Randall Munroe Popular Books

Randall Munroe Biography & Facts

Randall Patrick Munroe (born October 17, 1984) is an American cartoonist, author, and engineer best known as the creator of the webcomic xkcd. Munroe has worked full-time on the comic since late 2006. In addition to publishing a book of the webcomic's strips, titled xkcd: Volume 0, he has written four books: What If?, Thing Explainer, How To, and What If? 2. Early life and education Munroe was born in Easton, Pennsylvania, though he grew up in Virginia. His father has worked as an engineer and marketer. He has two younger siblings, including a brother named Doug, and was raised as a Quaker. He was a fan of comic strips in newspapers from an early age, starting with Calvin and Hobbes.After graduating from the Chesterfield County Mathematics and Science High School at Clover Hill in Midlothian, Virginia, he graduated from Christopher Newport University in 2006 with a degree in physics. Career NASA Munroe worked as a contract programmer and roboticist for NASA at the Langley Research Center, before and after his graduation with a physics degree.In late 2006, he left NASA, and moved to Boston to focus on webcomics full time. Webcomic Munroe's webcomic, entitled xkcd, is primarily a stick figure comic. Its tagline describes it as "A webcomic of romance, sarcasm, math, and language".Munroe had originally used xkcd as an instant messaging screenname because he wanted a name without a meaning so he would not eventually grow tired of it. He registered the domain name, but left it idle until he started posting his drawings, perhaps in September 2005. The webcomic quickly became very popular, garnering up to 70 million hits a month by October 2007. Munroe has said, "I think the comic that's gotten me the most feedback is actually the one about the stoplights".Munroe now supports himself by the sale of xkcd-related merchandise, primarily thousands of t-shirts a month. He licenses his xkcd creations under the Creative Commons attribution-noncommercial 2.5, stating that it is not just about the free culture movement, but that it also makes good business sense.In 2010, he published a collection of the comics. He has also toured the lecture circuit, giving speeches at places such as Google's Googleplex in Mountain View, California.The popularity of the strip among science fiction fans resulted in Munroe being nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Fan Artist in 2011 and again in 2012. In 2014, he won the Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story for the xkcd strip "Time". Other projects Munroe is the creator of the now defunct websites "The Funniest", "The Cutest", and "The Fairest", each of which presents users with two options and asks them to choose one over the other.In January 2008, Munroe developed an open-source chat moderation script named "Robot9000". Originally developed to moderate one of Munroe's xkcd-related Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channels, the software's algorithm attempts to prevent repetition in IRC channels by temporarily muting users who send messages that are identical to a message that has been sent to the channel before. If users continue to send unoriginal messages, Robot9000 mutes the user for a longer period, quadrupling for each unoriginal message the user sends to the channel. Shortly after Munroe's blog post about the script went live, 4chan administrator Christopher Poole adapted the script to moderate the site's experimental /r9k/ board. Twitch trialed R9K mode as a beta feature, and eventually introduced it under the name "unique-chat mode".In October 2008, The New Yorker magazine online published an interview and "Cartoon Off" between Munroe and Farley Katz, in which each cartoonist drew a series of four humorous cartoons.In early 2010, Munroe ran the xkcd Color Name Survey, in which participants were shown a series of RGB colors and asked to enter a suitable name for each specific color. Munroe wanted to identify colors which were given identical or highly similar names by a large number of survey participants, which would then serve as an approximate list of the most common colors rendered similarly across a range of computer monitors. Over 200,000 people eventually completed the survey, and Munroe published the resulting list of 954 named RGB web colors on the xkcd website. They have since been adopted as conventional color identifiers in various programming and markup languages, including Python and LaTeX.In 2015, The New Yorker published "The Space Doctor's Big Idea", an article by Munroe explaining general relativity using only the 1,000 most common English words. What If? Munroe has a blog entitled What If?, where he has answered questions sent in by fans of his comics. These questions are usually absurd and related to math or physics, and he explains them using both his knowledge and various academic sources. In 2014, he published a collection of some of the responses, as well as a few new ones and some rejected questions, in a book entitled What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions. Starting in November 2019, Munroe began writing a monthly column in The New York Times titled Good Question, answering user-submitted questions in the same style as What If.A sequel, What If? 2: Additional Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions, was published in September 2022. Radioactivity visualization In response to concerns about the radioactivity released by the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in 2011, and to remedy what he described as "confusing" reporting on radiation levels in the media, Munroe created a radiation chart of comparative radiation exposure levels. The chart was rapidly adopted by print and online journalists in several countries, including being linked to by online writers for The Guardian, and The New York Times. As a result of requests for permission to reprint the chart and to translate it into Japanese, Munroe placed it in the public domain, but requested that his non-expert status be clearly stated in any reprinting.Munroe published an xkcd-style comic on scientific publishing and open access in Science in October 2013. Thing Explainer Munroe's book Thing Explainer, announced in May 2015 and published later that year, explains concepts using only the 1,000 most common English words. The book's publisher, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, saw these illustrations as potentially useful for textbooks, and announced in March 2016 that the next editions of their high-school-level chemistry, biology, and physics textbooks will include selected drawings and accompanying text from Thing Explainer. How To In February 2019, Munroe announced his next book, How To, which was released in September of that year. The book deals with everyday problems by using physics to find absurd, and generally extreme, solutions to them. YouTube On 31st August 2023, Munroe created a YouTube channel called xkcd's What If?, where he first uploaded on 29th November of the same year. On the channel Munroe answers questions fr.... Discover the Randall Munroe popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Randall Munroe books.

