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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

Trending Memes

These memes have better version control than your git history

Vibecoding Side Effects

Security Webdev Programming Databases Backend
11 hours ago 160.5K views 1 shares
Vibecoding Side Effects
You know you've entered the danger zone when you're vibing so hard that you accidentally store passwords in plaintext AND make them globally unique across all users. The error message is basically tattling on poor [email protected], exposing their password to everyone who tries to register. This is what happens when you skip the "hash your passwords" lecture and go straight to "let's just see if it works." Somewhere, a security engineer just felt a disturbance in the force. This registration form is basically a GDPR violation speedrun. Not only are passwords stored in a way that allows collision detection, but they're also casually revealing other users' email addresses in error messages. It's like a two-for-one special on security nightmares.

Networking

Networking Programming
22 hours ago 154.7K views 1 shares
Networking
Someone fed LinkedIn corporate speak into Google Translate and got back what everyone's actually thinking. The translation cuts through approximately 47 layers of buzzword padding to reveal the core function: establishing a connection. Except one involves TCP/IP and the other involves considerably more awkward small talk. Both types of networking involve protocols, handshakes, and the occasional timeout. Though only one will ghost you after the initial SYN-ACK.

Horror From Chinese Medical Devices Showing On TV

Python Iot Hardware Programming Debugging
3 hours ago 61.5K views 1 shares
Horror From Chinese Medical Devices Showing On TV
When your medical device firmware crashes on national television and suddenly everyone can see your nested if-else hell. Look at those beautiful pyramids of doom - somebody clearly never heard of early returns or, you know, basic refactoring. The real horror isn't the medical emergency - it's watching production code with variable names like "LineEdit_A.setText()" broadcast to millions of viewers. Somewhere, a junior dev is having the worst day of their career while their tech lead is frantically updating their resume. Nothing says "quality medical equipment" quite like Python code with indentation levels deeper than the Mariana Trench. At least we know it's not running on a potato - it takes serious hardware to render that many nested conditions without catching fire.

AI Slop

AI Webdev
21 hours ago 166.4K views 0 shares
AI Slop
The internet used to be a beautiful place. Now? It's drowning in AI-generated garbage that looks like it was made by an algorithm having a fever dream. We've got cat-human hybrids, uncanny valley game characters, and hands with more fingers than a Chernobyl resident. DLSS might make your games look prettier, but it can't save us from the tsunami of AI-generated content flooding every corner of the web. From stock photos that make you question reality to "art" that screams "I was made in 30 seconds by someone who typed 'epic warrior' into Midjourney," we're living in the golden age of digital junk food. The worst part? It's not going away. It's multiplying faster than bugs in production code.

Posting AI Just Killed Jobs On Linked In

AI Programming
21 hours ago 163.7K views 0 shares
Posting AI Just Killed Jobs On Linked In
Every AI startup founder on LinkedIn acting like they've invented cold fusion when they've just wrapped the Anthropic API in a Next.js app with some Tailwind buttons. The rainbow and sparkles really sell the "revolutionary" part of their pitch deck. Meanwhile, the rest of us are sitting here knowing they're charging $99/month for what's essentially a glorified API call with a UI. But hey, gotta secure that Series A somehow, right?

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Back In The Days

Security Webdev Frontend
21 hours ago 162.5K views 0 shares
Back In The Days
Remember when security was just asking nicely if your credit card got stolen? No encryption, no OAuth, no JWT tokens—just a simple form asking "hey, did someone take your money?" with the honor system as the primary authentication method. The best part? They're literally asking you to type your card number into a web form to check if it's been stolen. Galaxy brain security right there. It's like asking someone to hand you their keys to check if their house has been broken into. The early 2000s were wild. SSL was optional, passwords were stored in plaintext, and apparently credit card validation was just vibes and a checkbox. Now we have 2FA, biometrics, and security audits that make you question your life choices, but back then? Just tick "Check It" and pray.

