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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 algorithms picked these memes (and they're usually busy mining crypto)

Rustmas

Rust Programming
12 hours ago 141.6K views 1 shares
Rustmas
The genius here is that Rust's entire existence revolves around the Result<T, E> and Option<T> types, which you literally have to unwrap using .unwrap() , .expect() , or proper error handling. So when Christmas rolls around and Rust devs are told to unwrap presents, their brains immediately go into panic mode—not the fun kind, but the thread-panicking kind that crashes your program. The penguin's concerned side-eye captures that exact moment when a Rust developer realizes they can't just pattern match their way out of this social interaction or use if let Some(gift) = present to safely extract the contents. No borrow checker to save you from Aunt Linda asking why you're still single, buddy.

The Importance Of Learning DSA

Algorithms Programming
3 hours ago 45.9K views 1 shares
The Importance Of Learning DSA
When your dating standards are literally higher than your company's hiring bar. She's out here rejecting people for not knowing Big O notation while HR is hiring folks who think recursion is a medical condition. The tech interview culture has rotted our brains so thoroughly that we're now gatekeeping relationships based on whether someone can reverse a binary tree on a whiteboard. Imagine explaining to your therapist that you left someone because they couldn't implement quicksort from memory. "Sorry babe, you're great and all, but I need someone who understands amortized time complexity for... reasons?" The real kicker? Most of us spend our actual jobs googling "how to sort array" and copying Stack Overflow answers, but sure, DSA knowledge is the foundation of true love.

8.2 Billion Wishlists

Gamedev Algorithms Math Programming
11 hours ago 141.7K views 0 shares
8.2 Billion Wishlists
Game dev discovers the ancient marketing algorithm: if everyone you know wishlists your game, and everyone THEY know does the same, you'll achieve exponential growth until the entire planet owns your indie platformer. It's foolproof math, really. Just need your mom, her book club, their extended families, and approximately 8.2 billion strangers to click one button. The cat's expression perfectly captures that moment when you realize your "viral marketing strategy" requires solving a recursive function where the base case is "literally everyone on Earth." Fun fact: Steam wishlists actually DO help with visibility in their algorithm, but the platform has around 120 million active users, not 8.2 billion. So you'd need to convince every human, including uncontacted tribes and newborns, to create Steam accounts first. Priorities.

Got A Reality Check

Bash Programming Linux
12 hours ago 139.2K views 0 shares
Got A Reality Check
YouTube's algorithm knows exactly when you're feeling confident about your coding skills and decides to humble you with surgical precision. You innocently open YouTube, probably feeling pretty good about yourself, and BAM—personalized recommendation telling you that you suck at programming. Not even subtle about it. Just straight up "You Suck at Programming" right there in the title. The best part? The immediate acceptance. No denial, no "actually I'm pretty good," just pure resignation: "Nevermind. My fault." Because deep down, every developer knows they're one bash script away from questioning their entire career. YouTube just said the quiet part out loud. Fun fact: YouTube's recommendation algorithm probably saw you googling "how to exit vim" last week and filed you accordingly.

Classic Dev To Dev Meeting

Debugging Programming Backend
11 hours ago 133.6K views 0 shares
Classic Dev To Dev Meeting
Two developers finally meet in person after months of remote collaboration, only to discover one of them has been the rubber duck debugger all along. You know, that inanimate object you explain your code to until the solution magically appears? Turns out Dave from the backend team has just been nodding along this whole time while you solved your own problems. The gun is pointed, but honestly, it's justified. That's what you get for pretending to understand microservices architecture when you were really just there for moral support.

I Know Programming

AI Algorithms Programming Debugging
14 hours ago 124.3K views 0 shares
I Know Programming
Someone out here really said "self-driving cars? Easy peasy!" and dropped the most catastrophically naive code snippet known to humanity. Just casually solving autonomous vehicle engineering with if(goingToHitStuff) { don't(); } like they just cracked the Da Vinci Code. Tesla engineers spending BILLIONS on neural networks, LiDAR systems, and complex decision trees while this genius over here is like "have you tried... just not hitting things?" Revolutionary. Groundbreaking. Nobel Prize incoming. This is the programming equivalent of telling someone with depression to "just be happy" – technically correct in theory, absolutely useless in practice. Because yeah, if only those silly engineers thought to add a don't() function! Problem solved, pack it up everyone, autonomous driving is DONE.

