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.

More Ports

More Ports
Tech companies spent years convincing us that "courage" means removing every port from our devices and forcing us to buy $40 dongles. Meanwhile, we're sitting here with 47 USB devices, 3 monitors, an ethernet cable, and a desperate need for more than two USB-C ports that share bandwidth like it's a communist utopia. The bottom panel shows what actual professionals need—a motherboard I/O panel that looks like the cockpit of a Boeing 747. Multiple HDMI ports, a small army of USB ports in various flavors, and enough connectivity options to make a network engineer weep with joy. But nope, instead we get sleek aluminum rectangles with two ports and a prayer. The dongle industry thanks you for your sacrifice.

Me With ADHD And Cybersecurity Studies

Me With ADHD And Cybersecurity Studies
Trying to study cybersecurity with ADHD is like running a home lab with 47 browser tabs open, three VMs spinning, a Raspberry Pi cluster humming in the background, and somehow you're still on GitHub looking at Arduino projects instead of finishing that penetration testing course. You tell yourself you're "building a diverse skill set" but really you just saw a shiny Brave browser icon and now you're down a rabbit hole about privacy-focused DNS servers. The hardware graveyard of abandoned projects surrounding you? That's not clutter, that's "research infrastructure." Sure, you'll get back to studying cryptography... right after you set up this Arch Linux distro you definitely don't need.

Mind Your Behaviour Around Server Room

Mind Your Behaviour Around Server Room
Sysadmins don't mess around. You touch their servers without permission, you get the bat. Simple workplace safety guidelines, really. The sign treats unauthorized server access with the same severity as industrial machinery accidents, which honestly tracks. One wrong move in production and someone's getting fired—or apparently, beaten to death in a warehouse-style execution. The warning is clear: those racks contain everything keeping the business alive, and the person guarding them has been awake for 72 hours dealing with a Kubernetes cluster that won't stop crashing. They're not in a negotiating mood. Stay back, keep your hands to yourself, and maybe everyone survives the day.

Improvised GPU Holder, Can't Afford It

Improvised GPU Holder, Can't Afford It
When you drop $800 on a GPU but suddenly a $15 support bracket feels like financial irresponsibility. The solution? A butt plug. Because nothing says "I make excellent life choices" quite like repurposing adult toys as PC hardware support. GPU sag is real—these chonky graphics cards can bend your PCIe slot over time. But instead of buying an actual GPU brace, our hero here went full MacGyver mode with what appears to be a chrome-finished "personal massager" doing structural engineering work. The green base really ties the RGB aesthetic together though. Props for creativity, but imagine explaining this to the repair technician when you bring your rig in for service. "Yeah, it's load-bearing."

Logitech 4k Webcam

Logitech 4k Webcam
SUPPORT WORK FROM ANYWHERE WITH SYNC: Whether employees are in the office, at home, or somewhere else, Sync device management software helps everyone stay connected by letting you ensure their Logite…

Need An AI Update

Need An AI Update
Someone's kitchen knife has a USB port and is getting a firmware update. Yeah, you read that right. We've reached peak IoT absurdity where even your cutlery needs software patches. The knife is literally plugged into a laptop running what appears to be a firmware update interface with progress bars and everything. The joke here is the ridiculous over-engineering of everyday objects. Your knife doesn't need Bluetooth connectivity, cloud sync, or AI-powered cutting algorithms. But in 2024, manufacturers are slapping microchips into everything that doesn't move fast enough to escape. Next thing you know, your fork will require a subscription service and your spoon will need a security update to patch a zero-day vulnerability. The "just updating firmware" caption is chef's kiss because it treats this dystopian nightmare as completely normal. Like yeah, obviously you need to update your knife before dinner. Wouldn't want to chop vegetables on version 1.2.3 when 1.2.4 fixes critical slicing bugs.

Steam Controller 2.0

Steam Controller 2.0
Nothing says "gaming ecosystem" quite like watching a $99 controller instantly go out of stock, only to magically reappear on third-party marketplaces for triple the price. Steam sitting there like Switzerland, refusing to intervene while scalpers and actual gamers duke it out for hardware supremacy. The real kicker? Steam could probably implement bot detection or purchase limits, but instead they're just vibing while their inventory gets vacuumed up faster than a junior dev's confidence during their first code review. Meanwhile, PC gamers are left choosing between paying rent or owning a controller that'll probably be discontinued in 2 years anyway. At least the scalpers are using automated scripts to buy these things. That's technically programming, right?

