Devops Memes

DevOps: where developers and operations united to create a new job title that somehow does both jobs with half the resources. These memes are for anyone who's ever created a CI/CD pipeline more complex than the application it deploys, explained to management why automation takes time to implement, or received a 3 AM alert because a service is using 0.1% more memory than usual. From infrastructure as code to "it works on my machine" certificates, this collection celebrates the special chaos of making development and operations play nicely together.

Git Explained: The Ryanair Edition

Git Explained: The Ryanair Edition
Finally, a Git tutorial that makes sense! The landing plane is git commit - safely touching down with your changes. The takeoff is git push - launching your code into the remote repo with a prayer it doesn't crash. And git add ? That's just people desperately climbing onto a sketchy ladder in the middle of nowhere - exactly how it feels tracking files before you've figured out what half of them even do. Ryanair's budget operations perfectly capture the bare-minimum approach most of us take with version control. "Yeah, I'll just commit directly to main. What could possibly go wrong?"

I'm Not Mad I Just Want To Talk

I'm Not Mad I Just Want To Talk
The classic "chess match with the dog" scenario we've all faced. Some junior dev just hard-coded environment variables directly into the build pipeline instead of using config files, and now your changes mysteriously vanish in production while everything passes in staging. That innocent face says it all – they have no idea they've created a deployment hellscape that'll take you three days and seven coffees to untangle. Meanwhile, they're getting praised for "making things work" while you contemplate a career in sheep farming.

When Your Docker Image Includes The Whole Kitchen For A Picnic

When Your Docker Image Includes The Whole Kitchen For A Picnic
Ah, the classic Docker bloat syndrome. Why create a svelte 50MB image with just what you need when you can ship a 2GB monstrosity that includes three Linux distros, a complete JDK, and somehow Visual Studio? The "minimal container" is just a theoretical concept developers tell themselves exists while they casually add another layer with "just one more dependency." By Friday, your microservice needs its own ZIP code.

I Have No Comments To This

I Have No Comments To This
The eternal dance of software development in two frames: a developer screaming internally while trying to estimate how long a project will take, juxtaposed with a project manager gleefully promising impossible deadlines to clients. It's like watching someone calculate the precise dimensions of a coffin while their boss is already selling tickets to the resurrection. The developer knows whatever number they give will be arbitrary and wrong, yet the PM has already promised the client they'll deliver a full enterprise system by next Tuesday. And thus begins another project destined to join the 70% that fail or exceed their budgets. But hey, at least the client is temporarily happy!

It Depends

It Depends
The universal escape hatch of every software architect in existence! Ask about microservices? "Depends." Monolith vs distributed? "Depends." Serverless or containers? You guessed it—"DEPENDS." This is basically the architectural equivalent of a doctor saying "take two aspirin and call me in the morning." The truth is, context is everything in architecture, and "it depends" is simultaneously the most frustrating and most correct answer to virtually any design question. The wise old architect with the pipe knows this ancient truth that juniors hate to hear!

Broadcom's Explosive Pricing Strategy

Broadcom's Explosive Pricing Strategy
Gearing up for the budget apocalypse! Nothing says "enterprise IT" like putting on a bomb suit to tell executives they need to fork over another 50% for VMware licenses while they simultaneously reject your migration requests due to "cost concerns." The irony is thicker than the blast-proof helmet. Ever since Broadcom's acquisition, IT departments worldwide have been practicing their explosion-resistant budget presentations. It's not a price increase—it's a "value adjustment opportunity."

Left Comments Please Check

Left Comments Please Check
The eternal battlefield of code reviews captured in one perfect image. Code reviewers (the kids) are desperately trying to protect themselves from the tiger (that obvious bug that will definitely crash production), while completely ignoring the rabbit (a harmless typo in a comment). Classic case of missing the forest for the trees—or in this case, missing the tiger for the bunny. The same reviewers who'll write a 12-paragraph essay about your variable naming conventions will somehow miss the null pointer exception that's about to nuke your entire AWS instance.

Where Exe? The Compilation Gap

Where Exe? The Compilation Gap
The eternal battle between developers and end users captured in its purest form! This GitHub issue shows a user absolutely losing it because they just want an executable file with a GUI, not source code they can't understand. Meanwhile, the maintainers are just casually closing the issue as "completed" and marking it as spam. It's the digital equivalent of asking for a sandwich and getting handed raw ingredients and a cookbook. The beautiful disconnect between "I just need a button to click" and "here's our elegant codebase" that fuels developer nightmares everywhere.

Prod Down But Conventions Upheld

Prod Down But Conventions Upheld
The server is LITERALLY ON FIRE, production is crashing harder than my dating life, and what are these developers doing? Having an EXISTENTIAL CRISIS over camelCase vs snake_case! 🙄 Meanwhile, that poor code reviewer is being torn apart, desperately trying to focus on the ACTUAL APOCALYPSE happening in production—you know, that tiny little infinite loop that's currently melting the server and making customers scream into the void. But sure, let's debate naming conventions while Rome burns! Priorities, people! PRIORITIES! 💅

Inexplicably Necessary To Function

Inexplicably Necessary To Function
Every production codebase has that one mysterious artifact nobody dares to touch. The image shows a decade-old codebase represented as a precarious tower of blocks, with "some godforsaken png of a random turtle that serves no evident purpose" pointed out at the bottom. The truth is, we've all been there. That random image file buried in the assets folder that might be powering the entire authentication system for all we know. Remove it? Sure, if you want to watch the world burn. That turtle is probably holding up more technical debt than your entire DevOps team. Ten years of spaghetti code, legacy systems, and band-aid fixes, all potentially hinging on a turtle PNG that some intern added as a joke in 2013. It's not a bug at this point—it's a structural support beam.

Burn The GPUs

Burn The GPUs
Nothing says "we love our users" like dropping a free AI feature that immediately sets fire to your data center. Those poor GPUs, running at 110°C, fans screaming like they're auditioning for a metal band. Meanwhile, DevOps is frantically calculating the electricity bill while the marketing team high-fives over user engagement metrics. The best part? The feature probably could've been implemented with a simple if-statement, but hey—gotta justify those VC millions somehow!

Let's Unmask The AI Agents Scam

Let's Unmask The AI Agents Scam
OMG, the AUDACITY of these tech companies! 💅 First they're all "AI agents will revolutionize everything!" *dramatic hair flip* But pull off that ghost sheet mask and SURPRISE! It's just the same old automation workflows we've been using since the Paleolithic era of computing, but with fancier marketing! The tech industry really thinks we're all just standing here with our mouths open waiting for them to rebrand "if-then statements" as "autonomous intelligence." I CANNOT EVEN with this level of deception! *faints onto Victorian chaise lounge*