and all of her co workers Initially a minor character in the strip her character grew enough in popularity over the years that Adams started creating complete storylines for her Her character was based on all the bad experiences Adams ever had with any secretary 6 Several strips feature Carol menacing or attacking co workers with a crossbow Known as the Secretary with a Crossbow Carol frequently attempts to put the Pointy haired boss in situations where he will be killed she states this to the boss directly on numerous occasions She has for example encouraged him to buy a build it yourself helicopter kit scheduled his business trips via third world countries experiencing rebel insurrections caused him to crash his car by sending him texts marked crisis so that he will answer them while driving scheduled walking meetings so that his lack of physical coordination may cause self injury for example by falling off a bridge and holding a press conference stating that her boss is an infamous serial killer Carol s two young poorly behaved children also make appearances in the strip She is voiced by Tress MacNeille in the animated TV series Ratbert Edit A rat formerly used as a laboratory test animal A cheerful character and something of a nitwit though he does make the occasional brilliant observation He usually gets all the lowest jobs but has been seen as a consultant before He has made the pointy haired boss fall under his consultant spell Dilbert originally disliked Ratbert for being a rat but Ratbert is later accepted as a member of the family He was not originally intended as a regular character but because of his popularity with readers he was kept Ratbert first appeared on July 23 1990 1990 07 23 He was not originally intended to be a regular instead being part of a series of strips featuring a lab scientist s cruel experiments Ratbert s name at this stage was XP 39C Ratbert soon realized that he was the subject of a hideous macaroni and cheese experiment the scientist made him eat huge amounts of it and writes in his notebook that it causes paranoia in rats 7 and escaped eventually finding a refuge in Dilbert s house He was not initially accepted by the residents especially Dilbert who was highly prejudiced against rats However he finally allowed Ratbert to become a permanent member of the household 8 Ratbert chose his name through a discussion with Dogbert Dogbert suggested names such as Rodney the Rodent and Vernon the Vermin XP 39C suggested the name Bill the Rat before finally settling on Ratbert 9 As a simple rat and having been specially bred to be susceptible to peer pressure Ratbert is very gullible and innocent although optimistic Sometimes his actions can become quite annoying such as doing rat dances Like Dogbert he has made inroads into business once working as an intern a concierge a consultant with an external brain pack tied to his torso which was actually a slab of liver 10 and vice president of marketing for which he was hired on the basis of his week in a dumpster at Procter amp Gamble He also became CEO after a series of strips that involved the previous CEO jumping into a volcano and the first replacement a vampire burning up due to daylight Ratbert was fired for varnishing employees for use as office furniture He received a severance package of 100 million the corporate jet perpetual benefits and a salary of 1 million per year Ratbert s biggest ambition in life is to become loved and accepted He tries to impress those he considers his friends on various occasions and nearly always fails miserably Just as Dogbert protects Dilbert on numerous occasions despite his contempt for him so do Ratbert s friends and family Ratbert is friendly with Bob the Dinosaur and is also good friends with Mister Garbage Man who tries and fails to enlighten Ratbert on the complexities of the universe Catbert Edit The company s evil feline Human Resources director Although he was originally just supposed to be around for a few strips the fans named him and demanded more of him An unnamed cat appeared in two 1992 strips as the companion of Dilbert s perfect romantic match he or she strongly resembled the later Catbert design The real Catbert unnamed first appeared in a series of comic strips from September 12 to 16 1994 when he attacked Ratbert and rebooted Dilbert s computer before Dogbert finally kicked him out of the house Reader response asked for more Catbert despite the cat never having been named and Adams decided to bring him back as the evil director of human resources Catbert appeared again on March 20 1995 11 when Dogbert hired Catbert to handle downsizing a process that leads to Alice and Wally running for the new org chart 12 and colliding so hard that they ended up wearing each other s clothes backwards 13 With the help of his random policy generator 14 he comes up with sadistic illogical and often evil policies to force on the employees such as permanently branding them 15 requiring them to schedule sick time before they actually get sick 16 replacing the health plan with Google 17 and making time spent in the bathroom count as vacation 18 He also has the help of his Life Suck 3000 to suck the life force out of employees faster than normal 19 and his library of HR binders that give strategies on downsizing and hiring of morons specifically 20 He often works in tandem with