frontend Memes

Apparently You Can Put Images Inside Your Console Logs

Apparently You Can Put Images Inside Your Console Logs
Someone just discovered that Chrome DevTools lets you render images in the console using console.log() with special CSS directives, and naturally they're using this power responsibly by rickrolling themselves during debugging sessions. Because nothing says "professional developer" quite like embedding a full-resolution image of Rick Astley in your browser console. Your CPU fan spinning up? That's just the sound of innovation. The junior dev who discovers this in production logs next week is gonna have questions. Fun fact: You can do this with %c formatting and background images in CSS. It's been possible for years, but most developers are too busy console.logging "HERE" and "TEST123" to explore the artistic possibilities of their debugging tools.

Coworkers Watching Me Run Npm Update This Morning

Coworkers Watching Me Run Npm Update This Morning
Running npm update on a Monday morning is basically playing Russian roulette with your entire codebase. You're sitting there all confident, thinking "I'll just update these dependencies real quick," while your coworkers watch in horror knowing exactly what's about to happen. One second everything's fine, the next second you've got 47 breaking changes, your build fails, half your tests are red, and that one package decided to jump from version 2.1.4 to 87.0.0 because semantic versioning is apparently just a suggestion. Your coworkers have seen this movie before—they know the next 3 hours of your life will be spent in dependency hell trying to figure out why node-sass won't compile anymore. Pro tip: Always run updates on Friday afternoon so you have the whole weekend to contemplate your life choices. Just kidding—never update on Friday. Or Monday. Actually, maybe just never update.

CORS Be Like

CORS Be Like
Manager schedules a meeting right when you're about to solve a CORS issue. Classic timing. CORS problems have this magical property where they're simultaneously trivial and soul-crushing—you're this close to fixing it, just need to add that one header, but nope, time to discuss quarterly objectives instead. The "is this your way of saying never?" response is the perfect encapsulation of every developer's internal monologue when meetings interrupt actual work. That laughing emoji is doing heavy lifting here, probably masking the internal screaming.

Imagine Having A Job Where Your Mistakes Are Literally A Meal Instead Of A Mental Breakdown

Imagine Having A Job Where Your Mistakes Are Literally A Meal Instead Of A Mental Breakdown
Spiders out here living their BEST life as the universe's most successful web developers. They find a bug and it's literally dinner time, not a 4-hour debugging session followed by questioning your entire career path. Meanwhile, we human web developers discover a bug and suddenly we're spiraling into an existential crisis about that semicolon we forgot three files ago. Spiders just casually catch their bugs in a web they built from SCRATCH (no Stack Overflow needed, might I add), wrap them up, and call it a productive day. We catch our bugs and get to enjoy the sweet taste of imposter syndrome with a side of production downtime. Nature really said "let me show you what ACTUAL web development looks like" and gave spiders the ultimate work-life balance.

You Can Save At Least 40 Percent By Externalizing The Css

You Can Save At Least 40 Percent By Externalizing The Css
Oh honey, the AI revolution has come full circle and now we're literally tricking LLMs into being more efficient by... using basic web development practices from 1998? The absolute CHAOS of optimizing token usage by just separating your CSS into external files like our ancestors intended is sending me. Imagine spending billions on training massive language models only to discover that the secret to saving 44% of your tokens is just *not* making the AI regenerate the same CSS styling over and over again. It's like buying a Ferrari and then realizing you save gas by not driving in circles. The LLM sits there churning out "/* 20 lines */" of card styling for the millionth time when you could just... link to a stylesheet once and call it a day. The real galaxy brain move here is that we've somehow reinvented the entire reason external stylesheets were created in the first place, except now it's for AI token efficiency instead of page load times. History doesn't repeat itself, but it sure does rhyme!

You Can Save At Least 40% By Externalizing The CSS

You Can Save At Least 40% By Externalizing The CSS
So we're optimizing LLM token consumption now by... using external stylesheets? The same practice we've been preaching since 2005? Incredible. The AI era has brought us full circle to basic web development best practices, except now the justification is "save tokens" instead of "save bandwidth." The beauty here is watching people discover that separating concerns actually has benefits beyond making your code maintainable. Who knew that not dumping 20 lines of CSS into every prompt would reduce token usage? Next you'll tell me that minifying code and using compression also helps. The real galaxy brain move is training the LLM to reference external CSS so it "never outputs CSS again." Because nothing says efficiency like teaching an AI to avoid generating something it's perfectly capable of generating. It's like hiring a chef and then telling them to never cook vegetables because you bought them pre-cut.

hiBCTR 6 Packs ESP32-DevKitC-32 Development Board modules(ESP-32D,ESP-32 CP2012 USB C with 38 pins),Supporting STA/AP/STA+AP,with WiFi+Bluetooth Dual-core and Type-C Interface.