Best Seller Randall Munroe Books of 2024

  • Everyday Amazing synopsis, comments

    Everyday Amazing

    Beatrice the Biologist

    Like fan mail addressed to the natural world, Everyday Amazing is filled with uplifting and interesting musings on science from Beatrice the Biologist. Beatrice the Biologist is an...

  • No idea - was wir noch nicht wissen synopsis, comments

    No idea - was wir noch nicht wissen

    Jorge Cham & Daniel Whiteson

    Eine unterhaltsame Reise durch die Rätsel des UniversumsDas Wissen der Menschheit über das Universum ist voller Löcher. Und dabei handelt es sich nicht um kleine Lücken, sondern um...

  • The Periodic Table synopsis, comments

    The Periodic Table

    Paul Parsons & Gail Dixon

    The Periodic Table is one of the most recognizable images in science and in our culture. Its 118 elements make up everything on our planet and in the entire universe. But how many...

  • Asap SCIENCE synopsis, comments

    Asap SCIENCE

    Mitchell Moffit

    From the creators of the wildly popular and seriously scientific YouTube channel, AsapSCIENCE, comes entertaining, irreverent, and totally accessible answers to the questions you n...

  • The Mice Who Sing For Sex synopsis, comments

    The Mice Who Sing For Sex

    Lliana Bird & Jack Lewis

    Lliana Bird and Dr Jack Lewis tackle the strange and surreal phenomena from the depths of the oceans to the limits of the far flung universe; the dark corners of your laundry baske...

  • The British Caricature and Satire of Napoleon synopsis, comments

    The British Caricature and Satire of Napoleon

    John Ashton

    This book is not intended to be a History of Napoleon the First, but simply to reproduce the bulk of the Caricatures and Satires published in England on our great enemy, with as mu...

  • Maths Hacks synopsis, comments

    Maths Hacks

    Richard Cochrane

    Everything you need to know about 100 key mathematical concepts condensed into easytounderstand sound bites designed to stick in your memory and give you an instant grasp of the co...

  • Time synopsis, comments

    Time

    Colin Stuart

    'A gripping exploration of one of the most fundamental, but also perplexing aspects of existence.' PROF. LEWIS DARTNELL, author of Origins'Such an enjoyable read...full of delightf...

  • Gamish synopsis, comments

    Gamish

    Edward Ross

    Shortlisted for the British Book Design and Production Award for Graphic Novels'A love letter to gaming in all its forms from board games, to roleplay, to virtual reality and vide...

  • Spurious Correlations synopsis, comments

    Spurious Correlations

    Tyler Vigen

    "Spurious Correlations ... is the most fun you'll ever have with graphs." Bustle Military intelligence analyst and Harvard Law student Tyler Vigen illustrates the golden rule that...

  • How to Make a Tornado synopsis, comments

    How to Make a Tornado

    New Scientist

    Science tells us grand things about the universe: how fast light travels, and why stones fall to earth. But scientific endeavour goes far beyond these obvious foundations. There ar...

  • Hot Mess synopsis, comments

    Hot Mess

    Matt Winning

    'A very funny, important and only moderately terrifying clarion call of a book' Adam Kay'HOT MESS provides loads of laughs about "the climate situation" and will position you at...

  • Penguin Pocket Jokes synopsis, comments

    Penguin Pocket Jokes

    David Pickering

    Have you heard the one about the man who walked into a bar? (Ouch!)... Penguin Pocket Jokes is essential (and hilarious) reading for anyone searching for the perfect joke. Whether ...

  • Mehr als nur Atome synopsis, comments

    Mehr als nur Atome

    Sabine Hossenfelder

    Das neue Buch der renommierten Physikerin und Autorin (»Das hässliche Universum«) erklärt unterhaltsam und anschaulich, was die moderne Physik über die großen Fragen des Lebens sag...

  • Benny the Blue Whale synopsis, comments

    Benny the Blue Whale

    Andy Stanton

    AI is changing the world at frightening speed. A bestselling author decides to find out more…‘Something profound and utterly brilliant is going on… hilarious.’ THE TIMESIs ChatGPT ...

