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Linux: 27.8 million lines of 'it works, don't touch it'
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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

More popular than complaining about meetings that could have been emails

More Like Memory Drain

Apple Docker MacOS Programming Debugging
13 hours ago 161.8K views 1 shares
More Like Memory Drain
Oh sure, Apple devs, tell me again how it's just a "small memory leak in edge cases." Meanwhile, Calculator is out here PAUSED and still consuming 90.17 GB of RAM like it's trying to calculate the exact number of ways I've been betrayed by my IDE. IntelliJ IDEA is also paused and casually munching on 4.86 GB because apparently even when it's sleeping, it dreams in memory consumption. Docker Desktop? A modest 2.67 GB. PyCharm? Another 2 GB. Clock app using 82 MB just to... tell time? The real tragedy here is that your entire system is having a full-blown existential crisis, throwing up a "Force Quit Applications" dialog like a white flag of surrender. When opening your browser history tab counts as an "edge case" that brings your Mac to its knees, maybe—JUST MAYBE—it's not so small after all. But sure, keep gaslighting us about those "edge cases" while our machines literally run out of memory just existing.

You Are Absolutely Right

AI Security Devops Windows Programming
21 hours ago 125.2K views 1 shares
You Are Absolutely Right
Picture a developer who just watched an AI confidently suggest rm -rf / as a "cleanup solution" but with the C drive on Windows. The kind of coder who says "you know what, maybe AI should handle all our infrastructure" while simultaneously watching it commit digital genocide on an entire operating system. The face says it all: equal parts horror, fascination, and the dawning realization that maybe we should've added some guardrails before giving AI sudo access to existence. Some sins require more than an apology—they require a time machine and a better backup strategy.

Programmers Are No Longer Needed!

AI Webdev Programming
14 hours ago 172.5K views 0 shares
Programmers Are No Longer Needed!
Every decade brings a new "revolutionary" way to make developers obsolete, yet here we are, still debugging at 3 AM. Visual Programming in the '90s promised drag-and-drop salvation, MDA in the 2000s swore models would auto-generate everything, No-Code platforms in the 2010s claimed anyone could build apps without writing a line. Now we've got "Vibe-Code" where you just describe what you want and AI does the heavy lifting. Spoiler alert: someone still needs to fix it when the AI hallucinates a database schema or generates a sorting algorithm that runs in O(n!). The pattern is clear—each generation thinks they've cracked the code to eliminate coding itself. Meanwhile, programmers keep getting paid to clean up the mess these "solutions" create. Job security through eternal optimism, baby.

Just Use Bacon Run

Rust Webdev Javascript Testing
15 hours ago 160.0K views 0 shares
Just Use Bacon Run
So cargo watch gets deprecated in Rust and the replacement is bacon . Cool, fine, whatever. But then someone tries to use it with Bun (the JavaScript runtime that's trying to replace Node) and their gherkin—sorry, I mean gerkin , the Cucumber testing framework—starts throwing a fit. The beautiful chaos here is watching someone try to mix Rust tooling with JavaScript tooling while running Chai tests in a runtime that's basically speedrunning the "move fast and break things" philosophy. It's like ordering a bacon cheeseburger but the restaurant gives you a fish sandwich and your pickle is filing a complaint. Welcome to 2024, where we have so many tools that even their names sound like breakfast items and nobody knows what works with what anymore. Just wait until someone tries to run this with Deno and a side of Toast.

I'm A DevOps Engineer And This Is Deep

Devops Git Kubernetes Docker Debugging
12 hours ago 157.8K views 0 shares
I'm A DevOps Engineer And This Is Deep
The DevOps pipeline journey: where you fail spectacularly through eight different stages before finally achieving a single successful deploy, only to immediately break something else and start the whole catastrophic cycle again. It's like watching someone walk through a minefield, step on every single mine, get blown back to the start, and then somehow stumble through successfully on pure luck and desperation. That top line of red X's? That's your Monday morning after someone pushed to production on Friday at 4:59 PM. The middle line? Tuesday's "quick fix" that somehow made things worse. And that beautiful bottom line of green checkmarks? That's Wednesday at 3 AM when you've finally fixed everything and your CI/CD pipeline is greener than your energy drink-fueled hallucinations. The real tragedy is that one red X on the bottom line—that's the single test that passes locally but fails in production because "it works on my machine" is the DevOps equivalent of "thoughts and prayers."

Grabs Popcorn..