hiBCTR 6 Packs ESP32-DevKitC-32 Development Board modules(ESP-32D,ESP-32 CP2012 USB C with 38 pins),Supporting STA/AP/STA+AP,with WiFi+Bluetooth Dual-core and Type-C Interface.
Core Board Specifications ESP32 CP2012 USB C (Type-C) core board, equipped with 38 pins, offering more functions compared to 30-pin modules. Its narrower width enables excellent connection to the bre…

Pure Evil

Pure Evil
So apparently trying to kill a baby gets you the bronze medal, destroying whole planets earns you silver, but creating the WebP file format? That's the gold standard of villainy right there. Satan himself is like "Yeah, you win this one buddy." The WebP format promised smaller file sizes and better compression, but what it delivered was incompatibility nightmares, browser support headaches, and that special moment when you download an image only to realize half your tools can't even open it. It's the file format equivalent of "we have JPEG at home." The best part? The guy looks so proud of himself. Meanwhile, every developer who's had to add WebP fallbacks for Safari users is plotting their revenge.

Why Is Software Engineering So Horny?

Why Is Software Engineering So Horny?
Someone finally said it out loud and the entire tech industry is sweating nervously. Frontend, backend, mounting, pulling, pushing, penetration testing... like WHO decided these would be normal professional terms to say in a Monday standup meeting? Imagine explaining your job to your grandma: "Yeah, today I'll be doing some penetration testing on the backend after mounting the frontend." Security engineers really drew the shortest straw here – their entire job description sounds like it needs an NSFW tag. The person replying absolutely understood the assignment and just kept going. Stop teasing? Kiss me already? The confidence! The audacity! Meanwhile the rest of us are just trying to push to master without getting rejected.

Why Is Software Engineering So Horny

Why Is Software Engineering So Horny
Someone finally said what we've all been thinking! The tech industry really looked at basic terminology and said "let's make this as suggestive as humanly possible." Front end? Back end? Mounting components? Pushing to repos? Pulling requests? And don't even get me started on penetration testing (which is literally a security practice where you test system vulnerabilities by simulating attacks). It's like the entire field was named by people who were desperately trying to make coding sound exciting at parties. The best part? We all just casually throw these terms around in meetings with straight faces like we're not living in the most unintentionally provocative profession ever created. Someone really needs to have a talk with whoever's been in charge of naming conventions since the dawn of computing.

Software More Like Wetware

Software More Like Wetware
Someone finally said what we've all been thinking. Software engineering terminology reads like it was designed by people who desperately needed to touch grass. Frontend, backend, mounting, pulling, pushing, penetration testing... whoever named these things either had zero self-awareness or maximum self-awareness and just didn't care. The best part? These are all 100% legitimate technical terms we use in daily standups with straight faces. "Yeah, I'm working on penetration testing the backend after we finish mounting and pushing to production." HR is just sitting there pretending everything is normal. Bonus points for the fact that "mounting" is a real thing in both frontend (React component lifecycle) and systems programming (mounting filesystems). We really committed to the bit.

The Struggle Is Real

The Struggle Is Real
Someone built a literal wall of phones just to test if their CSS breakpoints work. You know you've made it as a frontend dev when your device farm looks like a RadioShack liquidation sale circa 2015. Meanwhile, the PM is asking why the sprint is delayed and you're over here managing more devices than a Best Buy inventory system. The real question is whether they're all running different OS versions too, because that's when the fun really starts. Spoiler: it still breaks on that one guy's Samsung Galaxy S7 running Android 6.0.

DreamAxis Heavy Duty Single Monitor Arm for 13-42" Ultrawide Screen, Adjustable Monitor Mount with Tilt Rotation Swivel, Gas Spring Desk Mount Bracket with Clamp/Grommet, Holds 33lbs, Max VESA 100x100

DreamAxis Heavy Duty Single Monitor Arm for 13-42" Ultrawide Screen, Adjustable Monitor Mount with Tilt Rotation Swivel, Gas Spring Desk Mount Bracket with Clamp/Grommet, Holds 33lbs, Max VESA 100x100
Universal Compatibility: Supports heavy flat or curved screens from 13” to 42”, Holds 2.2–33.1 lbs with universal VESA 75x75 and 100x100 compatibility · Secure Anti-Sag Tilt :Features a reinforced ti…

Github If It Was A Gov Uk Service

Github If It Was A Gov Uk Service
Someone took GitHub's sleek developer interface and gave it the full British government website treatment—complete with that unmistakable GOV.UK design system that makes everything look like you're about to pay a tax or renew your driving license. Your repositories? Now they're "services you maintain" because apparently we're all civil servants managing passport applications and teacher training programs instead of pushing code at 2 AM. The attention to detail is chef's kiss: pull requests are now "proposed changes for review" (very bureaucratic), there's a BETA banner reminding you this might actually work someday, and the whole thing radiates that special energy of needing to fill out three forms just to commit a README update. Even the announcements section warns you about downtime like it's a scheduled road closure. The GOV.UK design system is actually brilliant for accessibility and usability, but seeing it applied to GitHub is like watching your favorite indie band perform at a tax office.