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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

Trending memes that don't need to be rewritten in Rust for performance

Means To Deceive

AI Programming
22 hours ago 241.0K views 0 shares
Means To Deceive
The AI overlords have gathered in their ominous council of doom, represented by every major AI logo known to humankind (Meta, OpenAI, Google Gemini, Anthropic, and friends), and they've cracked the code: documentation, tutorials, and Stack Overflow answers? Just elaborate psychological warfare to trick humans into willingly handing over their careers. "Here's how to write a for-loop, sweetie" they whisper, knowing full well they're training their own replacements. The sheer AUDACITY of these silicon villains pretending to be helpful while plotting our professional demise is honestly iconic. They're out here playing 4D chess while we're just trying to center a div.

Pride Versioning

Programming Devops Git Debugging
21 hours ago 228.8K views 0 shares
Pride Versioning
Forget semantic versioning—welcome to emotional versioning. The major version bump is for when you actually shipped something you're not ashamed of. The minor version? That's just Tuesday. But the patch number? That's where the real story lives. That triple-digit patch number is basically a confession booth for all those "critical security fixes" that are really just you fixing the bug where clicking the submit button twice crashes the entire database. Nothing screams "production-ready enterprise software" quite like version 2.7.847 because you've been too scared to bump to 3.0 and admit you broke backward compatibility six months ago.

Vibe Reviewers

AI Devops Git Programming
2 hours ago 36.6K views 1 shares
Vibe Reviewers
When you're too lazy to actually review the code so you just tag every AI assistant in existence and let them fight it out. Cursor, Claude, CodeRabbitAI, Codex - basically assembling the Avengers of code review except none of them have opposable thumbs or can actually merge the PR. The best part? They'll all probably approve it with different reasoning. Claude will write you a 3-paragraph essay about code quality, Cursor will suggest 47 autocomplete options, CodeRabbitAI will find that one missing semicolon from 2019, and Codex will just hallucinate a completely different codebase. Meanwhile, the actual human reviewers are nowhere to be found because they're busy... also asking AI to review their code. Welcome to 2024 where code review has become a group chat for bots. At least they respond faster than Dave from the backend team who's been "looking at it" for 3 weeks.

Coding Starts Chill Debugging Ends In Pain

Debugging Programming
20 hours ago 205.9K views 0 shares
Coding Starts Chill Debugging Ends In Pain
You start your day feeling blessed, writing beautiful functions, architecting elegant solutions, vibing with your IDE's autocomplete like it's reading your mind. Then you hit run and suddenly you're the High Sparrow doing a walk of shame through King's Landing. Debugging transforms you from Pope Francis radiating divine confidence into a weathered peasant who's seen too much. That semicolon you forgot? It aged you 40 years. The null pointer exception that only appears in production? That's your hair turning gray in real-time. The race condition that happens once every 1000 executions? You're now speaking in ancient tongues. The contrast is chef's kiss perfect—coding feels like you're writing poetry, debugging feels like you're deciphering someone else's fever dream from 2003 with zero comments and variable names like "temp2_final_ACTUAL".

Not So Open Of You

AI Programming
16 hours ago 194.3K views 0 shares
Not So Open Of You
OpenGL? Friendly handshake. OpenCV? Sure, let's be buddies. OpenSSH? Come here, friend! OpenCL? Absolutely! OpenVPN? Of course! But then OpenAI shows up and suddenly everyone's like "wait, you're calling yourself WHAT now?" The irony is absolutely *chef's kiss* because OpenAI is about as open as a bank vault on a Sunday. They literally went from a non-profit promising open research to a multi-billion dollar company keeping their models more locked down than Fort Knox. Meanwhile, all the other "Open" technologies are actually, you know, OPEN SOURCE. The betrayal! The audacity! It's like showing up to a potluck empty-handed and still putting "generous" in your Instagram bio.

Do You Want A Website?

Webdev React Javascript Programming Frontend
17 hours ago 188.6K views 0 shares
Do You Want A Website?
When World War 3 breaks out, programmers will somehow find a way to monetize the apocalypse. While everyone's panicking about nuclear fallout, developers are already spinning up their laptops asking "Hey, you need a landing page for your bunker?" The hustle never stops, not even during the literal end of civilization. That dog sitting there with a tie, completely unfazed by the mushroom clouds in the background, frantically coding up a React app for disaster preparedness? That's every freelance web developer who's ever existed. The world could be burning and we'd still be like "I can have a prototype ready by Friday, just need your brand colors and logo."