Coal Or Wood? Nah, Lemme Throw On Cyberpunk On Ultra For An Hour

Hardware Gamedev
10 hours ago 123.6K views 0 shares
Coal Or Wood? Nah, Lemme Throw On Cyberpunk On Ultra For An Hour
Who needs a heating bill when you've got a gaming rig that doubles as a nuclear reactor? Regular people are out here like peasants using "central heating" and "fireplaces" while PC gamers have ascended to a higher plane of existence where their GPU becomes a legitimate household appliance. Just crank up Cyberpunk 2077 on ultra settings and watch your room transform into a sauna faster than you can say "thermal throttling." Your electricity bill might require a second mortgage, but at least you'll be cozy AND getting those buttery smooth 12 FPS. The RGB fans aren't just for aesthetics—they're emergency heating units disguised as gamer bling. Bonus points if your GPU hits 90°C and you can literally cook eggs on your case. Winter survival tip: forget chopping wood, just compile some code or run a benchmark test. Mother Nature is shaking.

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My Code Is Self-Documenting

Programming Debugging
13 hours ago 122.4K views 0 shares
My Code Is Self-Documenting
You know that senior dev who proudly declares "my code is self-documenting" and refuses to write a single comment? Yeah, trying to understand their codebase is like being an archaeologist deciphering ancient hieroglyphics with nothing but an English dictionary. Sure, your variable names are descriptive, but that doesn't explain WHY you're recursively calling a function named processData() three times with slightly different parameters. The hieroglyphics probably had better documentation than your 500-line function that "speaks for itself." Pro tip: If someone needs a dictionary and a PhD to understand your "self-documenting" code, it's not self-documenting. It's self-destructing... your team's productivity.

My Friend Have An Impeccable Timing...

Hardware Programming
9 hours ago 121.9K views 0 shares
My Friend Have An Impeccable Timing...
You spend years being the designated "tech person" in your friend group, fielding questions about why their printer won't work and explaining that no, you can't hack their ex's Instagram. Radio silence for months. Then suddenly, out of nowhere, they emerge from the shadows with actual tech curiosity! Your heart swells with pride. Maybe they want to learn programming? Build a website? Understand how databases work? Nope. Gaming PC. Because of course they do. The one thing that has absolutely nothing to do with your software engineering expertise but somehow you're still expected to know the difference between a 4070 Ti and a 4080 Super. Welcome to being the "computer friend" – where your CS degree qualifies you to be an unpaid hardware consultant apparently. At least it's not another "can you fix my phone" request, right? Right?

I Love Pathfinding

Algorithms AI Programming Testing
23 hours ago 121.0K views 0 shares
I Love Pathfinding
When someone innocently asks why you know Romanian geography so well, and you have to explain that implementing A* pathfinding means you've traversed every possible route between Bucharest and Cluj-Napoca about 47,000 times in your test cases. The chess board with the AI textbook is chef's kiss – because nothing says "I'm a normal person" like having Russell & Norvig's brick of a book memorized while your pathfinding algorithm treats European cities like graph nodes. Sure, you could just say you like geography, but where's the fun in hiding the fact that you've optimized heuristic functions using Romanian cities as your dataset? The Traveling Salesman Problem hits different when you're actually trying to visit every Romanian city in minimum time.

My Spaghetti Just Needed More Sauce

Debugging Agile Programming Testing Backend
19 hours ago 117.8K views 0 shares
My Spaghetti Just Needed More Sauce
You know that feeling when QA keeps bouncing your ticket back like a ping pong ball from hell? Fourteen rounds of "fixes" later—each one adding another layer to your beautiful spaghetti architecture—and suddenly they give up and approve it. Not because you actually fixed the issue, but because they're exhausted and have 47 other tickets to deal with. That zen-like satisfaction of finally getting sign-off isn't about code quality anymore. It's pure survival instinct kicking in. You've basically just played chicken with the bug tracking system and won through sheer attrition. The code's probably worse than when you started, held together with duct tape and prayers, but hey—it's shipping to production baby. The real kicker? That bug will 100% resurface in prod within a week, but by then it'll be someone else's problem. Welcome to enterprise software development.

Internal Server Error

Devops Webdev Debugging Backend Cloud
21 hours ago 117.0K views 0 shares
Internal Server Error
Someone built a Cloudflare error page generator so you can fake outages and buy yourself precious debugging time. Because nothing says "professional incident response" like gaslighting your users into thinking it's Cloudflare's fault when your spaghetti code just threw up. The tool literally lets you customize everything—error codes, locations, status messages—so you can craft the perfect alibi while you frantically grep through logs trying to figure out why your production database just decided to take a nap. It's the digital equivalent of pointing at someone else and running away. Peak DevOps strategy: deflect, delay, and deploy the blame elsewhere. Your manager will never know the difference between a real Cloudflare outage and your nil pointer exception. Probably.
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