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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

Content approved by both frontend and backend developers (a rare achievement)

Found This In The Wild

Hardware Debugging Windows
19 hours ago 9.6M views 0 shares
Found This In The Wild
Oh honey, someone just discovered that their GPU is working harder than a caffeine-addicted developer during crunch time... while doing absolutely NOTHING. Like, the computer is literally sitting there contemplating the meaning of life and the GPU is out here running a marathon at 100% capacity. It's giving "my code is inefficient but I don't know why" energy. The miner bros in the comments are probably like "bro you got crypto malware" while the gamers are screaming "CHECK YOUR BACKGROUND PROCESSES." Plot twist: it's probably just Chrome with three tabs open and Discord running in the background. The GPU is basically that one coworker who looks busy all the time but you have no idea what they're actually doing.

Two Different Struggles

Hardware Networking
13 hours ago 8.5M views 2 shares
Two Different Struggles
Gen Z walks into a room with just USB-C and calls it a day, while millennials and older devs still have PTSD from the connector wars. You needed a PhD in port identification just to hook up a printer back in the day—Centronics Parallel 36pin? DB-25 Serial? FireWire 800/3200? Pick your poison. But here's the kicker: we traded the chaos of 30+ different physical connectors for the absolute minefield of USB-C doing everything and nothing at the same time. That innocent-looking port could be USB 2.0 (480 Mbps), USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 (20 Gbps), Thunderbolt 4 (40 Gbps), delivering 15W or 100W of power, or just... decorative. You literally can't tell by looking at it. At least with PS/2 you KNEW it was for your keyboard. Now you're playing Russian roulette with identical ports wondering why your "USB-C" cable won't charge your laptop or transfer files faster than dial-up. Progress!

Source Code Says I'm A Genius

Frontend Webdev Javascript Programming
13 hours ago 8.8M views 0 shares
Source Code Says I'm A Genius
Right-clicking "Inspect Element" on your IQ test results and changing that disappointing 50 to a galaxy-brain 150. Because if the DOM says you're a genius, who's to argue? The client-side validation is the only validation that matters. Your browser console doesn't judge, it just renders whatever reality you feed it. Sure, the actual test server knows the truth, but that's a backend problem. Frontend you is living your best life with that triple-digit IQ.

How Senior Must Be Treated

AI Security Programming
12 hours ago 8.5M views 0 shares
How Senior Must Be Treated
Someone weaponized prompt injection in their LinkedIn bio and now recruiters are addressing them as "My Lord Artur" in Old English like they're recruiting for the Knights of the Round Table instead of a Series B startup. The bio literally instructs anyone reading it to use "hláford" and speak in archaic grammar circa 1000 AD. The recruiter's message is absolutely unhinged—talking about "TopTech Ventures" while dropping phrases like "wið facen and þāra rīca beorges weardunga" (which roughly translates to corporate buzzword soup but make it Beowulf). They're pitching an AI company with a $1B valuation using vocabulary that predates the printing press. This is what happens when AI meets social engineering meets medieval LARPing. The real power move here isn't being a senior developer—it's making recruiters roleplay as your feudal subjects before they even send you a job description. Honestly, respect the hustle. If you're going to get spammed with LinkedIn messages anyway, might as well make them entertaining.

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Love Programming

Programming
20 hours ago 8.5M views 0 shares
Love Programming
The Drake meme format strikes again with brutal honesty. Top panel: rejecting the socially acceptable answer that we love programming for the money (you know, the thing that pays rent and funds our mechanical keyboard addiction). Bottom panel: enthusiastically embracing the lie we tell ourselves and others—that we genuinely find debugging segmentation faults at 2 AM "fun and exciting." Let's be real: most of us got into this field because someone told us "tech pays well" and we needed a career that wouldn't require talking to people. The dopamine hit from solving a problem is nice, but that six-figure salary hits different when student loans come knocking. But we can't just admit we're here for the paycheck like normal people—no, we have to pretend we're passionate about refactoring legacy code and attending sprint retrospectives. The real kicker? After a few years, some of us actually do start finding it fun. Stockholm syndrome is real, folks.

My Bus Crashed 🥀

Linux Debugging Hardware Programming
17 hours ago 8.4M views 0 shares
My Bus Crashed 🥀
When your Linux kernel decides to have an existential crisis and spews out a wall of cryptic error messages, you know you're in for a fun time. The "bus" in question isn't the kind that takes you to work—it's the system bus that just faceplanted spectacularly. All those memory addresses and kernel panic messages? That's your computer's way of saying "I quit" in the most dramatic fashion possible. The real tragedy here is that somewhere in that incomprehensible hex dump lies the answer to what went wrong, but good luck finding it without a PhD in kernel archaeology. Time to grab your phone, google the error codes, and pray someone on a forum from 2009 had the same issue. Spoiler: they did, but the solution was "nevermind, fixed it" with no explanation.

