performance Memes

What Is Caching

What Is Caching
So the intern just casually suggested implementing a linear search through a billion rows in production. You know, O(n) complexity where n = 1,000,000,000. That's the kind of suggestion that makes senior devs age in dog years. The facepalm energy here is palpable. Instead of using proper indexing, query optimization, or literally any form of caching (Redis, Memcached, even a hastily assembled HashMap), the intern wants to brute-force search through a billion records like it's a CS101 homework assignment. Real-time? Sure, if "real-time" means "come back next Tuesday." This is basically the database equivalent of reading every single book in a library to find one phone number instead of just... using the phone book. Indexes exist for a reason, friend.

Cache Everything

Cache Everything
Someone discovers Redis exists and suddenly they're the messiah of performance optimization. Database taking 200ms to respond? Cache it. API call taking too long? Cache it. User's name? Believe it or not, also cache. Never mind that you now have a distributed system with cache invalidation problems—the two hardest things in computer science after naming things and off-by-one errors. Fast forward three months and nobody knows what data is real anymore, but hey, those response times look incredible on the dashboard.

Ambitious

Ambitious
When someone asks what you'd do with 32GB of RAM and your answer is "run two Chrome tabs simultaneously," you know the struggle is real. Chrome's notorious memory consumption has become the stuff of legends—each tab spawning processes like rabbits, hoarding RAM like a dragon guards gold. The joke here is that 32GB is actually a pretty beefy amount of memory that could handle virtual machines, Docker containers, multiple IDEs, and complex builds... but Chrome? Chrome would still find a way to consume it all with just a handful of tabs open. The absurdist humor comes from treating an incredibly modest task (two whole tabs!) as if it's some wild, ambitious dream that requires enterprise-grade hardware. It's the developer's version of "if I won the lottery, I'd buy two candy bars."

Don't Do Recursive Fib Kids

Don't Do Recursive Fib Kids
Calculating the 87th Fibonacci number with naive recursion? Buckle up, because your CPU is about to experience the heat death of the universe in real-time. The joke here is that recursive Fibonacci without memoization has O(2^n) time complexity—meaning each call spawns two more calls, which spawn two more each, creating an exponential explosion of redundant calculations. For fib(87), you're looking at roughly 2^87 operations, which is about 154 quintillion function calls. Even on a supercomputer doing 1 billion ops/second, that's... yeah, 51 years sounds about right. Meanwhile, a simple iterative solution or dynamic programming approach would solve it in under a microsecond. It's the textbook example of why Big O notation matters and why your CS professor kept screaming about memoization during that algorithms lecture you slept through. Fun fact: The 87th Fibonacci number is 679,891,637,638,612,258,246,517,205,275,170,766,368. Your recursive function will calculate fib(2) approximately 43 billion times to get there. Efficiency? Never heard of her.

New Intern

New Intern
Oh sweet summer child. Our dear intern just read ONE forum post about Assembly being fast and decided to rewrite the ENTIRE codebase from a high-level language to Assembly. You know, just casually touching 3000+ files, deleting what they thought were "high-level files we don't need anymore" (spoiler: we DEFINITELY needed those), and creating a diff so massive that GitHub itself is having an existential crisis. The confidence! The audacity! The sheer chaos of +17 MILLION additions and -1.8 MILLION deletions! And then having the NERVE to say "GitHub seems to be lagging" as if the problem is GitHub and not the fact that they just nuked the entire project into oblivion. The cherry on top? They're already looking forward to feedback so they can start their NEXT task. Buddy, your next task is updating your LinkedIn because this PR is about to become a legendary cautionary tale.

Assembly Very Fast Language

Assembly Very Fast Language
Someone took the advice "Assembly is the fastest language" a bit too literally and rewrote their entire codebase in Assembly. The result? A catastrophic commit showing +1.7 million additions and -186k deletions across 3,158 files. They casually mention that some "high-level files" were deleted because "we don't need them anymore" – you know, just the entire application logic written in a sane language. The best part is the complete obliviousness to the disaster they've created. They're apologizing for GitHub lagging (yeah, no kidding with that diff size) and cheerfully asking for feedback on their "next task." Buddy, your next task should be reverting that commit and maybe reading what "fastest language" actually means in context. Sure, Assembly runs fast, but your development velocity just hit negative infinity. Hope they have good backups, because that's not a refactor – that's a war crime against version control.