  • Daft Wee Stories synopsis, comments

    Daft Wee Stories

    Limmy

    DAFT WEE STORIES is Limmy’s first book.It is a collection of stories.There are short stories. There are longer stories. There are stupid stories. There are thoughtful stories. Ther...

  • How to be British synopsis, comments

    How to be British

    Tim Benson

    Not sure why everyone keeps talking about the weather?Can’t tell your Earl Grey from your English breakfast?Feeling a wobble in your stiff upper lip?It sounds like you need a crash...

  • Weirdest Maths synopsis, comments

    Weirdest Maths

    David Darling & Agnijo Banerjee

    Maths is everywhere, in everything. It’s in the finest margins of modern sport. It’s in the electrical pulses of our hearts and the flight of every bird. It is our key to secret me...

  • For the Love of Physics synopsis, comments

    For the Love of Physics

    Walter Lewin

    “YOU HAVE CHANGED MY LIFE” is a common refrain in the emails Walter Lewin receives daily from fans who have been enthralled by his worldfamous video lectures about the wonders of p...

  • The Element in the Room synopsis, comments

    The Element in the Room

    Helen Arney & Steve Mould

    'Made me go Hydrogen Argon, Hydrogen Argon, Hydrogen Argon.' Rufus HoundAs featured in Best stockingfiller books of 2017 The Guardian'Witty and clever writing, every topic is enga...

  • The Trust Manifesto synopsis, comments

    The Trust Manifesto

    Damian Bradfield

    From the moment we wake up and unlock our phones, we're producing data. We offer up our unique fingerprint to the online world, scan our route to work, listen to a guided meditatio...

  • How to Fossilise Your Hamster synopsis, comments

    How to Fossilise Your Hamster

    New Scientist

    How can you measure the speed of light with chocolate and a microwave? Why do yoyos yoyo? Why does urine smell so peculiar after eating asparagus (includes helpful recipe)? How lon...

  • Hyperbole and a Half synopsis, comments

    Hyperbole and a Half

    Allie Brosh

    #1 New York Times Bestseller “Funny and smart as hell” (Bill Gates), Allie Brosh’s Hyperbole and a Half showcases her unique voice, leaping wit, and her ability to capture complex ...

  • Does Anything Eat Wasps synopsis, comments

    Does Anything Eat Wasps

    New Scientist

    Every year, readers send in thousands of questions to New Scientist, the world's bestselling science weekly, in the hope that the answers to them will be given in the 'Last Word' c...

  • The Science of Why 2 synopsis, comments

    The Science of Why 2

    Jay Ingram

    An allnew volume of science questions to delight, entertain, and inform readers of all ages, from bestselling author Jay Ingram.Bestselling author and commentator Jay Ingram is bac...

  • Wie bastel ich mir einen Zombie synopsis, comments

    Wie bastel ich mir einen Zombie

    Frank Swain

    Seit tausenden von Jahren versuchen wir Mittel und Wege zu finden, Körper und Geist unserer Mitmenschen zu beeinflussen und zu kontrollieren. Von giftigem Honig, der ganze Armeen n...

  • English Caricature and Satire on Napoleon I synopsis, comments

    English Caricature and Satire on Napoleon I

    John Ashton

    This book is not intended to be a History of Napoleon the First, but simply to reproduce the bulk of the Caricatures and Satires published in England on our great enemy, with as mu...

  • The Maths Behind... synopsis, comments

    The Maths Behind...

    Colin Beveridge

    The Maths Behind over 60 everyday phenomena. Have you ever wondered why traffic jams often turn out to have no cause when you get to the end of the queue? There's a mathematical ex...

  • Solutions and Other Problems synopsis, comments

    Solutions and Other Problems

    Allie Brosh

    INSTANT #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLERFor the first time in seven years, Allie Broshbeloved author and artist of the extraordinary #1 New York Times bestseller Hyperbole and a Halfre...

  • How to Slay a Dragon synopsis, comments

    How to Slay a Dragon

    Cait Stevenson

    Grab your magical sword and take the place of your favorite fantasy character with this fun and historically accurate howto guide to solving epic quests.What should you ask a magic...

  • Planet der Algorithmen synopsis, comments

    Planet der Algorithmen

    Sebastian Stiller

    Algorithmen: Die wichtigste Denkweise unserer Zeit unterhaltsam erklärt.Ob Suchmaschine, Navigationssystem, Datensicherheit, OnlineDating oder Studienplatzvergabe – Algorithmen si...

  • The Science of Why synopsis, comments

    The Science of Why

    Jay Ingram

    Ever wonder why onions make you cry? Or why lizards do pushups? Or why leaves change color in the fall?Don’t worry, you’re not alone. Acclaimed science writer and broadcaster Jay I...

  • The Science of Why, Volume 4 synopsis, comments

    The Science of Why, Volume 4

    Jay Ingram

    Back by popular demand: a brandnew volume of science queries, quirks, and quandaries in the megabestselling Science of Why series, sure to enlighten and entertain readers of all ag...