It Has Two Buttons Btw

It Has Two Buttons Btw
The eternal quest for minimalism has led webdevs to the promised land: a mouse so smooth and buttonless that it might as well be a bar of soap. Because why would users need something as archaic as visible, tactile buttons when they can just... guess? Click anywhere and hope for the best. It's like designing a website where every element is a mystery meat navigation—except now it's your actual hardware. The "MaCaLLY" branding really seals the deal here. Nothing screams "premium user experience" like a peripheral that requires a PhD to operate. Sure, it has two buttons—they're just hiding somewhere in the quantum realm between the top and bottom surfaces. Revolutionary? Absolutely. Usable? That's a different sprint story. Fun fact: Apple's Magic Mouse actually does this too, with its touch-sensitive surface replacing physical buttons. Turns out when you prioritize aesthetics over ergonomics, you get a device that looks great in photos but makes your hand cramp after 10 minutes. But hey, at least it's elegant .

Wrong Claude

Wrong Claude
When you're desperately trying to summon Claude AI to build your billion-dollar startup at 5:50 AM, but you accidentally text your buddy Claude who plays pickleball instead. The sheer audacity of asking an AI to "make no mistake" while building a B2B SaaS platform is already comedy gold, but getting a reality check from someone who just wants to enjoy their retirement sport? Chef's kiss. The "for the thousandth time" suggests this poor guy has been getting these delusional startup requests repeatedly. Imagine being named Claude in 2024 – you're basically living in a constant state of mistaken identity with an AI that's actually useful.

It Works

It Works
You start with a beautiful, well-structured bird drawing—clean lines, proper proportions, following all the best practices. Then requirements change. Product wants a new feature. You add a patch here, a workaround there. Before you know it, your codebase is a chaotic tornado of duct tape and prayers, barely resembling the original design. But here's the kicker: it still flies. Tests pass (mostly). Users are happy (enough). So you ship it, close the ticket, and pretend you meant to architect it that way all along. "Don't touch it, it's load-bearing spaghetti" becomes your new team motto. If it works, it works—even if looking at the code makes your eyes bleed.

Accepting Cookies

Accepting Cookies
Cookie consent banners: the digital equivalent of a parkour course designed by sadists. "Accept all" is the easy path—just click and move on with your life. But try to actually manage your privacy? Suddenly you're performing Olympic-level gymnastics through "Customize Settings," dangling from "Toggle" switches, balancing on "Disable" buttons, and somehow ending up in a flaming car crash labeled "Save preferences." Then there's uBlock Origin—the zen master who just walks the empty path, unbothered by the chaos. No banners, no choices, no existential crisis about whether you really need "strictly necessary" cookies. Just pure, uninterrupted browsing bliss while the rest of us are still trying to figure out which toggle actually does something. The real joke? Websites spent millions implementing GDPR compliance just to make the user experience so painful that everyone clicks "Accept all" anyway. Mission accomplished, I guess?

Ambitious

Ambitious
When someone asks what you'd do with 32GB of RAM and your answer is "run two Chrome tabs simultaneously," you know the struggle is real. Chrome's notorious memory consumption has become the stuff of legends—each tab spawning processes like rabbits, hoarding RAM like a dragon guards gold. The joke here is that 32GB is actually a pretty beefy amount of memory that could handle virtual machines, Docker containers, multiple IDEs, and complex builds... but Chrome? Chrome would still find a way to consume it all with just a handful of tabs open. The absurdist humor comes from treating an incredibly modest task (two whole tabs!) as if it's some wild, ambitious dream that requires enterprise-grade hardware. It's the developer's version of "if I won the lottery, I'd buy two candy bars."

Just Codex Things

Just Codex Things
When your friends compliment your elegant code architecture and you're standing there knowing full well that OpenAI Codex (or GitHub Copilot) wrote 90% of it. The best part? Taking full credit with that smug grin while your AI assistant sits silently in the background, the unsung hero of your "beautiful" implementation. Modern software development is basically just being really good at prompting and knowing when to hit Tab to accept suggestions. The code review goes great, your PR gets approved, and nobody needs to know that your pair programming partner was a large language model.

