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.

Always Use Original Product

Always Use Original Product
When your mouse looks like it survived the Jurassic period and you're pairing it with a pristine Microsoft keyboard. Someone clearly has their priorities sorted—invest in the keyboard for those epic typing sessions, but the mouse? Nah, that ancient potato-shaped relic held together by prayers and dust will do just fine. The contrast here is chef's kiss: one peripheral living its best life in 2024, the other literally decomposing on your desk. But hey, if it still clicks, it ships. Why waste money on a new mouse when you can just... suffer? Peak developer energy right here—we'll optimize our code to perfection but won't replace hardware that looks like an archaeological find.

Thank You Lenovo

Thank You Lenovo
Nothing brings people together quite like mutual suffering, and boy does Windows 11 23H2 deliver on that front! Your fancy Microsoft desktop with its shiny new update? Struggling. Your trusty Lenovo laptop running the same cursed version? Also struggling. But at least they're struggling TOGETHER. It's basically a support group where everyone's crying about the same bugs, performance issues, and mysterious crashes. Who needs compatibility when you can have solidarity? Lenovo really said "we're all going down with this ship" and honestly? Respect. The real MVPs are the laptop manufacturers who ensure that when Microsoft drops a problematic update, NOBODY escapes unscathed. Democracy at its finest! 💀

Not A 5090 But Thanks Mom

Not A 5090 But Thanks Mom
When you ask for the latest gaming GPU but mom comes through with a $10,000 professional workstation card instead. The RTX 6000 is literally more expensive and powerful than the 5090, but gamers gonna game and nothing else matters. It's like asking for a sports car and getting a Lamborghini tractor—technically superior engineering, but where's the street cred? The Blackwell architecture RTX 6000 is an absolute beast for AI training, 3D rendering, and professional workloads, but you can't exactly flex it in your Discord gaming setup channel. Mom basically handed you the keys to a data center and you're upset you can't run Cyberpunk at 500fps.

Well, I Guess I Have My Kids House Deposit Sorted!

Well, I Guess I Have My Kids House Deposit Sorted!
Someone's hoarding a box full of old RAM sticks like they're vintage Pokémon cards, convinced they're sitting on a goldmine. Spoiler alert: DDR2 and DDR3 RAM from 2008 isn't exactly fetching Bitcoin prices on eBay. That Samsung 4GB stick? Worth about as much as a fancy coffee. Maybe two if you find someone desperate. The delusion is real though. We've all been there—keeping obsolete hardware because "it might be worth something someday" or "I could use it for a project." Narrator: They never did. Meanwhile, you're one drawer away from becoming a tech hoarder with a garage full of IDE cables and VGA adapters. Fun fact: The entire box is probably worth less than a single modern 32GB DDR5 stick. But hey, at least you can build a really inefficient space heater by running all those sticks simultaneously in some Frankenstein build.

Old News But Made A Meme

Old News But Made A Meme
NVIDIA really said "you know what, let's bring back the 3060" ten days after discontinuing the 5070 Ti. The 3060 got resurrected while the 5070 Ti is getting a proper burial. Talk about product lineup chaos. The funeral meme format captures it perfectly—someone's mourning the RTX 5070 Ti that barely had a chance to exist in production, while casually presenting the RTX 3060 like it's the guest of honor at its own wake. Nothing says "strategic product planning" quite like killing off your new card and zombie-walking your old budget king back into the lineup. GPU manufacturers and their discontinuation schedules remain undefeated in creating confusion. At least the 3060 gets another lap around the track.

Saw This Major Monitor Post And Thought My Setup Deserves An Extra Spot

Saw This Major Monitor Post And Thought My Setup Deserves An Extra Spot
When you're working on a serious project and decide that three monitors just isn't enough screen real estate. Left monitor: the serious work version. Middle monitor: the "let me zoom in and pretend I'm being productive" version. Right monitor: when your code finally compiles and you've lost your damn mind. The progression from intimidating dragon to derpy dragon with googly eyes and its tongue out is basically the journey every developer goes through during a coding session. You start off fierce and focused, then by hour 6 you're just happy to be alive and your brain has turned to mush. Also, respect for actually using all that screen space instead of just having Stack Overflow tabs open on two of them like the rest of us.

I Mean 64 Gigs Is 64 Gigs

I Mean 64 Gigs Is 64 Gigs
The moment you realize RAM prices have gotten so ridiculous that you're genuinely considering whether Mr. Whiskers is worth more as a companion or as a down payment on that 64GB upgrade. Chrome's got 47 tabs open, Docker's eating memory like it's an all-you-can-eat buffet, and your IDE is basically running a small country's worth of processes. The cat's looking at you with those big eyes, but you're looking at him calculating his resale value in DDR5 sticks. We've all been there—well, maybe not the cat-selling part, but definitely that internal debate where you're pricing out RAM upgrades versus literally anything else in your life. Priorities, right?

