Chatgpt Memes

Posts tagged with Chatgpt

Another Thing Killed By OpenAI

Another Thing Killed By OpenAI
Back in the day, you had to actually know what uu and ruff meant to feel like a real developer. Now? Just ask ChatGPT and pretend you've been using them since the Unix days. The smugness that came with obscure command-line knowledge has been democratized, and honestly, the gatekeepers are not happy about it. For context: uu (like uuencode/uudecode) was used for encoding binary files into text for email transmission back when the internet was held together with duct tape and prayers. ruff is a blazingly fast Python linter written in Rust that's replacing the old guard. The real tragedy? You can't flex your niche knowledge anymore when anyone can just prompt their way to enlightenment. RIP to the era when knowing esoteric tools made you the office wizard instead of just "that person who Googles well."

Venture Capital In 2026

Venture Capital In 2026
The VC hype cycle has officially jumped the shark. After blockchain, metaverse, and AI, we've now reached the point where VCs are literally just throwing money at anything with "vibecoded" in the pitch deck. You know the startup ecosystem has lost its mind when shipping 10+ SaaS products in a weekend using ChatGPT prompts is considered a legitimate business strategy. The real kicker? They're offering 10% equity for a bag of gummy bears and "unsolicited advice" – which is basically every VC meeting ever, except now they're being honest about the value proposition. Pre-revenue preferred because who needs actual customers when you have vibes and AI-generated code? This is what happens when you give people too much money and not enough technical due diligence.

Can Someone Help Pls?

Can Someone Help Pls?
When even the AI that was trained on the entire internet takes one look at your code and nopes out. ChatGPT just went from "I can help with anything" to "I have standards, actually." The fact that it looked at the code first before refusing is the digital equivalent of a code reviewer physically recoiling from their monitor. At least it was polite enough to say sorry while throwing your codebase under the bus.

No Listen Here You Little Shit

No Listen Here You Little Shit
The AI claps back with the most devastating counter-argument known to developers: "Can YOU?" And just like that, every developer who's ever shipped spaghetti code, left TODOs from 2019, or named variables "temp2_final_ACTUAL" felt that burn deep in their soul. The audacity of questioning an LLM's ability to write maintainable code when most of us are out here writing functions longer than a CVS receipt and commenting "this works, don't touch it" like that's acceptable documentation. The LLM really said "let's not throw stones in glass houses, buddy." Sure, ChatGPT might hallucinate functions that don't exist and create security vulnerabilities, but at least it's consistently inconsistent. Meanwhile, human developers are out here writing code that only works on their machine and blaming it on "environment differences."

Stack Overflow Moderation Made Vibe Coding Possible

Stack Overflow Moderation Made Vibe Coding Possible
Getting your question nuked from Stack Overflow by a moderator with 500k rep who closed it as "duplicate" of a thread from 2009 that doesn't even answer your question? Yeah, that's a hard pill to swallow. But then you realize you're now free from the tyranny of actually having to write good questions with proper formatting, minimal reproducible examples, and—god forbid—showing what you've tried. Welcome to vibe coding, where you just throw spaghetti at the wall and see what sticks, no Stack Overflow judgment required. The mods did you a favor, really. Now you can just ask ChatGPT without getting roasted for not reading the documentation first.

What Now

What Now
The poor software engineer spent months getting Codex, Co-pilot, and Claude Code to work together in some unholy trinity of AI coding assistants. Finally, everything's running smoothly, the autocomplete is chef's kiss, and then Sam Altman shows up like "hey bestie, heard you needed help!" and the engineer just loses it. You've already got three AI overlords telling you how to write your code, and now the CEO of OpenAI himself wants to add another layer to this dependency nightmare. At this point, you're not even writing code anymore—you're just a conductor orchestrating an AI symphony. The existential crisis is real: do you even need to know how to code, or are you just a glorified prompt engineer now?