Fly Me To The Moon Baby

Vim Programming StackOverflow
11 hours ago 158.8K views 0 shares
Fly Me To The Moon Baby
The 1960s programmer: a literal chad with a tower of punch cards, writing assembly code to send humans to the moon with less computing power than your toaster. Fast forward to 2020, and we've got the doge programmer who can't even escape Vim without consulting Stack Overflow, powered by Spotify and coffee-fueled anxiety. They built Apollo with slide rules and raw determination. We build CRUD apps with 47 npm packages and still manage to break production on a Friday. The devolution is real, folks. But hey, at least we have syntax highlighting and dark mode... oh wait, we're stuck in Vim so we can't even enjoy that.

Our Database

Databases Programming Backend
17 hours ago 158.4K views 0 shares
Our Database
When your database management system is so collectively owned that it transcends capitalism and becomes a Soviet relic. The ushanka hat perched on the MySQL dolphin is chef's kiss—because nothing says "efficient data storage" like centralized planning and five-year schemas. Your SELECT statements now require committee approval, and every JOIN is a workers' union. Foreign keys? More like foreign comrades. The real question is whether your rollback strategy includes a Politburo vote. Fun fact: In OurSQL, there are no private tables—only shared resources for the people. Performance issues are distributed equally among all users.

Oh Hell No!

Hardware Security Programming
13 hours ago 158.3K views 0 shares
Oh Hell No!
You're lying in your casket, finally at peace, when you hear your family discussing funeral expenses. Their solution? Selling your custom-built gaming rig with the RTX 4090, the triple-monitor setup, the mechanical keyboard collection, and that NAS server running your Plex instance. Suddenly you're sitting bolt upright in the coffin like "absolutely not." That PC has your entire digital life on it. Unencrypted browser history, half-finished side projects, 47 different versions of "final_FINAL_v3_actually_final.py", and a folder structure so convoluted it would take archaeologists decades to decipher. They're not selling that thing. You're taking it with you.

Dennis

Networking Devops Programming Databases Backend
12 hours ago 156.0K views 0 shares
Dennis
You know what? This actually tracks. If we're gonna pronounce SQL as "sequel" instead of the proper S-Q-L, then yeah, DNS should absolutely be "Dennis." And honestly, "Dennis" has been causing me way more problems than any actual person named Dennis ever could. Server not responding? Dennis is down. Website won't load? Dennis propagation issues. Can't reach the internet? Dennis lookup failed. At least now when I'm troubleshooting at 2 AM, I can yell "DENNIS, WHY ARE YOU LIKE THIS?" and it'll feel more personal. The consistency is chef's kiss though—either we pronounce everything as acronyms or we give them all proper names. I'm ready to meet their friends: API (Ay-pee), HTTP (Huh-tup), and my personal favorite, JSON (Jason).

It's Too Early For Troubleshooting

Networking Programming Debugging
10 hours ago 155.8K views 0 shares
It's Too Early For Troubleshooting
You know you're running on fumes when your troubleshooting strategy is literally "let me check if the internet exists." Pinging 8.8.8.8 (Google's DNS) is the developer equivalent of slapping the side of a TV to see if it works. It's that baseline sanity check before your first coffee kicks in—if this doesn't respond, either your network is toast or you haven't paid the internet bill in three months. The DuckDuckGo browser with "Protected" and "United Kingdom" filters just adds to the vibe. Like yeah, we're privacy-conscious and geographically specific, but also too brain-dead to remember if we're actually connected to WiFi. Classic Monday morning energy.

Hmmmmm, No Thanks Nvidia

AI Hardware Gamedev
16 hours ago 155.7K views 0 shares
Hmmmmm, No Thanks Nvidia
So Nvidia's DLSS (Deep Learning Super Sampling) promises to upscale your graphics and make everything look better using AI magic. But when you turn it on, your sleek computer mouse suddenly transforms into a dead rodent connected to your laptop. The visual "enhancement" is... questionable at best. The joke cuts deep because DLSS, while technically impressive, sometimes produces artifacts and weird textures that make things look worse instead of better—especially at lower quality settings. Sure, you get more FPS, but at what cost? Your mouse now looks like it died from radiation poisoning in a Chernobyl simulator. It's the classic "expectation vs reality" of AI upscaling. Marketing says "crystal clear 4K gaming," but your eyes say "why does everything look like it's covered in Vaseline?"
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