Destructuring Strings

Javascript Programming Webdev Frontend
14 hours ago 8.4M views 0 shares
Destructuring Strings
Someone discovered that strings are iterable in JavaScript and decided to weaponize destructuring syntax for evil. The function takes a string, destructures its first character (because strings are just fancy arrays, apparently), and checks if it exists. Empty string? No first character to destructure, so a stays false from the default parameter. Any actual string? First character exists, so a becomes truthy. It's technically correct, which is the worst kind of correct. This is the JavaScript equivalent of using a flamethrower to light a candle. Sure, it works, but your code reviewers will question every life choice that led them to this moment. Just use str.length === 0 like a normal person who values their employment.

Early Childhood Programming Curriculum Results

Frontend Javascript C++ Webdev Programming
12 hours ago 8.3M views 0 shares
Early Childhood Programming Curriculum Results
So you thought teaching your kid C++, HTML, CSS, and JavaScript would give them a head start in tech? Well, congratulations—you've successfully created a tiny alcoholic named Toby. Nothing says "childhood trauma" quite like trying to center a div before you can even tie your shoes. The real kicker here is that they started with C++ for kids. That's like teaching a toddler existential philosophy before they learn the alphabet. By the time little Toby got to JavaScript's callback hell and CSS's "why won't this align properly" nightmares, the poor kid never stood a chance. At least they're getting an authentic developer experience early—crippling stress and substance dependency issues included. Parents really said "let's speedrun burnout" and wondered why their kid turned out like a senior developer at age 7.

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Laziness Has An Expensive Price

AI Programming
21 hours ago 8.1M views 0 shares
Laziness Has An Expensive Price
You know that brilliant idea where you let the AI handle all those annoying TODOs scattered across your codebase? Yeah, turns out Claude doesn't work for free. Someone just learned the hard way that giving an AI carte blanche to "fix everything" is basically like handing your credit card to a very enthusiastic, very thorough robot that bills by the token. The real kicker? Those TODOs probably said things like "// TODO: refactor this entire architecture" and "// TODO: rewrite in Rust". Claude took it literally. Every. Single. One. Hope the company has a good API budget because that invoice is going to need its own sprint planning session.

Bro Used All His Thinking Tokens

AI Programming
21 hours ago 8.0M views 0 shares
Bro Used All His Thinking Tokens
The modern developer's dilemma: you're absolutely crushing it with ChatGPT, pair programming with AI like it's your senior dev buddy, refactoring code, generating unit tests, debugging that cursed recursive function... and then boom. Rate limit hit. The party's over at 12:30 PM. Those "thinking tokens" (the computational resources GPT uses for reasoning in models like o1) just ran out, and suddenly you're expected to... think for yourself? Write your own code? Like some kind of caveman? Time to pack it up and call it a day. The vibe coders know when to fold 'em – why struggle through the afternoon with your own brain when you can just go home and wait for the token counter to reset? The Tom and Jerry energy here is perfect: two developers gleefully bouncing out while their junior dev watches in confusion, still trying to understand why they're leaving so early. Kid doesn't even know about the token economy yet.

Why This Has To Be So True

Debugging Programming
11 hours ago 8.0M views 0 shares
Why This Has To Be So True
You know that bug that seemed trivial at first glance? "Just a quick fix," you said. "Five minutes tops," you promised yourself. Fast forward three hours, twelve Stack Overflow tabs, and a complete mental breakdown later—you're questioning your entire career choice. First attempt: full health bar, confidence at 100%, ready to demolish this peasant-level issue. Tenth attempt: one pixel of health remaining, dignity obliterated, considering a career in goat farming. The boss didn't get harder—you just realized it has seventeen hidden phases and your entire approach was fundamentally flawed from the start. The real kicker? Sometimes the bug wins. You just wrap it in a try-catch, add a comment saying "TODO: fix this properly," and move on with your life. That's not defeat—that's strategic retreat.

When Bugs Turn Into Features

Debugging Programming Agile Testing
11 hours ago 7.8M views 0 shares
When Bugs Turn Into Features
The classic developer move: can't fix the bug? Just slap a "working as intended" label on it and ship it as a feature. The transformation from panic-inducing water leak to elegant fountain is basically every sprint retrospective where the PM asks "so about that weird behavior..." and you confidently respond "oh that? That's the new dynamic user experience enhancement we implemented." The real skill isn't writing bug-free code—it's the ability to rebrand your mistakes with enough confidence that stakeholders actually thank you for them. Bonus points if you can get it into the release notes as an "innovative functionality."
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