Shooting Yourself In The Foot

Webdev Javascript Programming Frontend
14 hours ago 184.5K views 0 shares
Shooting Yourself In The Foot
The ouroboros of web development economics: blocking the very thing that pays your bills. Installing an ad-blocker while simultaneously lamenting your salary is like being a farmer who refuses to eat vegetables. Here's the brutal irony—web devs spend countless hours implementing ad placements, optimizing ad load times, and debugging why ads won't display properly, only to go home and nuke every single ad from existence. Then they wonder why their paycheck isn't growing. It's the circle of life in tech: complain about ads, block ads, wonder why companies can't monetize, watch salaries stagnate, repeat. Chef's kiss of self-sabotage.

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Information Security Expert

Security Networking
18 hours ago 184.0K views 0 shares
Information Security Expert
Your CISO is out here throwing you a parade for dodging phishing emails like you're Neo in The Matrix, meanwhile you've been ignoring company emails for three months because you genuinely can't be bothered. The best security practice is just apathy, apparently. Who needs awareness training when you have chronic email avoidance? The irony is *chef's kiss* – you're technically unhackable if you never open anything in the first place. Task failed successfully, security edition.

It's That Time Again

Hardware Debugging
14 hours ago 178.6K views 0 shares
It's That Time Again
You know that rare magical moment when you actually clean out your PC case, blow out all the dust bunnies that have been living rent-free in your CPU cooler, and somehow—against all odds—the machine actually boots up successfully? That deserves a formal announcement. The fancy frog in Victorian attire perfectly captures that smug satisfaction when your hardware survives your "maintenance." Because let's be real, every time we open up that case and start yanking cables or blasting compressed air everywhere, there's a 50/50 chance something's getting unseated or a SATA cable is going to mysteriously stop working. The formal tone makes it even better—like you're presenting groundbreaking research at a conference when really you just vacuumed some Cheeto dust out of your GPU fans and didn't accidentally brick your motherboard in the process. Victory tastes sweet.

There Is A Page For Everything Yet Nobody Looks Before Slacking Me

Agile Devops Programming
13 hours ago 176.1K views 0 shares
There Is A Page For Everything Yet Nobody Looks Before Slacking Me
Oh, the TRAGEDY of being the person who actually documented everything! You spent hours crafting beautiful Confluence pages with step-by-step guides, architecture diagrams, and troubleshooting FAQs. You even added screenshots! But does anyone read them? ABSOLUTELY NOT. Instead, they ping you on Slack every five minutes asking questions that are literally answered in the FIRST PARAGRAPH of the docs. The savage tagline "where documentation goes to die" is painfully accurate. Confluence has become the digital equivalent of that drawer where you throw instruction manuals you'll never read. Your coworkers would rather interrupt you mid-flow than spend 30 seconds using the search bar. And when you send them the link? "Oh I didn't know we had that documented!" YES YOU DID, KAREN, I LITERALLY ANNOUNCED IT IN THREE CHANNELS. Documentation is immortal, but apparently so is everyone's refusal to read it.

Lean And Mean Eng Team

Agile Programming
10 hours ago 142.9K views 0 shares
Lean And Mean Eng Team
Upper deck's packed with C-suite executives having strategic meetings about synergy and KPIs, while the lone IC (Individual Contributor) is down in the engine room actually rowing the sinking ship. Two CTOs though? That's efficiency right there. Nothing says "lean engineering team" quite like having more chiefs than the entire Native American population and one engineer doing all the actual work. The EM hanging off the side is the perfect touch—middle management literally falling off the boat while trying to shield everyone from the reality that they're taking on water.

Ultimate Source Protection

Programming Webdev Security Algorithms Javascript
9 hours ago 131.8K views 0 shares
Ultimate Source Protection
Oh honey, someone really said "I'm gonna protect my JavaScript code" and then wrote it entirely in CLASSICAL CHINESE. Like, forget minification and obfuscation—just throw in some ancient dynasty poetry and call it a day! 😭 This is literally the nuclear option of code protection. You've got arrays, sorting algorithms, and what appears to be a quicksort implementation, but it's all written using traditional Chinese characters with classical grammar. It's like someone took their CS homework and decided to cosplay as a Tang Dynasty scholar. The best part? This would ACTUALLY work as protection because even Chinese-speaking developers would need a degree in ancient literature to decode this masterpiece. Good luck to the junior dev who has to maintain this code. They'll need a dictionary, a history textbook, and possibly a time machine.
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