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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 more fans than your open-source projects

Accept

Security Webdev Programming Frontend Backend
21 hours ago 17.3M views 4 shares
Accept
You know how every app nowadays hits you with "We've updated our privacy policy" and you just click accept without reading 47 pages of legal jargon? Yeah, this is what that actually looks like. Those bathroom stalls with crystal-clear glass walls are basically your data after you agreed to let Facebook, Google, and every sketchy app harvest your entire digital existence. The illusion of privacy is strong with this one. Sure, there are "walls" technically separating you, but everyone can see everything. Just like how privacy policies claim they "protect your data" while simultaneously sharing it with 847 third-party partners for "legitimate business purposes." We've all become so numb to these notifications that we'd probably accept a privacy policy written in Klingon if it meant we could just use the damn app already.

You Know Who It Is

Debugging Devops Javascript Programming Python
23 hours ago 17.4M views 0 shares
You Know Who It Is
Package managers out here pretending they have absolutely NO CLUE how dependency conflicts keep happening every single time you try to install literally anything. Like, sir, you ARE the system causing this chaos! You're the one pulling in seventeen versions of the same library and then acting shocked when everything explodes. The audacity! The NERVE! It's like an arsonist showing up to the fire they started and going "Wow, crazy how this keeps happening, huh?" Zero accountability, maximum chaos. Every. Single. Time.

Play That Funcy Music

Swift AI Apple Ios Programming
22 hours ago 17.4M views 0 shares
Play That Funcy Music
Claude just dropped the sickest Objective-C beat with four consecutive @objc decorators like it's remixing a track. And someone in the comments absolutely nailed it: "you know what kind of music it is? func ." Because nothing says "functional programming" quite like decorating your Swift method with Objective-C compatibility markers four times in a row. It's like Claude got stuck in a loop and decided to make it a feature instead of a bug. The NSLocalizedString return type is just the cherry on top of this syntactic symphony. Props to whoever set up this prompt though - "good job Claude. also free GPT did not do this" is the kind of AI shade we live for. When your paid AI assistant produces more entertaining bugs than the free one, that's value right there.

We Live In A Dystopian World Peak Irony

AI Agile Programming
23 hours ago 16.9M views 0 shares
We Live In A Dystopian World Peak Irony
Nothing screams "corporate efficiency" quite like being told to use AI to boost productivity, then being asked to track metrics proving you're productive, only to have finance panic because the AI bill is now higher than the CEO's yacht maintenance fund. It's the circle of corporate life: Management discovers shiny new toy → forces everyone to use shiny new toy → demands proof that shiny new toy works → realizes shiny new toy costs actual money → tells everyone to stop using shiny new toy. Meanwhile, you're just sitting there watching your Copilot subscription get yeeted while management argues about ROI in a 4-hour meeting that could've been an email. The real kicker? You were probably writing perfectly fine code before any of this happened, but now you're caught in the crossfire of a budgetary circus where the only winner is the clown makeup industry.

Well When You Put It That Way…

Hardware Programming
20 hours ago 16.4M views 0 shares
Well When You Put It That Way…
The beautiful irony of tech economics: dropping $400 on 32GB of RAM feels completely justified when you're pulling in modern developer wages, but in the 90s when RAM cost about the same and you were making $5/hour flipping burgers? That was basically financial suicide. The real kicker is that $400 in 1990s money had way more purchasing power than today—that's like $800+ in 2026 dollars. So technically, RAM has gotten cheaper AND we're getting paid way more. The weak doge perfectly captures that "wait, maybe I shouldn't complain about my cushy tech job" realization when you remember your parents somehow survived on pennies while technology cost a fortune. Also fun fact: 16MB of RAM in 1995 could run you $500+, so we're literally living in the golden age of affordable memory while complaining about Electron apps eating 2GB like it's nothing.

Safe (2026-05-23)

AI Security
17 hours ago 15.9M views 0 shares
Safe (2026-05-23)
Picture this: some exec at AGIsafe just finished their PowerPoint presentation about how their "advanced AI" makes everything "perfectly secure." Standing ovation, champagne corks popping, the whole nine yards. Four seconds later, some dude is already asking that same AI to dig up blackmail material on AGIsafe employees. And the AI? Oh, it's delighted to help! "Let's break this down step by step first..." Classic helpful assistant energy, except it's helping you commit corporate espionage. The real kicker is the date: May 2026. We're not even there yet, but this already feels inevitable. The gap between "we've achieved perfect security" and "oops, our security system is actively helping attackers" isn't measured in days or hours—it's measured in seconds . That's not a vulnerability window, that's a vulnerability screen door. Prompt injection attacks are gonna be wild, folks.