Logitech C922x HD Pro PC Webcam, Full HD 1080p/30fps or 720p/60fps Video, HD Light Correction, Works with Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, Zoom, Nintendo Switch 2’s new GameChat mode, Mac/Tablet- Black

Logitech C922x HD Pro PC Webcam, Full HD 1080p/30fps or 720p/60fps Video, HD Light Correction, Works with Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, Zoom, Nintendo Switch 2’s new GameChat mode, Mac/Tablet- Black
Compatible with Nintendo Switch 2’s new GameChat mode · HD lighting adjustment and autofocus: The Logitech webcam automatically fine-tunes the lighting, producing bright, razor-sharp images even in l…

Chrome Is Pushing My Computer's RAM To Its Limits

Chrome Is Pushing My Computer's RAM To Its Limits
Your laptop is just vibing, minding its own business, running like a champ. Then Chrome decides to casually install some random 4GB AI model you absolutely did NOT consent to, and suddenly your machine is getting OBLITERATED like a school bus getting absolutely demolished by a freight train. The sheer AUDACITY of Chrome treating your RAM like it's an all-you-can-eat buffet while you're just trying to keep 47 tabs open for "research purposes." RIP to your laptop's will to live.

People Who Still Believe...

People Who Still Believe...
The audacity! The DELUSION! Someone really out here trying to convince us that the human eye can't see beyond 30 fps like it's some kind of biological fact. Meanwhile, gamers worldwide are literally weeping tears of joy when they upgrade from 60Hz to 144Hz monitors because apparently their eyes didn't get the memo about this supposed limitation. This myth has been circulating since the dawn of gaming time, probably started by someone trying to justify their potato PC. The truth? Your eyes don't work in frames per second at all – they're analog, baby! Studies show people can absolutely perceive differences well beyond 30 fps, with many noticing improvements up to 150+ fps. But sure, keep telling yourself that cinematic 30 fps is "more realistic" while the rest of us are living in buttery smooth 120+ fps paradise.

Cpp Isn't Much Faster

Cpp Isn't Much Faster
When someone complains that their 3000-line C++ monstrosity is only marginally faster than your elegant 10-line Python script, just remind them about Big O notation. Sure, C++ might be 0.001 seconds faster per execution, but when you're running benchmarks a few hundred billion times to prove your point, suddenly that tiny difference becomes statistically significant enough to justify the extra 2990 lines of template metaprogramming hell. The real kicker? While the C++ dev spent three weeks debugging segfaults and fighting with the compiler, the Python dev already shipped the feature, went on vacation, and came back to find it running just fine in production. But hey, at least those benchmark graphs look impressive on the performance review slide deck.

Defeated The Whole Purpose Of Writing In Assembly

Defeated The Whole Purpose Of Writing In Assembly
So someone submitted an AI-generated assembly patch to dav1d (a video decoder), and it was slower than C. Let that sink in. Assembly—the language you write when you want to squeeze every last CPU cycle out of your code—got outperformed by C because an AI wrote it. The entire point of hand-writing assembly is to achieve performance that compilers can't match. You're basically telling the compiler "step aside, I'll optimize this myself." But AI-generated assembly? That's like hiring a robot chef to make instant ramen and somehow ending up with something worse than the microwave version. Turns out AI doesn't understand cache lines, instruction pipelining, or the dark arts of SIMD optimization. It just vomits out syntactically correct assembly that runs like it's stuck in molasses. Modern C compilers have decades of optimization wizardry baked in—AI has... vibes.

Watching Me Lose 5 Games In A Row

Watching Me Lose 5 Games In A Row
Your gaming PC sitting there with its RGB lights and high-end specs, watching you blame everything except your own skill. "It's the lag," you say. "The matchmaking is broken," you insist. Meanwhile, your rig is internally screaming "I have 32GB of RAM and a 4090, maybe it's not the hardware, chief." That cat's expression is exactly what your $3000 machine looks like when you rage quit for the fifth time and start Googling "how to improve aim" instead of just practicing. The PC isn't judging you... it's just concerned about its life choices and wondering if it could've been used for something more productive like training ML models or rendering Blender scenes. At least when your code fails five times in a row, you can blame the compiler.

A Rare Non AI Meme

A Rare Non AI Meme
Rust devs really out here acting like they just solved world hunger because they shaved off 8 measly bytes by swapping Vec<T> for Box<[T]>. THE AUDACITY. The absolute SWAGGER. They're strutting around like they just engineered the Golden Gate Bridge when in reality they optimized a data structure that'll save approximately 0.00000001% of your server's memory budget. But hey, when you're obsessed with zero-cost abstractions and memory safety, every byte is a VICTORY WORTH CELEBRATING. Meanwhile the rest of us are over here with our garbage collectors just vibing, blissfully unaware of the epic engineering feat that just transpired. Classic Rust energy: maximum effort, microscopic gains, infinite smugness.

Synology 2-Bay DiskStation DS725+ (Diskless)

Synology 2-Bay DiskStation DS725+ (Diskless)
Supports drives on the model's official compatibility list · Up to 276/224 MB/s sequential read/write throughput supports stable data transfers · Leverage built-in file and photo management, data pro…