Hardware Memes

Hardware: where software engineers go to discover that physical objects don't have ctrl+z. These memes celebrate the world of tangible computing, from the satisfaction of a perfect cable management setup to the horror of static electricity at exactly the wrong moment. If you've ever upgraded a PC only to create new bottlenecks, explained to non-technical people why more RAM won't fix their internet speed, or developed an emotional attachment to a specific keyboard, you'll find your tribe here. From the endless debate between PC and Mac to the special joy of finally affording that GPU you've been eyeing for months, this collection captures the unique blend of precision and chaos that is hardware.

Rip Ports

Rip Ports
Behold the tragic evolution of Apple's MacBook lineup, where each generation is blessed with FEWER ports than the last, like some kind of twisted minimalist nightmare. We went from a glorious buffet of USB-A, HDMI, Ethernet, Thunderbolt, SD card slots, and headphone jacks to... *checks notes* ...two measly USB-C ports. COURAGE, they called it. Meanwhile, developers are out here carrying around a dongle collection that rivals a janitor's keychain just to plug in a mouse and an external monitor simultaneously. The top MacBook is basically screaming "look what they took from you!" while flexing its port abundance like a bodybuilder showing off gains. RIP to the days when you could actually connect things to your laptop without needing a PhD in adapter logistics or a second mortgage for dongles.

I Don't Think It's The Monitor

I Don't Think It's The Monitor
When your screen is absolutely covered in dead pixels and artifacts but you're still desperately trying to convince yourself it's a GPU issue. Sure, buddy. Those random colored squares floating all over your display? Totally the graphics card. The denial is strong with this one. We've all been there—your monitor starts looking like a glitchy mess from a corrupted JPEG, but you'd rather blame literally any other component because replacing a monitor means admitting you need to spend money. "Maybe if I update my drivers..." No. Your monitor is dead. Accept it and move on.

Gaming Laptops Cam

Gaming Laptops Cam
So you're telling me I can drop $2500 on a gaming laptop with an RTX 4090, 64GB of RAM, and enough RGB to light up a small country, but the webcam looks like it was salvaged from a 2003 flip phone? Meanwhile, your basic smartphone has a camera setup so crispy it could shoot a Marvel movie, but it costs a FIFTH of the price? Make it make sense! Laptop manufacturers really said "let's put all our budget into making this thing run Cyberpunk at 240fps" and then slapped on a 720p potato cam as an afterthought. The disrespect is real. Your Zoom meetings deserve better than looking like a witness protection program interview.

It Will Happen With RAM Too I Guess

It Will Happen With RAM Too I Guess
Remember when we thought GPU prices would normalize after the crypto mining craze? Then the pandemic hit. Then scalpers. Then AI boom. Now it's 2026 and we're still out here refreshing Newegg like it's a Supreme drop, watching GPUs cost more than a used car. The optimism-to-despair pipeline is real, folks. And yeah, RAM prices follow the same cursed cycle—just when you think you can finally upgrade from 16GB to 32GB without selling a kidney, some factory in Taiwan catches fire or there's a "shortage" (read: price fixing) and boom, your wallet's crying again. The hardware market is basically Stockholm syndrome at this point.

I Feel Scammed

I Feel Scammed
You know you've been bamboozled when you realize the "Steam" in Steam Deck is just metaphorical branding and not actual Victorian-era steam power. Like, where's my coal-powered gaming rig? Where are the gears and pistons? I was promised steampunk aesthetics and all I got was this lousy lithium-ion battery. Patrick here perfectly captures that moment of existential disappointment when you discover your portable gaming device won't double as a miniature locomotive. The steampunk cityscape in the background really drives home what could have been—a glorious future where your FPS is measured in both frames per second AND boiler pressure. At least your electricity bill thanks Valve for their false advertising.

Wake Up, It's 2022 Again

Wake Up, It's 2022 Again
Oh FANTASTIC, because what we all desperately needed was a time machine back to the GPU apocalypse! Nvidia's out here resurrecting the RTX 3060 like it's some kind of zombie graphics card, while AMD's digging up the 5800X3D from its grave like "Hey bestie, miss me?" Nothing says "innovation" quite like both tech giants simultaneously deciding that moving BACKWARDS is the new forward. It's giving major "we ran out of ideas AND supply chain solutions" energy. Your wallet is screaming, your gaming rig is confused, and somewhere a scalper just woke up from a beautiful dream.