the Pointy Haired Boss though on occasion he even harasses him with his policies 21 22 Catbert typically celebrates the creation of a new evil policy by purring loudly hugging himself 23 doing the evil dance 24 or by occasionally laughing himself fuzzy 25 He often abuses workers by doing things like sending Wally home for wearing shorts even though Wally s pants reach his ankles 26 He also claws up employees once batted Dilbert s head off 27 hid Asok the intern in his litter box and pulled some strings to get Wally moved to a window cubicle so as to use Wally s head as a bed to lie on while warming himself in the sun 28 Catbert s more cat like traits include use of the litter box purring and lying on warm or sun heated surfaces Some of his own strategies have been known to backfire on him like the August 2007 strips where he made the employees wear brain monitoring helmets when he suspected they were thinking about pleasant stuff rather than work Wally naturally was the first whose helmet went off and when Catbert went over what he was thinking about he went metaphorically blind 29 possibly with the same reaction the Pointy haired boss afterwards had I was happier not knowing 30 His more evil nature is also kept in with the TV series voiced by comedian Jason Alexander with a notable example being his forging a confession in Dilbert s name claiming Dilbert had been responsible for pilfering dry erase markers as well as using his computer for X rated sites as well as completely unrelated crimes such as the Lindbergh kidnapping and the shooting of Larry Flynt as well as publicly announcing Dilbert s signing of the confession with permission given to the other employees to treat Dilbert like a pariah 31 Dilbert s mother Edit Dilbert s mother known by fans as Dilmom is a homely and intelligent woman She used to think Dilbert worked at a railroad because he is an engineer She is often selfish and openly uncaring towards her son in the TV series she states that although she loves him she does not actually like him but she does like Dogbert The comic often shows her and her son passive aggressively attempting to get out of seeing each other She has nearly the same level of technical knowledge as Dilbert although she has him do technical work for her She is obsessed with Scrabble and has been accused of cheating with counterfeit vowels This is a reference to Scott Adams own mother She is voiced by Jackie Hoffman in the TV series Her husband has been missing for years at a 24 hour All You Can Eat restaurant in the local mall he will not leave until it is all he can eat in the animated series she was touched by a surveillance video of him given to her by Dilbert and Dogbert Dilbert s mother s name appears in the April 12 2006 32 and the May 31 2009 33 strips She is also called Dilmom in the TV series episode Hunger by Dogbert and later a TV announcer Phil the Prince of Insufficient Light Edit A parody of Satan the Prince of Darkness Phil Prince of Insufficient Light and Supreme Ruler of Heck is a minor demon who punishes people for small crimes by darning them to heck with his pitch spoon Such crimes include using copier paper for the printer stealing a chair from another cubicle and finishing off the last coffee from the coffee maker without making another pot As a minor demon Phil s punishments are annoying rather than tormenting such as being forced to sit at a secretary s desk and be teased by coworkers or being forced to sit among the accountants at lunchtime and listen to their boring conversations or in one strip using the spoon which involved spooning with said person Phil was eventually revealed to be the Pointy Haired Boss s brother Adams is inconsistent with his depictions of Phil who sometimes has horns and sometimes does not and sometimes carries a pitchfork rather than a spoon Adams has stated that the inconsistency is because he sometimes forgets that Phil is not supposed to have a cape or a pitchfork He also drank milk Bob the Dinosaur Edit A vegetarian dinosaur who tries to avoid using modern technology and seems proud of his low tech lifestyle He was found after Dilbert calculated that dinosaurs could not be extinct and they therefore must be in hiding Bob was found hidden behind the couch Bob has a wife Dawn and son Rex who also live in Dilbert s house but they are seen far less frequently than he is since most of his time is spent at Dilbert s office where his wedgie duty is constantly needed while working with incompetent co workers salesmen or clients He has also revealed that being a dinosaur he is of course mistaken for a COBOL programmer Bob likes to nap and eat carrots In the television series he appears in the intro and the episode The Little People Mister Garbage Man Edit Dilbert s garbageman is frequently described in the comic as the world s smartest garbageman He appears for the first time in the strip of December 5 1989 34 He occasionally solves extremely complex problems for Dilbert and in various strips has developed several futuristic inventions He once returned Dilbert from the dead by repairing the cloning device that Dilbert had thrown into the garbage 35 36 37 38 In the TV show it is revealed that he is the only garbageman for the whole city and is able to collect for all houses through shortcuts i e wormholes Tina Edit Tina is a technical writer who was