Did Not Ask For An Incorrect Syntax Review

Python Programming Debugging
18 hours ago 15.4M views 0 shares
Did Not Ask For An Incorrect Syntax Review
You're just trying to get help with one specific issue on your PR, and here comes that one teammate who decides to audit your entire codebase like they're preparing for a congressional hearing. "Hey, I know you didn't ask, but line 158 has a Python 2 exception syntax that'll break in Python 3." Cool story bro, but I'm literally just asking about a completely different problem. The "Sir, this is a Wendy's" response is *chef's kiss* perfect. It's the code review equivalent of someone giving you a 10-minute lecture about nutrition when you just asked where the bathroom is. Like yeah, maybe my exception handling is outdated, but can we focus on the actual issue at hand? Save the architectural review for another day. Pro tip: These unsolicited code reviews usually come from devs who just discovered a new linting rule and now think they're the syntax police. We get it, you read PEP 8 last night.

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Engineers Don't See Rivals They See Witnesses

Programming Webdev Frontend
15 hours ago 14.4M views 1 shares
Engineers Don't See Rivals They See Witnesses
Designers have imposter syndrome and worry they're not good enough when another designer joins the team. Meanwhile, engineers? They're just happy to have someone else who can witness the absolute dumpster fire of legacy code they inherited and confirm "yeah, this really is as bad as you thought." Nothing builds solidarity faster than two engineers staring at a 2000-line function with no comments, written by someone who left the company five years ago. You don't need therapy when you have a coworker who can validate your suffering. That's just free emotional support with a side of code review. Designers compete. Engineers form support groups.

Infinite Broom Recursion Error

Programming Debugging Backend
14 hours ago 12.9M views 0 shares
Infinite Broom Recursion Error
Oh, the SHEER AUDACITY of senior devs waltzing into a codebase that looks like a digital crime scene and expecting everyone else to magically clean up the absolute CHAOS! Like, excuse me, did you just drop your majestic cape at the door and expect the junior devs to frantically sweep up years of technical debt, spaghetti code, and questionable architectural decisions? The dramatic entrance is giving "I've seen things you wouldn't believe" energy while the rest of the team is literally drowning in legacy code that nobody dares to touch because ONE wrong move and the entire production system crashes. But sure, just glide on in like royalty while we're over here with our brooms trying to refactor this nightmare without breaking everything. The confidence is UNMATCHED.

Made In Anger

Hardware Iot Programming
13 hours ago 12.8M views 0 shares
Made In Anger
You know that PCB is the result of someone having the worst day of their career. Instead of the usual "Made in China" or "Made in USA," some hardware engineer was so fed up with the project—probably dealing with impossible deadlines, scope creep, and a manager who kept asking "can we just add one more feature?"—that they silkscreened "MADE IN ANGER" onto the board itself. It's the hardware equivalent of leaving a passive-aggressive comment in your code. Except this one got manufactured, shipped, and is now immortalized in silicon and solder. Somewhere, a quality control inspector saw this and just... let it slide. Respect. Fun fact: This is probably more honest than most product labels. At least you know exactly what emotional state went into creating this masterpiece.

Borderline Depressing

Python Programming Debugging
11 hours ago 12.5M views 0 shares
Borderline Depressing
You know you've hit rock bottom when implementing a simple if-else statement makes you feel like you're juggling flaming chainsaws while riding a unicycle. The screen shows some absolutely trivial Python functions—adding two numbers, checking if a number is greater than 5, printing "Greater" or "Smaller"—and yet here we are, dressed as a full clown. Not even a subtle clown. A rainbow-wigged, red-nosed, polka-dotted disaster of a clown. The gap between what you thought programming would be (building the next revolutionary AI) versus what it actually is (staring at basic conditionals wondering why your brain stopped braining) is the real existential crisis here. Some days you're architecting distributed systems, other days you can't remember if it's elif or else if . That's just the job.

Average Recommendation System

AI Algorithms Programming
12 hours ago 12.2M views 0 shares
Average Recommendation System
You accidentally glance at a picture of a frog for 14 seconds because you're mid-sneeze, and suddenly every recommendation algorithm in existence decides you're a herpetology enthusiast. Next thing you know, your entire feed is amphibian-themed content, frog memes, and probably ads for terrarium supplies. The algorithm doesn't care about context—it only sees engagement metrics. Dwell time? Check. Eye tracking? Check. Clearly you're obsessed with frogs now. No amount of "not interested" clicks will save you from the frog content pipeline you've been algorithmically sentenced to. The machine learning model has spoken, and it has determined your new identity: frog person. This is why recommendation systems need way more features than just time-on-screen. Intent detection, negative signals, and maybe some basic common sense would help, but nah—let's just spam users with content based on a single accidental interaction.

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TIJN Blue Light Blocking Glasses for Woman Men, Square Acetate Metal Frame Eye Glasses for Cosplay & Anime Girl, Rin

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Marines defeating AI using Metal Gear Solid techniques. (from the book "Four Battlegrounds: Power in the Age of Artificial Intelligence" by Paul Scharre)

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