TheBOB was a commercial artists in Canada, above the Niagra Falls part of the country. He started doing art with QBasic back in the early 1990's. If the technique he used seems a bit antiquated for QB64, that's why. Still his creations were legendary enough for Rob to include a good deal of his projects in the QB64 Sample Programs folder. Bob hasn't programmed a full project in QB64 before this. I feel like his last project was probably around 10 to 15 years ago; so I think it's very cool something renewed his interest in coding.
As far as other QB64 forums go, yes there are a few besides this one. The one I linked to above is the original QBasic Forum, which is now on Tapatalk, but used to be hosted on the late, great Network 54. This was the QB forum I joined in the early 1990's, and I became the owner of after the previous owner, Mac, passed away in the summer of 2008.
The QBasic Forum has quite a history. For instance, it was the original home of Rob's QB64 project. I had to talk Mac into making a sub-forum for Rob, because at the time, about a half a dozen forum "regulars" claimed they were working on a compiler to get QB working again on Windows Vista and 32-bit XP. Mac had read enough of these posts to realize it was too big of a task and no one was really going to complete such an involved and complicated project. For whatever reason, I got a different impression when I read Rob's posts. It took a bit of doing, but Mac eventually gave in, and created a QB64 sub-forum at the QBasic Forum. Rob did complete the project, and then created an independent forum for it, [abandoned, outdated and now likely malicious qb64 dot net website - don’t go there].
I'm thrilled TheBOB is still active. He always used coding as a means to create his art projects. In other words the art trumped the coding. The puzzle was created from a painting he created of the actress/model, prior to coding it into a jigsaw puzzle. I'd love to see him join here, but I think he considers The QBasic Forum his home. After all, he's an ol' timer like me, I believe in his early 70's.
Pete