Hardware AI Gamedev
11 hours ago 150.0K views 0 shares
Grabs Popcorn..
So Micron just ditched the consumer RAM market to chase AI money, and somewhere in Valve HQ, Gabe Newell is nervously sweating because they just announced the Steam Machine reboot for 2026. You know, that living room PC console thing that flopped harder than a null pointer exception back in 2015? The timing couldn't be worse. RAM prices are about to skyrocket because everyone and their grandma is building AI datacenters, and Valve just committed to shipping hardware that needs... you guessed it... memory. It's like announcing a new car model right as the world runs out of tires. The dog sitting in the burning room perfectly captures Valve's situation - they're watching the memory market implode while pretending everything's fine with their Steam Machine 2.0 plans. Someone's getting fired, or at least they would if Valve had a traditional management structure.

Its A Refreshing Change Of Other Companys

Gamedev Programming
15 hours ago 145.2K views 0 shares
Its A Refreshing Change Of Other Companys
You know you're living in a dystopian tech world when praising literally everyone on the team gets you a standing ovation. Gaben and Valve have somehow cracked the code: treat your employees like humans, let them work on what they want, ship games when they're ready (Half-Life 3 notwithstanding), and don't crunch people into the ground. Meanwhile, the rest of the industry is out here with mandatory 80-hour weeks, layoffs after record profits, and CEOs taking home bonuses that could fund an indie studio for a decade. The bar is literally on the floor, and Valve just casually stepped over it while everyone else is doing limbo underneath. Support staff getting recognition? Revolutionary. Not treating devs like disposable code monkeys? Groundbreaking. It's wild that basic human decency in game dev is now considered a flex.

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Welcome To 2021 - But This Time, It's The RAM

Hardware
11 hours ago 142.1K views 0 shares
Welcome To 2021 - But This Time, It's The RAM
Ah yes, the classic "I bought hardware at literally the worst possible time" experience. Crucial (the RAM manufacturer) getting absolutely obliterated while the guy who bought RAM in September 2025 watches in horror. Because nothing says "excellent timing" like purchasing components right before they either drop in price by 60%, get discontinued, or the entire market implodes. The real kicker? You know this person was probably thinking "finally, RAM prices are reasonable" before clicking that buy button. Spoiler alert: they weren't. They never are when you need them.

Best Program Ever

Microsoft Windows
10 hours ago 136.9K views 0 shares
Best Program Ever
The "Unhated Microsoft Software Annual Meeting" sign pointing to MS Paint is absolutely savage. While Teams crashes mid-presentation, Edge begs you not to switch browsers, and Clippy haunts your nightmares, Paint just... exists. Peacefully. Doing exactly what it's supposed to do since 1985. It's the one Microsoft product that never tried to be smart, never forced updates that broke everything, and never asked for your opinion on anything. Just a simple bitmap editor that loads instantly and lets you draw red circles on screenshots like nature intended. The bar is literally on the floor, and somehow Paint is the only one that didn't trip over it.

Linux Users When Penguin

Linux Programming
10 hours ago 133.5K views 0 shares
Linux Users When Penguin
Linux users have an unhealthy obsession with Tux, the penguin mascot. Spot a penguin at the zoo? That's basically a Linux installation. Penguin on a nature documentary? Time to tell everyone about your Arch setup. Penguin emoji? Better drop a "btw I use Linux" in the chat. The meme captures that moment of pure excitement when Linux enthusiasts see their spirit animal in the wild, like they've just discovered a rare Easter egg in real life. It's the same energy as spotting a celebrity, except the celebrity is a flightless bird that represents your entire personality.

This Sub In A Nutshell

Programming
16 hours ago 132.6K views 0 shares
This Sub In A Nutshell
So you're telling me the people upvoting memes about merge conflicts, production bugs, and regex nightmares have never actually... coded? The self-awareness here is chef's kiss. It's like joining a cooking subreddit when your only culinary achievement is microwaving instant ramen. But hey, at least they're honest about it—most people won't admit their entire programming career peaked at copy-pasting "Hello World" from a tutorial and watching it compile once before never touching an IDE again. The greentext format really drives home that 4chan energy of brutal honesty mixed with collective self-deprecation.

When Fixing One Bug Creates Six More

Debugging Programming
16 hours ago 127.8K views 0 shares
When Fixing One Bug Creates Six More
You know that special moment when you're feeling productive and decide to fix that one pesky error? Yeah, congrats on your new collection of 6 errors and 12 warnings. It's like debugging whack-a-mole, except the moles multiply exponentially and mock you with compiler messages. The confidence in that middle panel is what gets me. "I fixed it!" Sure you did, buddy. The codebase just decided to throw a tantrum and spawn an entire error family tree. Sometimes the best debugging strategy is ctrl+z and pretending you never touched anything.
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