Quote By Abraham Linked In

Quote By Abraham Linked In
Modern programming in a nutshell: you spend 4 hours crafting the perfect prompt to tell an AI what you want, then 2 hours actually coding. It's like having a really smart but incredibly literal intern who needs extremely detailed instructions. The fake Abraham Lincoln attribution is *chef's kiss* – because nothing says "inspirational tech thought leader" like slapping a historical figure's name on your LinkedIn hot take about AI-driven development. Pretty sure Honest Abe was more into splitting rails than splitting user stories into microservices. But real talk? The ratio is painfully accurate. Half your "coding time" with AI tools is just negotiating with ChatGPT or Copilot to generate something that doesn't look like it was written by a caffeinated rubber duck. "No, I said B2B SaaS, not B2C... no, not blockchain... please stop adding blockchain..."

Why Did You Come To Interview

Why Did You Come To Interview
So you're telling me you showed up to a SOFTWARE ENGINEERING interview at a SOFTWARE COMPANY to do SOFTWARE THINGS and you... don't like coding? That's like applying to be a chef and saying "Yeah, I don't really vibe with food." The interviewer's face says it all – the sheer bewilderment, the existential crisis, the "did I just waste 30 minutes of my life?" energy radiating through the screen. Like bestie, what exactly were you planning to do here? Manage the office plants? Provide moral support to the CI/CD pipeline? The audacity is truly unmatched.

Vibe Coders

Vibe Coders
You know that guy who names his variables like "fireRocket" and "boomError" with matching emojis? Yeah, his code reads like a kindergarten art project but somehow it ships on time while your perfectly architected, SOLID-principled masterpiece is still in code review. The real pain hits when you're doing a pair programming session and they're throwing 🔥 and ✅ everywhere like they're decorating a Christmas tree, and you're sitting there wondering if your CS degree was worth it. But hey, at least when production breaks, you'll know exactly which function caused it: explosionHandler💥() . The worst part? Their code probably has better documentation than yours because emojis are universal. Can't argue with that logic when the PM understands their codebase better than yours.

I Knew I Should Have Listened To Him…

I Knew I Should Have Listened To Him…
That guy who made a 10-year-old video begging you to buy just ONE stick of DDR5 RAM? Yeah, he was a prophet and nobody listened. Now you're stuck paying the price of a used car for memory modules while he's somewhere saying "I told you so." The real tragedy is that 4.5M people watched this wisdom and collectively thought "nah, I'll wait for a sale." Spoiler alert: the sale never came. DDR5 prices went up faster than your technical debt, and now that single stick costs more than your entire first PC build. Time travel is real, it's just locked behind YouTube recommendations trying to warn us about our future financial mistakes.

The Best Decision I Ever Made

The Best Decision I Ever Made
Nothing hits quite like the satisfaction of upgrading your rig right before RAM prices go absolutely bonkers. You're sitting there with your fresh DDR5 sticks, watching everyone else panic-buy at triple the price, and suddenly you feel like a financial genius who timed the market perfectly. The RAM market is wild—prices can literally double overnight due to factory fires, supply chain issues, or just because the tech gods felt like it. Getting in before the "RAMocalypse" is the PC builder equivalent of buying Bitcoin at $100. You didn't plan it, but you'll absolutely brag about it. Meanwhile, your buddy who waited "just one more month for better deals" is now contemplating selling a kidney to afford 32GB. Timing really is everything.

CLI Over GUI Anyday

CLI Over GUI Anyday
You know you've ascended to true Linux mastery when you look at a colorful, friendly penguin GUI and smile, then immediately recoil in horror at its ASCII art CLI cousin. PenGUIn vs PenCLIn—because nothing says "I love efficiency" quite like staring at dots and dashes pretending to be a mascot. Sure, the terminal is faster, more powerful, and scriptable, but sometimes you just want to see Tux in all his glory without needing to squint at characters that look like they were assembled by a drunk typewriter. The CLI purists will swear by it until their dying breath, but deep down, even they know that ASCII art penguin looks like it crawled out of a 1980s BBS fever dream.

Saved You An Entire Week Of Incessant Fooling Around, And An Entire Month Of Intermittent Pauses To Test Ideas In Just Over An Hour. Solid Product.