introduced both to add more females to the cast and to satirize the technical writing profession of the late 20th century Tina was portrayed as a frustrated feminist always on the defensive about her skills and her value to the company 39 She never appears in the TV series but she appears in some of the animated shorts Elbonians EditFurther information Dilbert Elbonia People from a fictional Fourth World nation used as a parody of outsourcing Their culture is radically different from Western culture and their patriarchy often annoys Alice Their country is covered in waist deep mud which they keep wet using expensive bottled water as revealed in one strip The main vehicle of their national airline is essentially a giant slingshot At one point the French declared war on Elbonia because they tried to launch a satellite with the town slingshot thereby flattening the French Embassy before Dilbert can intercede Elbonia ultimately benefited from the war because the sale of pieces of French bombs became a significant part of the national income At another time Dogbert lobbied Switzerland to liberate Elbonia s oil Dogbert once became the king of Elbonia but Dilbert convinced him to abdicate Elbonia was first described as an Eastern European nation that had recently overthrown communist rule Scott Adams stated in Seven Years of Highly Defective People that Elbonia was created to allow for a foreign nation inoffensive to people outside the United States and is based on the average American s perception of any country without cable television Accounting trolls EditSadistic trolls from the accounting department whose bodies are 95 saliva As Dogbert shows their brains are so hard wired that seeing someone wearing a baseball cap backwards causes their heads to explode which he called paradigm shifting without a clutch The trolls accounting offices resemble a cavernous Hell They were originally ruled by a witch who turned Dilbert into an accounting troll but was destroyed when Dilbert assigned to budget erasing erased the accounting department s budget The trolls are rarely given names but occasionally a troll by the name Nordlaw is referenced The first troll introduced in the comics was named Bradley Their original name was Erv Minor recurring characters EditMing Edit Web Mistress occasionally dates Mordac Mother Nature Edit Mother Nature the ruler of the Earth judges the characters usually Dilbert about how they treat nature Company Lawyer Edit The company s lawyer He claims he could have been in almost any legal profession yet still ended up there The Pointy Haired Boss uses his bitterness to shut down any project he dislikes Mordac Edit A senior system network administrator or manager at Dilbert s company Mordac the Preventer of Information Services also known as Mordac the Refuser strives to make the use of the company s computing resources as difficult and frustrating as possible In most cases the ridiculous or over the top restrictions he introduces are explained as in line with the company s IT policy then again he might be the one writing that policy In one strip he claimed to have lost the file containing his job description and that he has been winging it for five years There have however been cases for instance when he made obscure changes to the network without testing just before allegedly leaving for a three week vacation on a Russian submarine above the Arctic Circle when his actions could only be explained by malice His motives are unclear although his demeanor suggests he simply takes pleasure using his management and technical powers to make the users of his systems suffer On one occasion he was attacked while confronting Dilbert by Catbert as he had made Catbert s personal printer a shared device In more recent strips he looks different He has pointed ears and hairstyle much like a Vulcan He appeared once with a sidekick Walter the Budget Man in the Merger episode of the animated series Here he was voiced by Maurice LaMarche Topper Edit A relatively frequently recurring character in the strip Whenever anyone mentions in Topper s earshot any difficult task he or she accomplished he barges into the conversation with a smug facial expression exclaiming That s nothing He then proceeds to top the other s statement with his own obviously implausible or downright ridiculous claim e g insulating his house with cheese implanting himself with insect organs so he can spin silk or passing a gallstone so big it became the Secretary of Labor in Clinton s administration He seems to be genuinely offended when the others express disbelief in his purported exploits He allegedly cannot start a conversation as he claims that it ruins his system Dadbert Edit An unseen character in the comic strip although he does appear in the animated series in which his face is hidden in a fashion similar to some of the humans from Tom and Jerry or Wilson from Home Improvement He left the family during a trip to the mall in 1992 1979 in the TV series in order to visit a 24 hour all you can eat restaurant He refuses to leave until he is sure he has had all he can eat Liz Edit Dilbert s girlfriend from 1994 to 1996 He met her at a soccer game 40 where she rebounded a ball off his head to score a goal Liz would constantly taunt Dilbert about their comparative levels of attractiveness and his obsession with technology