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More entertaining than watching progress bars during deployment

But It Might Work For Us

But It Might Work For Us
Oh honey, the AUDACITY of management thinking they can just replace their entire dev team with a no-code platform! Companies out here really looking at Frontpage, Dreamweaver, Drupal, WordPress, and Squarespace like "yeah, we don't need those pesky developers anymore, we've got DRAG AND DROP!" But here's the plot twist nobody saw coming: it literally NEVER works out. These companies somehow gaslight themselves into believing they're the special snowflake that'll crack the code. "Sure, it failed for Amazon, Google, and every other company on planet Earth... but WE'RE DIFFERENT!" Narrator voice: They were not different. Six months later they're desperately hiring developers at 2x the salary to untangle the absolute NIGHTMARE their "simple" website builder created. Because turns out, when you need anything beyond a basic brochure site, those platforms become digital duct tape holding together a house of cards in a windstorm. Who could've possibly predicted this outcome? Oh right, THE DEVELOPERS YOU JUST FIRED.

100 Gb Game To Download

100 Gb Game To Download
Your phone with 128GB? That's basically a data center. You've got apps, photos, videos, music, and still room for a AAA game or two. Your gaming PC with 128GB? Brother, you're one Call of Duty update away from having to uninstall your operating system. Modern Warfare alone needs 250GB just to sneeze. Add in Cyberpunk, Baldur's Gate 3, and whatever 4K texture pack you downloaded at 2AM, and suddenly you're playing storage Tetris like it's your full-time job. Fun fact: The entire Apollo 11 guidance computer had 72KB of memory. Now we need 100GB just to render realistic horse testicles in Red Dead Redemption 2. Progress!

Console Logs Will Do Fine

Console Logs Will Do Fine
Look, we've all been there. The CTO sends down the mandate about "proper debugging practices" and "professional development workflows," but you know what? When your code breaks at 2 AM, you're not launching a full IDE debugger setup with breakpoints and watch expressions. You're slapping in a console.log("HERE") and calling it a day. Real debuggers are great in theory—until you need to configure source maps, set up remote debugging, or figure out why your breakpoint isn't hitting in that async callback hell. Meanwhile, good old console.log() has never let anyone down. It works in production, it works in dev, it works when everything else fails. The kid in the bottom panel represents every developer who's discovered that the simplest solution is usually the right one. Sure, you could spend 30 minutes setting up a debugger... or you could find the bug in 3 minutes with strategic console logging. Time is money, and console logs are free real estate.

Loop Break If Not Corrupt

Loop Break If Not Corrupt
When your code logic is so twisted that even civil engineers are taking notes. That roundabout literally goes straight through the middle—it's like someone wrote while(true) { break; } in real life. The title perfectly captures that beautiful moment when your loop conditions are so convoluted that you're breaking out of iterations based on whether data is corrupted or not. Except here, the infrastructure itself said "screw the circular logic" and just... broke through. It's the physical manifestation of that one function in your codebase that everyone's afraid to refactor because it somehow works despite violating every principle known to computer science. Honestly, this is what happens when you let a developer design roads after they've spent too long debugging nested loops. "Why go around when you can just... not?"

Yeeeeeep

Yeeeeeep
Steam's account recovery system is like that friend who helps you move but accidentally drops your TV down the stairs. Sure, you got your account back, but now you've lost every game, friend, achievement, and screenshot from the last decade. Meanwhile Microsoft's over here like "we deleted everything just to be safe" as if nuking your entire digital library is somehow more secure than just changing the password. Both companies treating your account like it's contaminated evidence that needs to be incinerated. Nothing says "customer service" quite like making the victim suffer more than the hacker.