Found This Old Gem On My External Drive

Found This Old Gem On My External Drive
Nothing says "gaming rig" quite like a GPU that doubles as a portable BBQ grill. NVIDIA's thermal management has been a spicy topic for years, and someone decided to take it literally by photoshopping an actual George Foreman grill onto a graphics card. The "NVIDIA Thermi - Meant to be grilled" badge is *chef's kiss* - a beautiful roast of the infamous Fermi architecture (GTX 400/500 series) that ran so hot you could probably cook an egg on it. These cards were legendary for turning your PC into a space heater, with some models hitting 100°C under load. The dude happily grilling in the background? That's all of us who paid $500+ to heat our rooms while gaming. At least you saved on heating bills during winter.

DROP + The Lord of The Rings™ Black Speech TKL Mechanical Keyboard - MT3 Profile Keycaps with Accent Keys - Holy Panda X Tactile Switches - PBT Dye-Sub Keycaps - LED Backlight - Black (Renewed)

DROP + The Lord of The Rings™ Black Speech TKL Mechanical Keyboard - MT3 Profile Keycaps with Accent Keys - Holy Panda X Tactile Switches - PBT Dye-Sub Keycaps - LED Backlight - Black (Renewed)
Mechanical Keyboard: Tenkeyless (TKL) layout with 87 keys · N-key rollover: Every single key you press is registered as a separate input · Robust Aluminum Case: The durable anodized aluminum bottom c…

One Thing I Miss From Gaming..

One Thing I Miss From Gaming..
Remember when you could just press a button and instantly have two players on the same screen? Now you need three monitors, two laptops, a VM running on your toaster, and you still can't get your IDE and browser to play nice side-by-side without one of them deciding to resize itself into oblivion. Split-screen gaming was peak UX design and we threw it away for "productivity." Meanwhile, we're here juggling windows like we're performing circus acts, alt-tabbing so fast our keyboards are filing workers' comp claims. Gaming had it figured out decades ago, but somehow in professional software development, we're still treating multiple viewports like it's rocket science.

Three Leetcode Hard In 30 Min

Three Leetcode Hard In 30 Min
Andrej Karpathy announces he's joining Anthropic to work on cutting-edge AI, and Kevin Naughton Jr. immediately asks what LeetCode questions they asked in the interview. Because apparently even when you're literally one of the most influential AI researchers who co-founded Tesla's Autopilot and OpenAI, you still gotta prove you can reverse a binary tree in 15 minutes. The man has probably trained more neural networks than most of us have written for-loops, but sure, let's make sure he can solve "Two Sum" first. Tech interviews remain undefeated in their ability to completely miss the point. Kevin's question is the developer equivalent of asking Einstein if he passed his multiplication tables test. Respect the hustle though—someone's gotta keep it real.

AI Hiring In 2026

AI Hiring In 2026
Job postings demanding 8-12 years of experience for tools that dropped last Tuesday? Check. Requiring 5 years of production experience on a framework that's still in beta? Absolutely. And let's not forget the classic "must have built a time machine" requirement (bonus points if you actually did). Meanwhile, recruiters are out here looking for "senior engineers" on a stack that literally released in 2023 and hasn't even hit v1.0 yet. The math ain't mathing, but that won't stop them from rejecting 500 qualified candidates because they don't tick every impossible box. And the good engineers? They're just scrolling past these unicorn job postings, watching the industry collectively lose its mind while companies wonder why they can't find talent. Spoiler alert: maybe stop asking for more years of experience than the technology has existed.

Suddenly Stakeholders Lost Patience

Suddenly Stakeholders Lost Patience
You and your team are vibing, peacefully researching, learning at your own pace, experimenting with different approaches like responsible engineers... and then BOOM! Management suddenly decides they need it done in 2 hours. The peaceful construction vehicle of steady progress gets absolutely OBLITERATED by the missile of unrealistic deadlines. Nothing says "we trust the process" quite like turning a month-long learning journey into a two-hour death sprint. The transformation from "let's do this right" to "JUST SHIP IT" is so violent it should come with a warning label. Welcome to software development, where timelines are made up and your careful planning doesn't matter!

When Your Thoughts Don't Match

When Your Thoughts Don't Match
Two developers bonding over their shared love of animals, except one's thinking puppies and kittens while the other's mentally scrolling through PHP elephants, Python snakes, MySQL dolphins, and Linux penguins. We've all been in that conversation where someone says "programming" and your brain immediately translates everything into tech logos and mascots. Can't even enjoy a normal conversation anymore without your IDE brain taking over. The zoo in your head is entirely made of open-source projects and database management systems.