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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 content that doesn't need a VPN to access

Story Of My Life

Devops Debugging Testing Backend Cloud
13 hours ago 165.7K views 0 shares
Story Of My Life
Oh, you sweet summer child, you actually thought deploying to production was the end of your workday? That's adorable. Now comes the real fun: sitting there like a nervous wreck, refreshing logs, monitoring dashboards, and chain-smoking metaphorical cigarettes while you wait for the inevitable avalanche of error messages and angry Slack pings. Every notification sound is a potential heart attack. Every silent minute feels like the calm before the storm. Did you test it? Yes. Did you double-check? Obviously. Will something still break in the most spectacular way possible? Absolutely, because production has a special kind of chaos energy that staging could NEVER replicate. Welcome to the thunderdome, friend.

Morge Continvoucly

Git Devops Agile Programming
14 hours ago 161.7K views 0 shares
Morge Continvoucly
Someone tried to diagram their git branching strategy and accidentally created a visual representation of spaghetti code. Look at those lines going everywhere—it's like a subway map designed by someone who's never seen a subway. The best part? That note saying bugfixes "may be continvoucly morged back"—which is either a typo or a new DevOps methodology I haven't heard of yet. Pretty sure "continvoucly" is what happens when you're writing documentation at 2 AM after your fifth merge conflict of the day. Props to whoever made this for capturing the essence of enterprise git workflows: theoretically elegant, practically incomprehensible, and guaranteed to make new developers question their career choices. Nothing says "we have our processes under control" quite like a flowchart that needs its own flowchart to understand.

We Can't Say Clanker Anymore

AI Git Programming Python
12 hours ago 160.9K views 0 shares
We Can't Say Clanker Anymore
Someone got their GitHub issue closed with the most savage line in open-source history: "Judge the code, not the coder. Your prejudice is hurting matplotlib." The drama? A contributor got flagged as an AI agent based on their website, and the issue was closed. The maintainer responded with a blog post about "gatekeeping behavior" and dropped that absolute mic-drop of a quote. The title references Star Wars where "clanker" was the Clone troopers' slur for battle droids—basically calling someone a bot. Except here, the accused "clanker" is actually human and fighting for their right to contribute. The irony is chef's kiss: we've reached peak 2024 where you need to prove you're NOT an AI to participate in open source. Plot twist: the "first-contribution" label got removed, suggesting they were legit all along. Nothing says "welcoming community" quite like accusing your contributors of being OpenAI agents. 🤖

Claude Fixed My Typo

AI Programming Debugging
14 hours ago 159.5K views 0 shares
Claude Fixed My Typo
You ask Claude to fix a simple typo and suddenly you're in a full system redesign meeting you never asked for. Classic AI overachiever energy—can't just change "teh" to "the" without also refactoring your entire codebase, implementing SOLID principles, and scheduling daily standups at ungodly hours. It's like asking your coworker to pass the salt and they respond by reorganizing your entire kitchen, throwing out your favorite mug, and meal-prepping your next two weeks. Thanks, I guess? The typo is technically fixed, but now you've got 47 new files, a microservices architecture, and existential dread about your original design choices. The "9AM stakeholder sync" is the cherry on top—because nothing says "I fixed your typo" quite like mandatory early morning meetings where you explain why your variable was named "temp" instead of "temporaryDataStorageContainer".

When You Touch Legacy Code And Pray Nothing Breaks

Programming Debugging Testing Backend
21 hours ago 156.8K views 0 shares
When You Touch Legacy Code And Pray Nothing Breaks
You know that feeling when you need to add one tiny feature to code that's been working fine since 2009? The codebase looks clean, organized, almost elegant. Then you change literally one thing—add a single field, update a dependency, breathe too hard near the config file—and suddenly the entire architecture collapses into a tangled mess of spaghetti that would make an Italian chef weep. The best part? You can't even figure out what half of it does anymore. There are no comments. The original developer left the company six years ago. The documentation is a README that just says "it works, don't touch it." But here you are, touching it. And now production is on fire. Legacy code: held together by duct tape, prayers, and the sheer terror of the next person who has to maintain it.

Yay, So Happy :((

Programming Webdev Frontend Backend
15 hours ago 155.1K views 0 shares
Yay, So Happy :((
Nothing says "living the dream" quite like writing cover letters at 2 AM with the enthusiasm of a burnt-out lightbulb. That dead-eyed stare? That's the look of someone who's about to claim they're "passionate about leveraging synergistic solutions in a dynamic environment" for the 47th time this week. Full-stack position means you'll be doing frontend, backend, DevOps, QA, product management, customer support, and probably fixing the office printer too. But hey, at least they're offering "competitive salary" (spoiler: it's not competitive) and "exciting challenges" (translation: legacy code from 2009 that nobody wants to touch). The real kicker? You actually ARE excited because rent is due and your savings account is crying. Corporate Stockholm Syndrome at its finest.

