Random Memes

More chaotic than your lab after a failed experiment

When Engineering Problems Get Dark

When Engineering Problems Get Dark
Engineering professors really know how to rip your heart out with those example problems! One minute you're calculating transformer loads, the next you're visualizing a puppy slaughterhouse powered by 1500 kVA. Nothing says "I'm prepared for the real world" like solving power factor triangles while emotionally scarred. The professor probably thinks they're being "practical" with "real-world applications," but c'mon—couldn't they have picked literally ANY other industry? Even a nuclear weapons facility would feel less disturbing. Electrical engineering: where the math is complex but the emotional damage is very, very real.

Why I Like Physics More Than Chemistry

Why I Like Physics More Than Chemistry
The eternal battle between physics and chemistry laid bare! On the left, we have the muscular "Physicist Doge" confidently proclaiming the universality of physical laws—clean, elegant, and absolute. Meanwhile, the sad little "Chemist Doge" struggles with a field where only two elements follow the rules while the other 116 are just doing whatever they want. This is basically why physicists strut around campus with their elegant equations while chemists are in the lab wearing hazmat suits and muttering "well, it should work this time." Physics gives you the universe in a neat package; chemistry gives you exceptions, explosions, and existential crises.

Science Vs Social Science

Science Vs Social Science

Vampire-Powered Piston Engine

Vampire-Powered Piston Engine
Finally, a renewable energy solution with real bite ! The vampire-powered piston engine represents the perfect marriage of mythological exploitation and thermodynamic principles. Spray holy water, vampire turns to dust (compression stroke), inject blood, vampire regenerates (power stroke). It's essentially a biological Stirling engine with fangs. The beauty is in the details—"piston knock" caused by unmatched vampire regeneration rates is a legitimate engineering concern. And the claim that vampires are "universally available" might be the most optimistic assumption in renewable energy research I've encountered in my 40 years of teaching. Who needs solar panels when you've got the undead? Just don't tell the ethics committee about your fuel source.

Bacteriophage Meets Animal Cell

Bacteriophage Meets Animal Cell
When your dating profiles don't match! The bacteriophage (that spider-looking virus with the geometric head) is specialized to inject its DNA into bacteria, but here it's getting rejected by an animal cell that's basically saying "wrong port, buddy!" It's like showing up to a USB-C party with your old-school VGA connector. Bacteriophages have these amazing lock-and-key mechanisms to dock onto bacterial cells, but animal cells? Completely different security system! The poor phage is getting the cellular equivalent of "new phone, who dis?"

In Every Second, Their Duties Is The One Thing

In Every Second, Their Duties Is The One Thing
Content That is just a motor protein which transports information about this meme in your bram. continue scrolling

The Engineering Paradox

The Engineering Paradox
Engineers will solve seemingly impossible design challenges with laser focus and precision (top panel), but ask them to complete basic paperwork like signing a drawing and suddenly they transform into complete disasters (bottom panel). The duality of the engineering brain - capable of calculating stress tensors in their sleep but utterly defeated by administrative tasks. The signature can wait until after they've redesigned that impossible cantilever system, thank you very much.

Aquatic Life When Literally Anything Interesting Happens To The Climate

Aquatic Life When Literally Anything Interesting Happens To The Climate
Fish skeleton in a dried-up landscape? Talk about the ultimate "I'm not swimming in that" moment! This dark comedy masterpiece shows what happens when marine creatures don't get the climate change memo fast enough. Evolution takes millions of years, but catastrophic climate shifts? Those happen in a geological blink. That fish clearly missed the "Download Weather App" prompt on its prehistoric smartphone. Next time you complain about the weather, remember this poor fellow who literally brought bones to a drought fight.

Oh So You're An Engineer?

Oh So You're An Engineer?
The moment you learn Ohm's Law and suddenly your family thinks you can resurrect their decade-old washing machine from the dead! Electrical Engineering students know the pain—one minute you're calculating circuit impedance, the next you're expected to be some appliance necromancer with a multimeter wand. Parents don't realize that fixing their washing machine is like asking a first-year med student to perform brain surgery... with a spoon! *frantically flips through textbook* "Chapter 1: How to avoid electrocution" isn't quite enough preparation for this family tech support role!

It's Recursion All The Way Down

It's Recursion All The Way Down
The mathematical rabbit hole goes DEEP with this one! The cat's expression of existential horror perfectly matches what happens when you realize the Gamma function is just factorials with extra steps, which are themselves just multiplication with extra steps, which is just addition with extra steps... 🤯 That equation at the bottom? It's the mathematical equivalent of opening a Russian nesting doll only to find ANOTHER Russian nesting doll. No wonder the cat looks like it's questioning its entire existence! Mathematical inception at its finest!

Grignard Reagent Tackles The Carbonyl Group

Grignard Reagent Tackles The Carbonyl Group
Chemistry nerds, rejoice! The soccer field has transformed into an organic chemistry reaction! The player in red is sporting the Grignard reagent (RMgCl) while attempting to tackle the player in green who's carrying a ketone or aldehyde (R-C=O-R'). Just like in the lab, this Grignard is aggressively attacking that carbonyl group! The beautiful nucleophilic addition we all know and love from Organic Chem 101, except with more shin guards and significantly more sweating. Wonder if they'll form a tertiary alcohol by the end of the match? The referee might need to check for proper reaction conditions - dry ether and absence of water required!

Chemically Friendzoned: NaH BrO

Chemically Friendzoned: NaH BrO
Chemistry nerds have the best rejection techniques! When asked to be someone's girlfriend, she responds with "Sodium Hydride Hypobromite" which chemically translates to "NaH BrO" - sounding exactly like "Nah Bro" when spoken aloud. It's the perfect chemical compound rejection that flies over the clueless guy's head. Next-level periodic table humor that transforms getting friendzoned into a brilliant display of scientific wit. Even rejections are better with chemical formulas!