open source Memes

See We Got 200 K Stars

See We Got 200 K Stars
When your startup's entire pitch deck hinges on "Look, 200K GitHub stars!" but someone actually did the forensic analysis and discovered it's all bought engagement at $0.06 per click. Six million fake stars floating around the ecosystem like counterfeit currency, and VCs are out here treating star count like it's quarterly revenue. The real kicker? They only needed to analyze 20 repos to find the pattern. That's like a detective showing up to investigate a crime spree and solving all the cases before lunch. The "fake star economy" is basically the programming world's version of buying followers on Instagram, except instead of looking cool at parties, you're trying to secure Series A funding. Imagine building actual useful software when you could just spend a few grand inflating your GitHub metrics and convincing investors you're the next big thing. Nothing says "sustainable business model" quite like click farms in developing countries starring your half-baked React component library.

Mine Would Basically Be White Tiles

Mine Would Basically Be White Tiles
GitHub's contribution graph is basically a public shame board that tracks your commit activity. Green squares mean you've been productive; white squares mean you've been... living your life? The joke here is that someone finally found the perfect bathroom design—green and white tiles mimicking GitHub's contribution calendar. The self-deprecating title hits different though. "Mine would basically be white tiles" is the developer equivalent of admitting your GitHub looks like a ghost town. We've all been there—opening our profile before a job interview and realizing it looks like we retired in 2019. At least bathroom tiles don't judge you for taking weekends off or having a life outside of pushing code at 2 AM. Fun fact: GitHub's green squares have probably caused more anxiety than actual performance reviews. Nothing says "imposter syndrome" quite like comparing your sparse contribution graph to that one colleague who apparently commits code in their sleep.

People Saying That Never Even Tried. The Best Photoshop Alternative For Linux Is Krita

People Saying That Never Even Tried. The Best Photoshop Alternative For Linux Is Krita
The classic Linux software holy war strikes again. Someone suggests Krita as a Photoshop alternative, and immediately gets hit with the "actually, Krita is for digital painting/drawing only" crowd. The counterargument? "Krita is better than GIMP and more intuitive!" Then comes the reality check: Krita literally markets itself as a digital painting application, not a photo editor. But here's the kicker – the person defending Krita probably hasn't even tried using it for photo editing themselves, they're just parroting what they've read online. The meme nails the frustration of Linux software recommendations. Someone asks for a Photoshop alternative, gets Krita recommended, then gets lectured about how they're using it wrong when they point out it's designed for illustration. It's like recommending a hammer when someone needs a screwdriver because "hammers are better quality and more ergonomic than screwdrivers." Sure buddy, but can it edit RAW photos and do layer masking for product photography? The answer is: technically yes, but you're gonna have a bad time.

Die In Honour

Die In Honour
Linux purists would literally choose death over touching Windows. The burning house represents a catastrophic system failure, and the only escape route is through "windows" - but here's the kicker: they'd rather perish in the flames than compromise their principles by using anything Microsoft-related. It's the ultimate display of operating system loyalty. No dual-booting, no emergency Windows partition, no VM as a backup plan. Just pure, unadulterated commitment to the penguin. Some might call it stubborn. Linux users call it integrity. The best part? They'll probably spend their final moments trying to fix the burning house with a bash script instead of just climbing out the window like a normal person.

Linux Users

Linux Users
The Linux user's ultimate nightmare: being forced to use Windows. Even in a life-or-death situation where the house is literally on fire and the only escape route is through the windows, they'd rather perish than compromise their principles. It's not just an operating system preference—it's a lifestyle, a philosophy, a hill they're willing to die on. Literally. Because touching Windows would mean admitting that maybe, just maybe, not everything needs to be compiled from source with custom kernel flags. The commitment is real, folks.

Linux Users Btw

Linux Users Btw
You know how some people order a pizza and just eat it like normal humans? Linux users disassemble the entire box, rewire the cheese distribution system, replace the crust with a custom-compiled sourdough kernel, and then spend three hours debugging why the pepperoni won't boot. And they'll tell you it's better this way. Because it is. Kind of. Maybe. Depends on your distro. The "btw" in the title is a beautiful reference to the Arch Linux meme where users can't go five minutes without mentioning they use Arch. "I use Arch btw" has become the vegan crossfitter of the programming world—except instead of kale smoothies, it's package managers and tiling window managers.