though Dilbert always took such comments in stride Adams admitted in Seven Years of Highly Defective People that Liz never really clicked with me and eventually had her break up with Dilbert after she started dating other men She is Dilbert s longest relationship Dawn and Rex Edit Introduced in 1989 Bob and Dawn came into the strip after Dilbert figured out that not all dinosaurs could be extinct Dawn was Bob s mate Rex was hatched shortly after the introduction of Bob and Dawn The two characters appeared much less frequently than Bob and have not been seen in a Dilbert strip since September 20 1997 The C E O Edit The Chief Executive Officer C E O of the unnamed company that Dilbert works at has been shown to be incompetent to some level though not as much as the pointy haired boss and often at meetings makes a desperate attempt to seem like as the pointy haired boss put it just plain folk Since 2003 the C E O has been drawn as a young bald man with a big head 41 The Company Robot Edit The Company s Robot was bought by the pointy haired boss to replace Wally All it was supposed to do was drink coffee and look at inappropriate Web sites which Wally admitted was all he did It was hacked by Dilbert and Wally to make it disgruntled to make sure Wally kept his job The robot has appeared on occasion since especially when plotting for robots to take over the world Bearded suspender guy Edit An old style computing guy who likes to reminisce about the old days he s a UNIX user and software architect to whom both Wally and Alice have taken exception He has appeared with white black and brown hair but all appearances include suspenders He is widely rumored to be based on computer scientist and cryptographer Igor Faynberg a Bell Labs Fellow who admits that this may be the case but has no memory of having met Adams Zimbu the Monkey Edit A monkey that works at Dilbert s office who is always a better employee than Dilbert due to his tail which enables him to be more productive by using his tail to control the mouse and his hands to type He appears in the episode Y2K voiced by Tom Kenny References Edit Search Results for The Boss Dilbert Comic Strip on 1989 04 20 Dilbert Comic Strip on 1989 07 31 Dilbert Comic Strip on 1991 10 21 Dilbert Comic Strip on February 07 2014 Adams Scott Seven Years of Highly Defective People page 227 Andrews McMeel Publishing 1997 Dilbert July 24 27 1990 Dilbert December 25 1990 Dilbert for July 31 1990 Dilbert May 9 14 1994 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com March 20 1995 Retrieved November 14 2011 Dilbert Comic Strip on 1995 03 21 Dilbert by Scott Adams Dilbert Retrieved 2018 07 18 Dilbert Comic Strip on 1995 03 22 Dilbert by Scott Adams Dilbert Retrieved 2018 07 18 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com July 13 2007 Retrieved November 14 2011 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com August 6 2000 Retrieved November 14 2011 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com October 25 2007 Retrieved November 14 2011 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com February 18 2007 Retrieved November 14 2011 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com March 22 1998 Retrieved November 14 2011 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com April 17 2001 Retrieved November 14 2011 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com February 6 1997 Retrieved November 14 2011 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com March 3 2005 Retrieved October 11 2012 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com May 8 2014 Retrieved May 9 2014 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com May 27 2003 Retrieved November 14 2011 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com September 27 2001 Retrieved November 14 2011 Dilbert comic strip Dilbert com August 25 1997 Retrieved July 19 2012 Dilbert Comic Strip on 1998 12 31 Dilbert by Scott Adams Dilbert Retrieved 2018 07 28 Dilbert Comic Strip on 2008 03 21 Dilbert by Scott Adams Dilbert Retrieved 2018 07 28 Dilbert Comic Strip on 1997 01 01 Dilbert by Scott Adams Dilbert Retrieved 2018 07 28 Dilbert Comic Strip on 2007 08 30 Dilbert by Scott Adams Dilbert Retrieved 2018 07 28 Dilbert Comic Strip on 2007 08 29 Dilbert by Scott Adams Dilbert Retrieved 2018 07 28 Dilbert Season 1 episode 7 Little People 1999 Dilbert comic strip for April 12 2006 Dilbert comic strip for May 31 2009 Dilbert comic strip for December 5 1989 Dilbert com 1989 12 05 Dilbert comic strip for October 3 1990 Dilbert com 1990 10 03 Dilbert comic strip for October 4 1990 Dilbert com 1990 10 04 Dilbert comic strip for October 5 1990 Dilbert com 1990 10 05 Dilbert comic strip for October 6 1990 Dilbert com 1990 10 06 Before the late 20th century technical writing was dominated by males writing to military specifications These MIL SPEC writers gave way to a mixed environment in the late 20th century when writers began to address the needs of personal computer users Thereafter the profession became more gender balanced Adams Scott Dilbert Retrieved 30 November 2013 Adams Scott 03 20 2003 Dilbert United Features Syndicate Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Dilbert characters amp oldid 1158387727 Pointy haired Boss, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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