Saved You An Entire Week Of Incessant Fooling Around, And An Entire Month Of Intermittent Pauses To Test Ideas In Just Over An Hour. Solid Product.
ChatGPT spent 69 minutes and 42 seconds "thinking" just to tell you "You can't." That's like watching your senior architect stare at the whiteboard for over an hour during a planning meeting, only for them to turn around and say "nope, not possible" without any further explanation. The irony here is beautiful. Someone's trying to install CUDA 12.1 on Ubuntu 24.04, and the AI that supposedly saves you weeks of work just burned over an hour to deliver the most unhelpful two-word response possible. No workarounds, no alternatives, no "but here's what you CAN do" — just pure, unfiltered rejection. You could've googled this, read three Stack Overflow threads, tried two wrong solutions, and still had time left over to make coffee. But sure, let's call it "incredible" and a "solid product." The future of development is waiting 69 minutes for a chatbot to say no.

Ok Well Thanks For Trying

Ok Well Thanks For Trying
The sheer BETRAYAL when you discover this absolutely gorgeous open source project that could solve all your problems, change your life, and possibly bring world peace... only to run npm install and watch it crumble into a thousand dependency errors like a sandcastle in a tsunami. Nothing quite captures the emotional journey from pure joy to utter despair like Baby Yoda going from adorable excitement to dead-eyed disappointment. You found THE project, the one that does exactly what you need, has a beautiful README, and then... it hasn't been updated since 2019, requires Node 8, and has 47 critical vulnerabilities. Cool cool cool. The worst part? You'll still probably spend the next three hours trying to make it work instead of just writing it yourself from scratch.

Buffer Size

Buffer Size
When your code review buddy asks if buffer size 500 is enough and you respond with the confidence of someone who has absolutely no idea what they're doing. Will it handle the data? Probably. Will it cause a buffer overflow and crash production at 2 PM on a Friday? Also probably. But hey, 500 sounds like a nice round number, right? It's bigger than 100 but not as scary as 1000. The scientific method at its finest.

Killswitch Engineer

Killswitch Engineer
OpenAI out here offering half a million dollars for someone to literally just stand next to the servers with their hand hovering over the power button like some kind of apocalypse bouncer. The job requirements? Be patient, know how to unplug things, and maybe throw water on the servers if GPT decides to go full Skynet. They're not even hiding it anymore – they're basically saying "yeah we're terrified our AI might wake up and choose violence, so we need someone on standby to pull the plug before it starts a robot uprising." The bonus points for water bucket proficiency really seals the deal. Nothing says "cutting-edge AI research" quite like having a dedicated human fire extinguisher making bank to potentially save humanity by unplugging a computer. The best part? You have to be EXCITED about their approach to research while simultaneously preparing to murder their life's work. Talk about mixed signals.

The Final Boss User Input

The Final Boss User Input
You've spent weeks writing pristine code, achieved that mythical 100% test coverage, handled every edge case known to humanity... and then some user decides to put 🎉💀🔥 in the name field. Your entire validation layer just got obliterated by three Unicode characters. Because apparently, while you were busy testing for SQL injection and XSS attacks, nobody thought to ask "what if someone just... doesn't use letters?" Your regex that confidently checks for ^[a-zA-Z]+$ is now weeping in the corner while your database tries to figure out how to sort "John Smith" and "💩". Fun fact: Emojis are stored as multi-byte UTF-8 characters, which means your VARCHAR(50) field might actually only fit like 12 emojis. But sure, your tests passed. Your beautiful, emoji-less tests.

It Works But Only One Time

It Works But Only One Time
Someone wrote a method to count employees, but there's a tiny problem: it deletes ALL the employees from the database first, then counts how many are left. Spoiler alert: zero. Every single time after the first run, you're counting an empty table. The function technically works once—before it nukes your entire workforce into the digital void. The best part? They're using using statements for proper resource disposal, so at least the database connection is being cleaned up responsibly while the employee data gets yeeted into oblivion. Priorities, right? Pro tip: maybe fetch the count BEFORE running DELETE FROM. Or better yet, don't run DELETE FROM at all when you just want to count rows. That's what SELECT COUNT(*) is for. Your HR department will thank you.