Easter egg Memes

Posts tagged with Easter egg

Put It Back Now

Put It Back Now
THE ABSOLUTE AUDACITY of Opera GX thinking they could just REMOVE a sacred fried egg image from their code! 💅 First they're like "we saved a WHOLE 18kb" as if that's something to brag about in our terabyte era. Then the ENTIRE INTERNET collectively loses its mind and demands justice for the egg that's been secretly lurking in their files since 2019! The fact that a browser had to publicly apologize to an EGG and then ceremoniously restore it to its rightful place is peak software development drama. This is why we can't have nice things... or smaller file sizes apparently!

When Google Takes Goat Privacy Seriously

When Google Takes Goat Privacy Seriously
Google's Android R update includes a method called isUserAGoat() that now deliberately returns false "to protect goat privacy." The hilarious part? This is an actual method in Android that once checked if you had a goat simulator app installed. In Android R, they've "upgraded" it with advanced goat recognition technology, but now it always returns false for "privacy reasons." It's the perfect example of developer humor hidden in production code. Someone at Google spent actual engineering hours on goat-related API documentation while the rest of us struggle with basic UI alignment.

The Fact That This Is Real

The Fact That This Is Real
Someone searched for "guthib" instead of "github" and the absolute madlads at GitHub actually bought the domain just to tell you that you can't type. The passive-aggressive energy here is what fuels developer nightmares. It's like when your code fails and the error message is just "no." Except this time, a multi-billion dollar company went out of their way to roast your typing skills. Money well spent!

While Redditing I Openned Console And Saw This

While Redditing I Openned Console And Saw This
Ah, the classic Reddit ASCII Snoo recruitment technique. Nothing says "we need developers" like hiding job ads in the console where only the curious nerds will find them. It's like leaving cheese in a mousetrap, except the cheese is a job opportunity and the mouse is a developer who can't help but inspect every website they visit. Twenty years in the industry and companies are still pulling the "How do you do, fellow hackers?" routine. Gotta respect the hustle though—beats those "we're like a family" job listings.