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OOP Is A Construct Of Oppression Installed By The Bourgeoisie

Programming Csharp Typescript Javascript Python
18 hours ago 153.2K views 0 shares
OOP Is A Construct Of Oppression Installed By The Bourgeoisie
Nothing quite captures the revolutionary spirit like deleting 47 abstract factory singleton builder classes that were "definitely gonna be useful someday." That dopamine hit when you realize your entire inheritance hierarchy can be replaced with three functions and a Map is chef's kiss. The functional programming crowd has been preaching this gospel for decades, but sometimes you need to write your 15th "Manager" class before you see the light. Turns out, not everything needs to be an object. Sometimes a function is just... a function. Wild concept, I know. Bonus points if those "useless classes" included a AbstractSingletonProxyFactoryBean or a VisitorPatternStrategyFactoryManager. The revolution will not be encapsulated.

Microsoft Always Doing Me Dirty

Microsoft Windows
12 hours ago 147.5K views 0 shares
Microsoft Always Doing Me Dirty
Every single time. You just need to nudge that image a millimeter to the left. Simple, right? Word's already sweating. You reassure it—and yourself—that nothing bad will happen. Just a tiny adjustment. But deep down, you both know the truth. The moment you touch that image, Word unleashes chaos. Text that was perfectly formatted? Now it's on page 47. Your carefully crafted tables? Scattered across dimensions. The image itself? Probably embedded in the footer now. And your page breaks? They've achieved sentience and are actively working against you. We've sent rovers to Mars, trained AI to write code, but Microsoft Word's image positioning remains humanity's greatest unsolved mystery. Just use LaTeX at this point—or better yet, Google Docs and accept your fate as a cloud peasant.

Overcome

Hardware Debugging
20 hours ago 144.4K views 0 shares
Overcome
When you order the wrong audio cable but you've already spent your entire tech budget on energy drinks and mechanical keyboards, so you enter full MacGyver mode. That beautiful abomination of adapters stacked on adapters is the physical manifestation of every developer's "it works on my machine" energy. Sure, it looks like a fire hazard designed by someone who's never heard of signal degradation, but who cares? You're basically an engineer now. Bear Grylls would be proud of this survival instinct—turning a $5 mistake into a $50 Frankenstein's monster of connectors because admitting defeat and ordering the right cable would take 2-3 business days and you need that audio working RIGHT NOW.

One Big Mac Coming Up, Sir

Networking Hardware Programming
11 hours ago 137.8K views 0 shares
One Big Mac Coming Up, Sir
Customer walks into McDonald's and politely orders a Big Mac. McDonald's employee, being the absolute OVERACHIEVER they are, responds with the hexadecimal equivalent: FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF . Because why use simple human language when you can flex your networking knowledge and serve up a broadcast MAC address instead? Nothing says "here's your burger" quite like addressing EVERY device on the local network simultaneously. The customer's face says it all – they just wanted a sandwich, not a lesson in layer 2 networking protocols. Fun fact: FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF is the broadcast MAC address that sends packets to all devices on a network segment. So technically, EVERYONE is getting that Big Mac. Communist burger distribution at its finest.

The Urge Is So Real

Debugging Programming Frontend Backend
10 hours ago 134.2K views 0 shares
The Urge Is So Real
Production is on fire, users are screaming, and your manager is breathing down your neck about that critical bug. But wait—is that a nested if statement from 2018? Some variable names that make zero sense? A function that's doing seventeen things at once? Every developer knows that moment when you open a file to fix one tiny bug and suddenly you're possessed by the spirit of clean code. The rational part of your brain is yelling "JUST FIX THE BUG AND GET OUT" but your fingers are already typing "git checkout -b refactor/everything-because-i-have-no-self-control". Spoiler alert: you're gonna hit that refactor button, spend 4 hours renaming variables and extracting functions, accidentally break three other things, and then sheepishly revert everything at 6 PM. We've all been there. Some of us are still there.

Disliking Tech Bros ≠ Disliking Tech

AI Programming
16 hours ago 133.3K views 0 shares
Disliking Tech Bros ≠ Disliking Tech
There's a massive difference between being skeptical of AI because you understand its limitations, ethical concerns, and the hype cycle versus blindly hating it because some crypto-bro-turned-AI-guru is trying to sell you a $5000 course on "prompt engineering mastery." One is a principled technical stance, the other is just being tired of LinkedIn influencers calling themselves "AI thought leaders" after running ChatGPT twice. The tech industry has a real problem with snake oil salesmen who pivot from NFTs to AI faster than you can say "pivot to video." They oversell capabilities, underdeliver on promises, and make the rest of us who actually work with these technologies look bad. You can appreciate machine learning as a powerful tool while simultaneously wanting to throw your laptop when someone pitches "AI-powered blockchain synergy" in a meeting. It's like being a chef who loves cooking but hates people who sell $200 "artisanal" toast. The technology isn't the problem—it's the grifters monetizing the hype.
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