The Goat

The Goat
uBlock Origin is genuinely the most essential browser extension ever created. It's not just an ad blocker—it's a privacy fortress, a performance optimizer, and your personal internet bodyguard all rolled into one. While other ad blockers sold out to "acceptable ads" programs (looking at you, AdBlock Plus), uBlock Origin stayed pure, open-source, and completely free. The developer, Raymond Hill, doesn't even accept donations anymore because he's just built different. He literally made the internet usable again and asks for nothing in return. Meanwhile, websites are out here loading 47 tracking scripts, auto-playing videos, and showing you ads for things you whispered about near your phone. Without uBlock Origin, you're basically raw-dogging the internet—exposing yourself to malware-laden ads, crypto miners, and those annoying newsletter popups that appear 0.3 seconds after you land on a page. It's the digital equivalent of wearing a hazmat suit in a biohazard zone. Can I get an AMEN?

Good Take Thio Joe

Good Take Thio Joe
Imagine being so traumatized by npm install times that you've sworn off entire programming languages. This person has ascended to a level of dependency paranoia where they're literally checking GitHub repos like they're reading ingredient labels on organic quinoa. "Python? TypeScript? JavaScript? Absolutely NOT, I refuse to download 47,000 packages just to print 'Hello World'." The "tree of life from a package manager" line is pure gold. Because nothing says "lightweight project" quite like installing half the internet's node_modules folder just to center a div. They're out here looking for projects written in pure assembly or carrier pigeon, anything to avoid that dreaded npm install that takes longer than compiling the Linux kernel. The aristocratic disgust in that bottom image perfectly captures the sheer AUDACITY of suggesting they use a language with dependencies. They're standing there in their powdered wig like "How DARE you suggest I pollute my pristine codebase with your bloated ecosystem."

It's A Matter Of Motivation

It's A Matter Of Motivation
Capitalism bros really thought they had a point until Wikipedia editors woke up and chose violence by documenting literally ALL of human knowledge for FREE. Meanwhile Minecraft players are out here building the Colosseum block by block at 3 AM because someone said they couldn't. Open source devs? They're fixing bugs in their sleep and maintaining critical infrastructure that runs half the internet without getting paid a SINGLE PENNY. And volunteer firefighters are literally running into BURNING BUILDINGS to save lives while Karen from corporate thinks people won't work without a quarterly bonus. The audacity of thinking money is the only motivator when passion, community, and spite are doing the HEAVY LIFTING out here!

Yet Another Download Manager

Yet Another Download Manager
Someone built a TUI (Terminal User Interface) download manager and now they're fishing for upvotes on Reddit like it's revolutionary. Meanwhile, the entire internet collectively yawns because there are literally hundreds of existing download managers—wget, curl, aria2, yt-dlp, axel, you name it. The Buzz Lightyear meme format nails it: one proud developer standing in front of an endless sea of identical clones, all doing the exact same thing. It's the programming equivalent of reinventing the wheel, except this time the wheel has a fancy ASCII progress bar. The TUI part is especially chef's kiss because nothing says "please validate my weekend project" quite like adding terminal colors to a task that's already been solved a thousand times over.

Appearances Can Be Something

Appearances Can Be Something
Plot twist of the century: FFmpeg is thanking an AI company for patches, and when someone asks why they're not upset about AI-generated code, the response is pure gold—"Because the patches appear to be written by humans." So either Anthropic's AI has gotten so good it's indistinguishable from human developers, or someone at Anthropic is actually reviewing and polishing the AI output before submitting. Either way, FFmpeg just delivered the most diplomatic burn in open-source history. They're basically saying "your AI code is acceptable because it doesn't look like AI slop," which is simultaneously a compliment and a savage indictment of typical AI-generated pull requests. The real kicker? They're calling it "Project Glasswing" to help secure critical software. Nothing says "urgent security initiative" quite like having to clarify that your patches don't read like a neural network had a stroke.

Even Ronaldo Agrees

Even Ronaldo Agrees
You know you've made questionable life choices when even Ronaldo—a guy who gets paid millions to kick a ball—looks at your Windows 11 setup and goes "nah, get that outta here." The man literally moved a Coca-Cola bottle once and tanked their stock. Now he's doing the same to Microsoft. Meanwhile Linux just casually slides in like "hey, I've been here the whole time, stable and ready." No forced updates during production deploys, no telemetry sending your search history to Redmond, no "let's move the Start menu again for funsies." Just a penguin that actually respects your workflow. The best part? Windows 11's system requirements eliminated half the world's perfectly good hardware while Linux runs on a potato with enthusiasm. Ronaldo knows. We all know.