Borg Memes

Posts tagged with Borg

Resistance Is Futile

Resistance Is Futile
Behold! The multimeter has spoken, and it's channeling its inner Borg! This Fluke multimeter is set to measure ohms (Ω) - which measures electrical resistance - but instead of showing a number, it's declaring resistance is "FUTILE." It's basically the electrical engineering equivalent of your toaster becoming sentient and threatening world domination. Next thing you know, your oscilloscope will be demanding human sacrifices and your soldering iron will start writing manifestos! 🤖⚡

Resistance Is Futile

Resistance Is Futile
Even electrical equipment has seen Star Trek! This multimeter is clearly a Borg fan, displaying "FUTILE" when set to measure resistance (ohms). The perfect inside joke for engineers who know the famous line "resistance is futile" from the show. Your circuit components might as well surrender and be assimilated at this point. Next time your project fails, just blame it on the multimeter's existential crisis.

Resistance Is Futile

Resistance Is Futile
The perfect crossover between Star Trek and electrical engineering doesn't exi-- That Fluke multimeter is set to measure ohms (Ω), which is the unit for electrical resistance. And there it is, displaying "FUTILE" instead of a number. Just like the Borg's famous catchphrase "resistance is futile," this multimeter has given up on measuring resistance altogether. Somewhere, a frustrated engineer is wondering if they've been assimilated into a collective of broken test equipment.

One Sixth Of Resistance Is Futile

One Sixth Of Resistance Is Futile
This is what happens when electrical engineers watch too much Star Trek. The meme brilliantly combines the Borg catchphrase "resistance is futile" with an actual electrical engineering joke. Those little striped components are resistors, and there are exactly 6 of them forming a cube. So one-sixth of the resistance... get it? Engineers spent 4 years in college just to make jokes this bad. Meanwhile, the Borg cube in the background reminds us that technology will eventually assimilate us all—probably while we're busy making terrible puns instead of preparing for the robot apocalypse.