If Not Corrupt Megacorporation, Why Corrupt Megacorporation-Shaped?

If Not Corrupt Megacorporation, Why Corrupt Megacorporation-Shaped?
The classic Peter Parker glasses meme but make it about tech companies with questionable ethics. NVIDIA and Palantir are the "respectable" choices - sure, NVIDIA's GPUs cost more than a used car and Palantir literally helps governments with surveillance, but at least they're established megacorps. Then you put on the glasses and suddenly see clearly: Arasaka from Cyberpunk 2077 (the fictional corpo that literally runs Japan and does human experimentation) and Militech (the other dystopian megacorp that starts wars for profit). The joke? They're the same picture. When your "real world" tech companies are indistinguishable from the deliberately evil corporations in a cyberpunk dystopia game, maybe it's time to question if we're living in the right timeline. The naming conventions, the logos, the vibes - it's all suspiciously corpo-dystopia-coded.

POV Of My CPU

POV Of My CPU
Your CPU sitting there following every instruction you meticulously wrote: load this, calculate that, branch here, store there. Then the moment it actually executes your code, you're staring at the output like it committed a crime. "Why are you doing this?" you ask, as if the CPU just went rogue and started making executive decisions. Buddy, it's doing exactly what you told it to do. The CPU doesn't have opinions or creativity—it's the most obedient employee you'll ever have. Maybe check your logic instead of gaslighting your hardware.

025 Gits Pink Bumper Sticker Window Vinyl Decal 5"

025 Gits Pink Bumper Sticker Window Vinyl Decal 5"

The Sound Of Motherboard Cracking

The Sound Of Motherboard Cracking
Installing a CPU cooler is basically choosing between two forms of torture: the primal terror of applying pressure to a $500 piece of silicon until you hear concerning cracks, or the slow death by a thousand paper cuts while wrestling with installation manuals that were clearly written by someone who hates humanity. That 24-pin power connector? It requires the grip strength of a Norse god and the faith of a saint. You're pushing down on your motherboard like you're trying to break through to another dimension, all while your brain screams "STOP YOU'RE BREAKING IT" even though that's literally how it's supposed to go in. The satisfying click comes right after the terrifying flex. Meanwhile, physical papers just... bend. No $2000 hardware casualties. No existential dread. Just a gentle crease and you're done. Revolutionary concept, really.

Chrome Is Pushing My Computer's RAM To Its Limits

Chrome Is Pushing My Computer's RAM To Its Limits
Your laptop is just vibing, minding its own business, running like a champ. Then Chrome decides to casually install some random 4GB AI model you absolutely did NOT consent to, and suddenly your machine is getting OBLITERATED like a school bus getting absolutely demolished by a freight train. The sheer AUDACITY of Chrome treating your RAM like it's an all-you-can-eat buffet while you're just trying to keep 47 tabs open for "research purposes." RIP to your laptop's will to live.

It's Already Out Of Stock And I'm Steamed!

It's Already Out Of Stock And I'm Steamed!
Steam controller sold out in an hour. "Sounds like Valve..." because Valve can't count to 3 and apparently can't stock products either. "Is out... of control." The triple pun here is doing more heavy lifting than Valve's inventory management team. We're talking about Steam (the platform), steamed (angry), Valve (the company), and out of control (the stock situation). This is what happens when a company famous for Half-Life 3 jokes tries to manufacture hardware. At least their pun game is stronger than their supply chain.

What Truly Makes You Happy

What Truly Makes You Happy
While hard drugs destroy lives and leave people looking like they've been through a zombie apocalypse, buying new PC parts has the exact opposite effect—it's literally rejuvenating. The before and after shots show someone going from dead inside to absolutely glowing with pure joy. There's something about unboxing that fresh GPU, installing more RAM, or upgrading to an NVMe SSD that hits different. It's the ultimate dopamine rush for tech enthusiasts. No intervention needed here, just a bigger budget and maybe a second mortgage for that RTX 4090.