Atla Comic Dub -

Fan-produced videos where voice actors (often from the fan community) read the dialogue from Avatar comics (e.g., The Promise, The Search, The Rift, Smoke and Shadow, North and South, Imbalance) over scanned or edited comic panels. They’re not official—no professional cast involvement.

Absolutely.

Whether you are a nostalgic millennial who grew up with the show or a Gen Z fan who just finished their first watch on Netflix, the ATLA comic dub is the essential bridge to new content.

Find a dark room, put on some good headphones, and search for a high-quality dub of The Search. You will forget you are looking at static pages. You will hear the roar of fire, the whisper of wind, and the breaking of Zuko’s voice as he confronts his past.

The page may hold the words, but only the ATLA comic dub makes the world breathe again.


Further Reading:

Avatar: The Last Airbender (ATLA) is a fan-made or semi-professional production where voice actors record dialogue over the panels of the official Avatar graphic novels atla comic dub

. Since the original animated series ended in 2008, these dubs serve as a "Season 4" for fans who want to experience the continuing stories of Aang and Zuko with full audio immersion. Popular Stories Adapted into Comic Dubs

The most common stories you'll find dubbed on platforms like The Promise

: Picks up immediately after the show's finale. It follows Aang and Zuko as they struggle to dismantle Fire Nation colonies in the Earth Kingdom, testing their new friendship to the breaking point. The Search

: Finally answers the long-standing mystery of what happened to Zuko's mother, Ursa. Many fans consider this the most "essential" story to watch in dub format.

: Focuses on Toph as she reconnects with her past and deals with the industrialization of the world, leading into the technological era of The Legend of Korra Katara and the Pirate's Silver

: A standalone story where Katara gets separated from the group and must lead a crew of pirates to safety. Why These Dubs Are "Useful" for Fans Bridging the Gap Fan-produced videos where voice actors (often from the

: They provide a direct narrative link between the original series and The Legend of Korra , explaining the origins of Republic City. Character Resolution

: They offer closure for arcs that the TV show left open, particularly regarding Zuko's family and Aang’s responsibility as the last Airbender. Accessibility

: For fans who find reading static comics difficult or less engaging, motion comic dubs

add music, sound effects, and voice acting that mimic the show's original atmosphere. Where to Find Them

While there are many independent creators, notable projects include:

Graphic Novel Review: Avatar - The Last Airbender: The Promise Further Reading:

If you want to dive into the world of ATLA dubs, skip the low-effort text-to-speech videos. Here is your starter pack:

While the original Avatar: The Last Airbender series ended with peace, the comics revealed the difficult reality of that peace: the friction of Fire Nation colonies in the Earth Kingdom, the mystery of Zuko’s mother, and Toph’s struggle with her past.

The Lost Scrolls brings these essential canonical stories to life with a high-production "Dub" style—utilizing the original voice cast (where possible) and a dynamic, semi-animated visual style that respects the source material while adding cinematic flair.

| Channel | Specialty | |--------|-----------| | Oliver’s Echo | High emotion, book-accurate pacing. | | AVoiceCompany | Large cast, cinematic editing. | | CRProductionz | Fast releases, covers smaller comics like Rebound. | | Sokka’s Voice | Solo VA doing all voices (surprisingly good). |


Recently, some creators have begun using AI voice cloning to replicate the original actors (Grey DeLisle for Azula, Dante Basco for Zuko). While these ATLA comic dubs sound hyper-realistic, they exist in a legal gray area regarding copyright and the right of publicity. Most ethical creators prefer sound-alike human actors over AI replicas.

7 Kommentare zu „Ubuntu MATE 16.04 für den Raspberry Pi“

  1. Danke für diese Vorstellung.

    „Die Image-Datei der finalen Version von Ubuntu MATE 16.04 ist unglücklich gewählt: Sie beträgt ca. 8 GByte, ist aber gerade um ein paar MByte größer als viele handelsüblichen 8-GByte-Karten“

    vielleicht war das Absicht weil die 8GB-Karte ja dann voll ist und man nichts mehr drauf installieren kann…?

  2. läuft Owncloud 9 auch schon auf Ubuntu 16.04 Mate auf Raspberry Pi 2?
    Ich hab gesehen es ist in dem ebook Ubuntu 16.04 beschrieben, aber ich vermute es ist für den PC.
    Danke.

  3. /var auf eine USB-Platte auszulagern wirkt bei einem Raspi geradezu Wunder und erhöht zu dem die Lebensdauer der SD-Card ganz erheblich… in var finden die fast alle Schreibvorgänge statt – und gerade die bremsen mit einer SD-Card ganz heftig. Gerade bei LAMPP Anwendungen wie owncloud oder tt rss ist der Effekt frapierend, da auch die mysql-Daten in var liegen
    Alternativ und noch besser natürlich das gesamte OS auf einer USB-HD zu haben … ist aber aufwendiger zu konfigurieren – eine SD-Card wird trotzdem benötigt. Bisher kann der Raspi nicht direkt von USB booten

  4. Die Schreibprozesse auf die SD-Karte sind es, die das System ins stocken bringen. Ich vermute das irgendwo in dem Schreibprozess ein „sync“ stattfindet. Und dann kommt es zu „Mikrorucklern“.

    Samsung hat um dem zu begegnen den ROW-IO-Scheduler geschrieben. ROW steht für „Read Over Write“, also Lesen vor Schreiben bevorzugen.

    Der ist allerdings für Android und eine bestimmte Kernel version geschrieben worden. Er müsste daher angepasst werden. Ich hab mich mal daran versucht, hatte aber so meine Probleme aus den Fehlermeldungen schlau zu werden bzw. zu beheben.

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