Tech myths Memes

Posts tagged with Tech myths

We've Been Bamboozled

We've Been Bamboozled
THE AUDACITY! All these years they've been selling us this magical "cloud" concept, promising our data is floating in some mystical digital heaven. Then you peek behind the curtain and—GASP—it's just regular computers... ON THE GROUND! Not suspended in fluffy white clouds! Not powered by unicorn dreams! Just boring server racks sitting in warehouses, probably in New Jersey or something. My entire tech career is built on a LIE! Next thing you'll tell me is that Big Data isn't actually physically larger than Regular Data. I'm having an existential crisis right now. 💀

The Three-Headed Dragon Of Rapid Development

The Three-Headed Dragon Of Rapid Development
The unholy trinity of "rapid development" is on full display! The tweet claims Git, JavaScript, and Microsoft BASIC were all created in under a week—which is hilariously wrong and the perfect setup for the three-headed dragon meme below. Two fierce dragon heads represent Git and BASIC—powerful tools that required significant development time. But that third head? JavaScript with its derpy eyes and tongue sticking out perfectly captures how JS was indeed cobbled together in 10 days by Brendan Eich in 1995. Fun fact: Linus Torvalds spent months creating Git after the BitKeeper controversy, and BASIC took significant development at Microsoft. Meanwhile, JavaScript—despite being slapped together in a mad rush to compete with Java—somehow powers most of the modern web. Proof that sometimes the derpy dragon wins!

One Of The Biggest Lies!

One Of The Biggest Lies!
The eternal refresh rate paradox strikes again! That moment when hardware enthusiasts smugly claim "the human eye can't see beyond 60 FPS" while simultaneously dropping $800 on a 240Hz monitor. The cognitive dissonance is real—suddenly they can magically perceive every microsecond of buttery smoothness between frames. Fun fact: while the average person can detect differences up to about 150Hz, hardcore gamers and developers have trained their eyes like digital ninjas to spot those precious milliseconds that might give them the edge in competitive play. Next time someone pulls the "60 FPS limit" card, just point to their expensive monitor and watch their brain.exe crash.