No Rgb Please

No Rgb Please
While the gaming industry collectively decided that RGB lighting equals performance gains (spoiler: it doesn't), some of us still believe in the radical concept of a computer that doesn't double as a nightclub. The top rig looks like it's hosting a rave for silicon chips with enough purple LEDs to guide aircraft, while the bottom one is just... a box. A beautiful, minimalist, "I'm here to compile code not blind my retinas" kind of box. There's something deeply satisfying about a sleek, monolithic case that whispers "professional" instead of screaming "LOOK AT MY GAMING SETUP MOM!" Plus, when you're debugging at 2 AM, the last thing you need is your PC reminding you that you're inside a cyberpunk fever dream. Function over flash, baby.

Heyy, You Guys Like My High School Graduation Cap?

Heyy, You Guys Like My High School Graduation Cap?
Kid literally made a graduation cap out of RAM sticks. You know what? I respect the commitment to the bit. Most students decorate their caps with glitter and inspirational quotes, but this absolute legend went "nah, I'm gonna need at least 128GB of memory to remember this day." The dedication to actually source that many RAM sticks and glue them together is honestly impressive. Though I gotta say, in today's market, that cap probably costs more than the degree itself. Hope they didn't use DDR5 because that's basically a down payment on a house at this point. Also, fun fact: with that much RAM on your head, you could theoretically run Chrome with like... 6 tabs open. Maybe 7 if you're feeling adventurous.

The 1080 Ti Really Was Nvidia's Greatest Mistake

The 1080 Ti Really Was Nvidia's Greatest Mistake
Nvidia accidentally created the immortal GPU. The GTX 1080 Ti was so absurdly well-built with 11GB of VRAM that people are still using it in 2024 for modern gaming and machine learning workloads. Released in 2017 for $699, it became the card that refused to die, meaning fewer people felt the need to upgrade to the overpriced 20-series and 30-series cards. From a business perspective, Nvidia basically shot themselves in the foot by making something too good—planned obsolescence who? The card's longevity became a running joke in the PC building community, with people clinging to their 1080 Tis like Gollum with the One Ring. Nvidia learned their lesson though: never again would they make a card this cost-effective and future-proof.

Is This True??

Is This True??
Vulkan developers looking at a rainbow triangle like it's a Michelin-star meal because they just spent 2000 lines of boilerplate setting up swap chains, render passes, and pipeline state objects. For context, Vulkan is a low-level graphics API that gives you complete control over the GPU, which means you're responsible for literally everything—memory management, synchronization, validation layers, the works. While other APIs let you draw a triangle in 50 lines, Vulkan makes you earn it by manually configuring things most people didn't know existed. The Carl Sagan quote is perfect here: rendering anything in Vulkan from scratch genuinely feels like you need to bootstrap reality itself first.

So Sad...

So Sad...
Welcome to PC gaming, where your wallet goes to die a slow, painful death. You think you're just upgrading to play games at higher FPS, but you're actually signing up for a subscription service to the hardware industry. RAM prices? Inflated. GPU prices? Astronomical (thanks, crypto miners and scalpers). Storage prices? Well, at least SSDs are cheaper than they used to be, but you'll need 2TB minimum because modern games are 150GB each now. The best part? You'll convince yourself it's a "one-time investment" and then spend the next five years chasing the dragon of 4K 144Hz ultra settings. Your console friends are out there playing games while you're refreshing Newegg at 3 AM waiting for GPU drops.

Why Is My Room A Sauna But The World Outside A Freezer?

Why Is My Room A Sauna But The World Outside A Freezer?
Your gaming rig isn't just rendering graphics—it's rendering your room uninhabitable. While the rest of the house enjoys arctic temperatures, your bedroom has become a thermal experiment gone wrong, courtesy of that beautiful black tower that doubles as a space heater. The best part? You're paying the electricity bill to simulate living inside a volcano while your family wonders why they need sweaters in summer. But hey, at least those frames are buttery smooth at 144fps while you're slowly being cooked alive. Fun fact: High-end gaming PCs can draw 500-800 watts under load—that's like running 8 old-school incandescent bulbs simultaneously. Your GPU alone can hit 90°C and still be considered "within normal operating temperatures." Normal for the surface of Mercury, maybe.