Every Era Of Programming Summarized

Every Era Of Programming Summarized
A beautiful cycle of suffering that explains why your senior dev looks dead inside. We went from hardcore C programmers who manually managed memory and segfaulted their way to glory, to Python devs who just wanted things to work, to AI that writes code while we sip coffee, to junior devs who can't debug their way out of a paper bag because ChatGPT did all the thinking for them. The real kicker? We're now back to creating "strong engineers" through bad times, which means the industry is about to lay off half of us, force the survivors to learn Rust, and the cycle starts again. The username "git_blame_ai" is chef's kiss irony here—we literally created the tools that might make us obsolete, then complain when juniors can't code without them. History doesn't repeat itself, but it sure does rhyme. And apparently, it rhymes in increasingly high-level languages until we forget how computers actually work.

Confidence 100

Confidence 100
Senior dev asks if you checked the PR before merging. You confidently slam your hand down on the table. "AI did it." Nothing says "I trust this code with my life" quite like letting an LLM write your pull request and yeeting it straight into main without reading a single line. Code review? That's what Copilot is for. Unit tests? The AI probably wrote those too. What could possibly go wrong when you outsource your entire job to a chatbot that occasionally hallucinates functions that don't exist? The junior dev energy here is immaculate. Peak "move fast and break things" mentality, except the things breaking will be production at 3 AM.

Thank You LLM

Thank You LLM
Nothing says "welcome to the team" quite like being handed a function that's literally 13,000+ lines long. Line 6061 to line 19515? That's not a function, that's a small novel. That's a war crime in code form. But hey, at least you've got your trusty LLM sidekick now. Just paste that monstrosity into ChatGPT and pray it doesn't hit the token limit before it's done analyzing what fresh hell the previous dev created. Because let's be real—nobody's refactoring that manually. You'd retire before finishing. Fun fact: The single responsibility principle died somewhere around line 7000.

Ball Knowledge

Ball Knowledge
Socrates out here dropping philosophical bombs about the AI hype train. The dude's basically asking: "Sure, you can prompt ChatGPT to write your entire codebase, but can you actually debug it when it hallucinates a non-existent library or generates an O(n³) solution to a problem that should be O(1)?" It's the eternal question for the modern developer: if you're just copying AI-generated code without understanding what's happening under the hood, are you really a programmer or just a glorified Ctrl+V operator? Socrates would probably make you explain every line in front of the Athenian assembly before letting you merge to main. The real kicker? When production breaks at 3 AM and GitHub Copilot isn't there to hold your hand through the stack trace. That's when you discover what you are without AI: panicking and googling StackOverflow like the rest of us mortals.

Shakespeare Of Our Time

Shakespeare Of Our Time
Garry Newman just dropped the most poetic take on AI coding tools I've ever heard. The guy who built Garry's Mod basically said relying too heavily on AI for programming is like watching so much adult content that you can't... perform creatively anymore. And honestly? He's not wrong. When you let Copilot or ChatGPT write all your code, your brain stops doing the heavy lifting. You lose that ability to architect solutions from scratch, to think through problems, to actually create instead of just prompting. It's the difference between being a chef and being really good at ordering DoorDash. The comparison is crude but brilliant. Both involve instant gratification that atrophies your natural abilities. Your problem-solving muscles need exercise, not an autocomplete button. Sure, AI tools are useful—but if you can't code without them, you're not a developer. You're a prompt engineer with a dependency problem.

I Love AI

I Love AI
The classic "I'm not like other developers" routine, but with AI. Our senior developer friend here is playing the long game—publicly pretending to have concerns about AI while privately speedrunning app development with ChatGPT-generated spaghetti code. Three apps, one file each. That's not architecture, that's a cry for help wrapped in a success story. But hey, if it compiles and nobody's maintaining it but you, does technical debt even exist? The real genius move is gatekeeping your AI usage while everyone else is still manually writing for loops like chumps. Nothing says "senior developer" quite like letting an LLM write your entire codebase and then taking credit for it on Twitter. The future is now, and it's magnificently unmaintainable.