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HTTP 418: I'm a teapot
The server identifies as a teapot now and is on a tea break, brb
HTTP 418: I'm a teapot
The server identifies as a teapot now and is on a tea break, brb
Slack messages Memes
Posts tagged with Slack messages
The Olympic Mental Preparation For A Teams "Hey"
Microsoft
Programming
Debugging
Agile
1 year ago
373.8K views
0 shares
That single "hey" message on Microsoft Teams might as well be the starting pistol for your Olympic sprint into chaos. You know exactly what's coming—some urgent bug that needs fixing ASAP, a production server that's decided to take an unscheduled vacation, or that feature you promised "would be easy" now requiring a complete architecture overhaul. The mental preparation is crucial. Deep breath. Crack knuckles. Summon your inner Olympic athlete. Because whatever follows that innocent three-letter word is guaranteed to derail your perfectly planned day and transform your Monday from "catching up on emails" to "why is everything on fire and why am I the only one with a fire extinguisher?"
The Sacred Scrolls Of Developer Apologies
Debugging
Programming
Agile
Git
Testing
1 year ago
322.6K views
0 shares
Ah, the sacred text of professional groveling. This is the comprehensive collection of phrases every developer keeps in a text file for when they realize they've been arguing about a bug for 45 minutes only to discover they forgot a semicolon. These aren't just apologies—they're survival tools. Copy-paste these into Slack after your senior dev points out you've been using the wrong API endpoint for three weeks and watch as your performance review magically improves from "concerning" to "shows potential." The best part? After 10 years in the industry, you'll develop the ability to sound genuinely contrite while simultaneously rolling your eyes so hard you can see your own brain.
When Your "Quick Question" Triggers A Novel-Length Response
Programming
Debugging
Agile
1 year ago
261.8K views
0 shares
The moment you realize your "quick question" has unleashed a coding apocalypse. That senior dev typing for 10+ minutes isn't crafting a simple yes/no – they're writing your obituary in documentation form. Nothing strikes fear into a developer's heart quite like watching those three typing dots continue past the 30-second mark. At that point, you're not getting an answer – you're getting an essay on why your approach is fundamentally flawed, complete with architectural diagrams and references to design patterns you've never heard of. Pro tip: If you see "senior dev is typing..." for more than 2 minutes, start updating your resume.
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