Progress

Progress
From landing on the moon with 4KB of RAM to landing on the moon with two instances of Outlook that won't even open. Humanity went from calculating orbital trajectories on computers less powerful than a toaster to being unable to manage email on machines that could run the entire Apollo program a thousand times over. The irony is beautiful: we've got exponentially more computing power, yet somehow we're struggling with basic productivity software. Armstrong made history with less computational power than your smart fridge, while modern astronauts are probably rebooting Outlook in orbit. Nothing screams "technological advancement" quite like needing two broken instances of the same email client. Fun fact: The Apollo Guidance Computer had 64KB of memory and got humans to the moon. Meanwhile, Outlook uses about 200MB just to tell you "Not Responding." Progress, indeed.

Could Be True ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Could Be True ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
You know what? This theory holds up better than most production code. The iconic 90s anthem "Rage Against the Machine" was probably written by someone who spent three hours trying to get their printer to work before a critical deadline. The band never specified which machine, and let's be real—printers are the only machines that truly deserve our rage. While developers battle compilers, databases, and CI/CD pipelines daily, none inspire the pure, primal fury of a printer that's simultaneously out of cyan, jammed, AND offline despite being connected via USB, WiFi, and Ethernet. PC LOAD LETTER? What the hell does that even mean? The printer: humanity's reminder that we're not as technologically advanced as we think.

The Sequel

The Sequel
You search for "portal" on Steam and get Portal 1, Portal 2, and then... Brazilian Drug Dealer 3. Because naturally, when you're looking for a physics puzzle game about aperture science, what you really need is a game about opening portals of a completely different nature. The algorithm knows what you really want. Search algorithms have one job. ONE JOB. But here we are, watching Steam's recommendation engine decide that "portal" in the title is close enough. At least it's on sale for 25% off, so you can save money while questioning your life choices.

When QA Finds A Bug And You Cannot Reproduce It

When QA Finds A Bug And You Cannot Reproduce It
QA shows you the bug. You open your terminal, ready to squash it. You run the code. Nothing. The bug has vanished into the void like it was never there. QA insists they saw it. You insist your machine works fine. The bug exists in a quantum superposition state—simultaneously there and not there until QA observes it again. Classic Heisenbug behavior. The moment you try to debug it, it disappears. Works on my machine™ has never felt so justified yet so infuriating. Now you're stuck in that awkward limbo where you can't fix what you can't see, but you know it's lurking somewhere, waiting to embarrass you in production.

Why I Always Keep Doing It...

Why I Always Keep Doing It...
You know that special kind of insanity where your code refuses to work, so you stare at it for 20 minutes, change absolutely nothing, run it again, and somehow expect different results? Yeah, that's the developer equivalent of checking the fridge multiple times hoping new food magically appeared. The best part? Sometimes it actually does work the second time because of some race condition, cached state, or cosmic alignment you'll never understand. And that's exactly why we keep doing it. We've been conditioned by random success to believe in the power of the unchanged re-run. Pro tip: After the third identical run, it's time to actually read the error message instead of just vibing with the red text.

Cannot Exploit If No Security Is Applied

Cannot Exploit If No Security Is Applied
When you skip OAuth, JWT validation, input sanitization, HTTPS, rate limiting, CORS policies, and basically treat security headers like optional dependencies, you've achieved what cryptographers call "security through obscurity" but what we call "security through nonexistence." The logic is flawless: hackers can't find vulnerabilities in security measures that were never implemented in the first place. It's like saying you can't have a memory leak if you never free any memory—technically correct, but also... completely wrong. Your vibe-coded app standing there confidently while Mythos (representing actual security threats) looms overhead is the energy of every developer who's ever shipped to prod with "TODO: add auth later" still in the codebase.

You Get It

You Get It
Your side project is literally DROWNING in the ocean, desperately waving for attention like "HELLO?? REMEMBER ME?? THE BRILLIANT IDEA YOU HAD AT 2 AM??" Meanwhile, you're out here living your best life with your stable job, completely ignoring the poor thing. That side project has been sitting in your GitHub repo collecting dust for 6 months while you pretend it doesn't exist. The audacity! The betrayal! But hey, at least your job pays the bills and doesn't require you to learn that new framework you promised yourself you'd master. Sorry buddy, but rent > passion projects. 💀