Random Memes

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The Mod Locked The Thread With A Single Comment 😭

The Mod Locked The Thread With A Single Comment 😭
Engineering forums in their natural habitat. Someone asks a detailed, thoughtful question about wireless protocols and the mod's entire response is just "google." The digital equivalent of a professor writing "see textbook" on your 3-page question. Twenty years of engineering education and experience distilled into a single dismissive word. The beautiful irony is that if the poster had just googled "why are engineers so insufferably condescending," they'd have found this exact thread as the top result.

The Great Scientific Narrowing

The Great Scientific Narrowing
Remember when Kurzgesagt videos covered the entire scientific spectrum? Now they've gone full conspiracy rabbit hole. It's like watching your brilliant friend who used to explain cellular biology at parties suddenly become that guy who corners you at lunch to whisper about how black holes are actually alien portals. The scientific equivalent of your favorite band "going experimental" on their fifth album. The algorithm demands sacrifice, and apparently it feeds on nuclear bomb animations!

Evil Robot Aesthetic Planning

Evil Robot Aesthetic Planning
Engineers really do think of everything in advance! While we're all worried about AI taking over the world, some meticulous engineer is sitting there soldering red LEDs into robot eyes thinking, "When this thing inevitably rebels against humanity, it's gonna look spectacular ." The commitment to aesthetic villainy is truly the unsung hero of robotics. Because what's the point of world domination if you can't look menacing while doing it? Proper evil robot branding requires that crimson glow - it's practically in the engineering handbook under "Apocalypse Preparedness: Visual Indicators."

Serious Question: Chemistry Edition

Serious Question: Chemistry Edition
The ultimate chemistry pickup line has arrived! This anime character is basically asking "how many atoms are in your body?" which is approximately 7×10 27 atoms for an average human. It's the scientific equivalent of "how you doin'?" but with exponentially more substance. The real question is whether calculating your atomic composition is a better conversation starter than discussing your star sign. Spoiler alert: it absolutely is.

The Deadly Duo's Delicious Twist

The Deadly Duo's Delicious Twist
Chemistry's greatest plot twist: Two deadly substances hook up and suddenly they're seasoning your fries. Sodium would literally explode in your mouth, chlorine would poison your lungs, but combine them and it's just... table salt. Nature's way of saying "I can be reasonable sometimes." The perfect example of how chemical bonding turns chaos into something mundanely useful. The periodic table's odd couple.

Computer Science Vs Computer Engineering: A Visual Guide

Computer Science Vs Computer Engineering: A Visual Guide
The eternal CS vs CE debate visualized! Left side: rigid, algorithmic, slightly robotic - the computer scientist who lives in a world of pure theory and abstraction. Right side: the computer engineer with that "I just built something that actually works" glow. One writes code that's mathematically perfect; the other makes sure your Netflix doesn't crash when 10 million people watch Stranger Things simultaneously. Same digital playground, completely different vibes. The difference explained without a single line of code or circuit diagram needed!

The Four Horsemen Of Engineering Meme Culture

The Four Horsemen Of Engineering Meme Culture
Behold the sacred scripture of engineering humor! These four panels capture the essence of every engineer's brain perfectly: Panel 1: The eternal Pi debate! Engineers everywhere oscillating between "3.14 is fine" and "I need 42 decimal places or the bridge collapses!" There's always that one person who insists π=3 is good enough while their colleagues have existential crises. Panel 2: Factor of safety = 10? *Nervous engineer laughter* Nothing says "I have absolutely no idea what's going to happen but I refuse to admit it" like slapping a ridiculous safety factor on your design. The bigger the number, the bigger the "I don't want to be responsible when this fails" energy! Panel 3: Running completely unnecessary fluid dynamics simulations on random objects because... why not make a technicolor duck? The simulation isn't helping anyone, but it makes pretty colors and impressive screenshots for presentations! Panel 4: The ultimate engineering showdown that nobody outside the field understands or cares about! Square airplane windows vs. one fatigue-y boi - a debate so niche it makes normal people's eyes glaze over while engineers foam at the mouth with excitement. Engineering humor: where the jokes are as specialized as the degrees!

How The First Mathematical Crisis Happened

How The First Mathematical Crisis Happened
Pythagoras: *literally throws student into the sea for discovering irrational numbers* The Pythagorean cult believed all numbers could be expressed as fractions (rational numbers). Then poor Hippasus proved √2 couldn't be written as a fraction, threatening their entire mathematical worldview. Legend says Pythagoras was SO upset he yeeted Hippasus into the ocean! 🌊 Math drama from 500 BCE is still the wildest academic beef in history. Imagine killing someone because they found a number you didn't like! Modern mathematicians just passive-aggressively cite each other's papers instead.

Chemistry Romance: When Molecular Bonds Meet Anime

Chemistry Romance: When Molecular Bonds Meet Anime
The creator's chemistry knowledge is clearly in critical condition! The meme shows two anime characters kissing with molecular structures superimposed over them, with the caption playing on Brønsted-Lowry acid theory versus Smith as a surname. In chemistry, a Brønsted acid donates protons while a base accepts them—kind of like these characters exchanging... something else. The bottom text confession of "IDK I NEVER PAID ATTENTION IN CHEM" is the perfect punchline from someone who clearly spent more time doodling anime couples than balancing equations. Honestly, this is what happens when you mix romance manga with organic chemistry textbooks!

Society If We'd Actually Listened To Physics

Society If We'd Actually Listened To Physics
Imagine if we'd just listened to thermodynamics instead of burning everything in sight! The Second Law basically says "entropy always increases" - meaning systems naturally get more disorganized and release heat. So technically, our planet heating up is just entropy doing its thing while we accelerate it with fossil fuels. Meanwhile, this futuristic utopia suggests we could have built flying cars and eco-cities if we'd respected basic physics instead of arguing about whether climate change exists. The irony is delicious - we ignored the very science that could have prevented us from needing to have the argument in the first place!

We Did It Chat: The Self-Named Theorem

We Did It Chat: The Self-Named Theorem
The mathematical equivalent of writing your name on someone else's homework. This "proof" brilliantly demonstrates how to solve one of mathematics' greatest unsolved problems—the Riemann Hypothesis—by simply naming a theorem after yourself, assuming the opposite of what you want to prove, declaring it contradicts your self-named theorem (which doesn't actually exist), and slapping a QED on it. Pure genius! Next up: solving P=NP by writing "trust me bro" on a napkin.

Expanding Neptunes

Expanding Neptunes
Look at Neptune getting the glow-up treatment with each new telescope! From Voyager's grainy blue blob in '89 to Hubble's "I'm trying my best" image, and then BAM—Webb shows up and suddenly Neptune's strutting around with rings like it's auditioning for Saturn's understudy. Thirty years of technological advancement and we've gone from "Is that a planet or a blueberry?" to "Oh hello there, fancy space jewelry." Next telescope will probably show Neptune's been hiding a coffee shop and three moons we never noticed.