Internet protocols Memes

Posts tagged with Internet protocols

IP Over Avian Carriers: Packet Loss

IP Over Avian Carriers: Packet Loss
Ah, the infamous RFC 1149 (IP over Avian Carriers) - the networking protocol we never needed but definitely deserved. Some network engineer looked at carrier pigeons and thought "yeah, that's reliable infrastructure." The punchline here is brutal - a dead bird labeled as "packet loss." When your ping times are measured in hours and your data packets can be taken out by neighborhood cats, maybe fiber optic isn't so bad after all. Still better uptime than some cloud providers I've worked with though.

It's 2025: Microsoft's Terrifying GitHub Request

It's 2025: Microsoft's Terrifying GitHub Request
The year is 2025. Microsoft has fully absorbed GitHub, and the dystopian nightmare begins. GitHub users cower in fear as Microsoft whispers "Come closer..." only to drop the bombshell: "I NEED YOU TO ADD IPV6 SUPPORT TO GITHUB." It's the ultimate plot twist! After all the fears of Microsoft injecting telemetry, ads, or subscription tiers into GitHub, they're just desperately trying to drag their acquisition into modern networking standards. Still running on legacy IPv4 in 2025? That's the real horror story! The internet ran out of IPv4 addresses years ago, but GitHub's still clinging to them like SpongeBob to his spatula.

Lost Packet Paperwork Hell

Lost Packet Paperwork Hell
Ah, bureaucracy has finally reached the network layer! This brilliant form imagines what would happen if our digital packets needed the same paperwork as our physical ones. "Print legibly and press hard. You are making up to 255 copies." Because nothing says efficient data transfer like carbon copy paperwork. I particularly love the "this bit intentionally left blank" option - as if packets are now subject to the same ridiculous government form logic that plagues humans. Next thing you know, UDP packets will need to take a number and TCP packets will need to schedule three-way handshakes weeks in advance. Remember: if your packet gets lost in transit, please fill out form RFC2460 in triplicate and expect a response in 4-6 business weeks.

Never Gonna Give You Up, OSI Style

Never Gonna Give You Up, OSI Style
The classic "passing notes in class" scenario gets a brilliant networking twist! This meme shows how data packets travel through the OSI model layers, from Application to Physical and back again—only for the recipient to discover they've been Rick Rolled at the end. It's basically TCP/IP's version of that friend who spent 20 minutes crafting an elaborate joke just to deliver a terrible punchline. The network went through all that trouble—encapsulation, transmission, decapsulation—just to send you a Rick Astley meme. Congrats, you've been Rick Rolled at the packet level. Your data plan died for this.