What This Sub Tells Me I Need To Buy

What This Sub Tells Me I Need To Buy
The GPU arms race has officially jumped the shark. Someone took the absurdity of tech enthusiasts constantly recommending overkill hardware and ran with it—literally creating a graphics card with approximately 25+ fans and a model number that looks like someone fell asleep on the 9 key. The "ROG ASTRAL PROTOS" (because we definitely needed another ROG variant) features the legendary "ASUS 999999999999990 Ti" paired with the "RTX 100010009 Ti Super Ultra Pro Pro Max Mega Hyper"—a naming scheme that perfectly captures how NVIDIA and Apple had a baby and it inherited the worst traits from both parents. The "billion pt vram" spec is *chef's kiss*—because why stop at terabytes when you can measure your VRAM in petabytes? At this point, you could probably run Crysis, host the entire internet, and simulate the universe simultaneously. But hey, according to Reddit, anything less and you're basically coding on a potato. Can't run "Hello World" without ray tracing these days.

End Of Life For A Few Nvidia Models

End Of Life For A Few Nvidia Models
Nothing says "planned obsolescence" quite like Nvidia casually yeeting perfectly good GPUs into the abyss. These RTX 50-series cards barely had time to collect dust before Nvidia decided they're done supporting them. Classic tech giant move—drop support faster than you can say "driver update." For developers and ML engineers who just dropped a kidney's worth of cash on these cards, watching Nvidia toss them aside like yesterday's garbage hits different. You're still paying off the credit card, and they're already pretending your hardware doesn't exist. The Toy Story format captures that exact moment when you realize your expensive hardware investment just became a very pricey paperweight. Woody's desperate plea perfectly mirrors every dev's internal screaming when their production server's GPU suddenly becomes unsupported legacy hardware.

We All Dreamed About Making Our Own OS At Some Point…

We All Dreamed About Making Our Own OS At Some Point…
The kid asks Santa for an OS built with HTML, and Santa's about to yeet them out the window. Classic misunderstanding of what an operating system actually is versus what HTML does. HTML is a markup language for structuring web content—it literally just tells browsers "hey, this is a heading, this is a paragraph, make this text bold." You can't build an OS with it any more than you could build a car engine out of Post-it notes. Building a real OS requires low-level languages like C, C++, or Rust, direct hardware interaction, memory management, process scheduling, and a whole lot of kernel-level wizardry. Meanwhile HTML is just sitting there like "I can make a div with rounded corners!" The gap between these two concepts is so vast that Santa's violent reaction is completely justified. Fun fact: Electron apps basically do wrap HTML/CSS/JS in what feels like a mini-OS footprint (looking at you, Slack and Discord eating 2GB of RAM), but that's still running on top of an actual operating system doing the heavy lifting.

What Was The Craziest "If It Works, Don't Touch It" Projects Of Your Life

What Was The Craziest "If It Works, Don't Touch It" Projects Of Your Life
You know that legacy codebase held together by duct tape, prayers, and a single try-catch block? Yeah, this is its physical manifestation. Someone's got a VGA-to-PS/2 adapter chained to what looks like a USB converter, all dangling precariously from the back of a machine that's probably running critical production systems. The "there is always a WAY" caption captures that beautiful moment when you realize your Frankenstein solution actually works, and now you're too terrified to touch it. Nobody knows why it works. Nobody WANTS to know. The documentation is just a sticky note that says "DON'T UNPLUG." It's been running for 847 days straight. The company's entire billing system depends on it. And if you breathe on it wrong, the whole thing collapses like a poorly written recursive function without a base case.

In Light Of The Recent Jensen Huang Complaint And His Contributions To The Current State Of Tech

In Light Of The Recent Jensen Huang Complaint And His Contributions To The Current State Of Tech
Jensen Huang really out here catching strays for making GPUs so expensive that Microsoft and Nvidia became household names for draining corporate budgets. But you know what? The man deserves credit where credit is due. He didn't just create a tech company—he created "Microslop Nshitia," the beautiful merger of bloated software and overpriced hardware that perfectly encapsulates modern tech. Your AI model needs 8 H100s to run? That'll be the GDP of a small nation, thanks. Want to train anything? Better get that enterprise license from Microsoft Azure while you're at it. It's the perfect ecosystem: Microsoft provides the cloud infrastructure to burn money, and Nvidia provides the GPUs to set that money on fire even faster. The Drake meme format really captures the vibe—rejecting the individual corporate overlords but fully embracing their unholy alliance. Because if you're gonna get fleeced, might as well get fleeced by the dream team.