Thriving on Vague Objectives
  "I think that idiot bosses are timeless, and as long as there are annoying people in the world, I won't run out of material."â€â€Scott Adams<BR><BR>  Dilbert and the gang are back for this 26th collection, <I>Thriving on Vague Objectives.</I><BR><BR>  Adams has his finger on the pulse of cubicle dwellers across the globe. No one delivers more laughs or captures the reality of the 9 to 5 worker better than Dilbert, Dogbert, Catbert, and a cast of stupefying office stereotypesâ€â€which is why there are millions of fans of the <I>Dilbert</I> comic strip.<BR><BR>  Dilbert is a techno-man stuck in a dead-end job (sound familiar?). Power-mad Dogbert strives to take over the world and enslave the humans. The most intelligent person in Dilbert's world is his trash collector, who knows everything about everything.<BR><BR>  Artist and creator Scott Adams started Dilbert as a doodle when he worked as a bank teller. He continued doodling when he was upgraded to a cubicle for a major telecommunications company. His boss (no telling if he was pointy-haired or not) suggested the name Dilbert. Adams is so dead-on accurate in his depictions of office life that he has been accused of spying on Corporate America.