Hans is replaying the archive of the strip and collections are also available.
It was a college comic strip that was made available for distribution through Usenet downloads before the Web even existed and later migrated to the Web. Argon Zark! may be the first continuing comic created specifically for distribution on the Web (the first "true" webcomic), but Where the Buffalo Roam is the first comic on the Internet. This is of special historical significance.
Webcomics Of Historical Significance These first three entries are of particular interest because of their place in the history of webcomics. Not only will you get a great strip, you'll help to promote the Net as a breeding ground for new newspaper comics! And don't miss the rest of the Peter Zale site. At first it was a Net-only strip, but a terrific collection called Techies Unite! has been published by McGraw-Hill and he strip has been picked up for newspaper syndication by Tribune Media Services! Write, call or email your local paper and tell them you want to see Helen, Sweetheart of the Internet on the comics page every day. I've been recommending this strip for years. Dilbert territory, but with a Gary Trudeau/Berkely Breathed sensibility. Helen, Sweetheart of the Internet Peter Zale's wonderful office/computer related daily strip. Not exactly a web comic, but a print comic that's been very well adapted to the web by careful selection and arrangement of the panels in a monitor-friendly format. MetaCops! Where else can Albert Einstein, Jayne Mansfield and Nicola Tesla meet multi-eyed, brain-in-a-bubble aliens than in this intelligent, witty, time-and-reality-twisting gem by Link Yaco and John Heebink, creator of Doll and Creature and Wrathbone and Bitchula. Mike is also the creator of Monsterman and the editor of the terrific Draw magazine. Here's some cool comics by friends of mine: Action Planet Comics Mike Manley, longtime artist on Batman and dozens of other top books from DC, Marvel and Dark Horse, is now producing his own comics.