hardware
Explanation
This comic contrasts the experience of troubleshooting physical hardware versus software.
The top panel is labeled "When a physical machine won't work." A person looks at a broken device and cheerfully says: "Ooh, looks like it's going to require a little tinkering." The tone is light, optimistic, even enthusiastic — fixing a physical machine is presented as an enjoyable puzzle.
The bottom panel is labeled "When software won't work." The same person clutches a laptop and screams in existential agony: "To live is to swim through needles and acid take me now Satan my soul is ready!"
The humor comes from the extreme contrast between the two reactions. Hardware problems, while potentially complex, tend to have tangible, diagnosable causes — a loose wire, a worn part, a visible break. Software problems, on the other hand, can be maddeningly abstract, with errors that seem to defy logic, cryptic error messages, dependency conflicts, and bugs that appear and disappear without explanation. The comic captures the common programmer experience that debugging software can feel like an existential crisis, while fixing physical objects feels like a pleasant hobby. The escalation from mild curiosity to invoking Satan is the comedic engine of the strip.