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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

Memes that make even the on-call engineer smile at 3 AM

China Spying On Your House

Networking Iot Security
14 hours ago 142.7K views 1 shares
China Spying On Your House
Dad's showing you the majestic home network with pride, but you notice something lurking in the shadows... the Chinese smart home VLAN. Because nothing says "secure home automation" like giving every IoT device its own little surveillance kingdom. Your smart fridge is probably sending your grocery list to Beijing as we speak, and that robot vacuum? Yeah, it's mapping your house layout better than any floor plan. At least someone bothered to segment their network though. Most people just throw everything on the same subnet and wonder why their smart lightbulb got pwned. Setting up a separate VLAN for IoT devices is actually solid security practice—keeps the sketchy Chinese hardware away from your real computers. Too bad it also keeps them away from literally nothing else.

I Miss Clippy

Microsoft AI Windows Programming
7 hours ago 113.0K views 1 shares
I Miss Clippy
Microsoft Copilot? Fancy rainbow gradient, probably costs your company a fortune in API credits. Cortana? Voice-activated disappointment that nobody asked for. But Clippy? That googly-eyed paperclip who'd pop up uninvited while you're trying to write a letter? Pure perfection. "It looks like you're trying to write a function. Would you like help?" No, Clippy, I wouldn't. But at least you were honest about being useless. You didn't pretend to be AI-powered or try to integrate with Azure. You were just a sentient office supply with boundary issues, and somehow that was more helpful than today's billion-dollar "smart" assistants. The nostalgia is real. We spent years complaining about Clippy, and now we'd trade our entire cloud infrastructure to have that annoying little guy back instead of another subscription service.

Changing Circumstances

Programming AI
14 hours ago 180.4K views 0 shares
Changing Circumstances
Back in 2016, a Computer Science degree was basically a golden ticket—ornate, prestigious, and practically guaranteed to land you a cushy job. Fast forward to 2026, and that same degree is just... there. Duct-taped to reality, barely holding on, looking significantly less impressive. The job market went from "we'll pay you six figures to center a div" to "you need 5 years of experience, three side projects, and a viral GitHub repo just to get ghosted by recruiters." The degree didn't change—the world did. Now everyone and their grandma can code (thanks, bootcamps and ChatGPT), so that fancy CS diploma is competing with self-taught devs who built an entire SaaS in their basement. The contrast is brutal: from majestic carved dragon to regular dog with a backpack. Still a good boy, just... not as mythical anymore.

Free App Idea

Algorithms Math Programming
13 hours ago 174.0K views 0 shares
Free App Idea
Someone just casually described the Traveling Salesman Problem—one of the most famous NP-hard computational problems in computer science—and asked why it hasn't been solved yet. You know, just a little app idea. No big deal. For context: mathematicians and computer scientists have been wrestling with this beast since the 1800s. There's literally a million-dollar prize for solving it efficiently. But sure, let's just whip up a quick app for the "vibe coders" over the weekend. The beautiful irony here is asking "why has nobody built this yet?" while unknowingly requesting someone to solve one of the hardest problems in computational theory. It's like saying "free startup idea: invent faster-than-light travel" and wondering why Uber hasn't implemented it yet.

Good Naming Convention

Programming Webdev Csharp Typescript Javascript
13 hours ago 166.8K views 0 shares
Good Naming Convention
The subtle art of variable naming strikes again. Someone discovered that validateDate() sounds like you're checking if a date is valid, but valiDate() sounds like you're going on a date with someone who's actually worth your time. It's the programming equivalent of realizing you can make your function names do double duty as puns. Why settle for boring technical accuracy when you can have camelCase wordplay that makes your code reviews 10% more entertaining? Your linter won't catch it, but your teammates will either love you or silently judge you. Pro tip: This also works with isValid() vs isVali() for when you need to check if someone's vali-d enough to merge their PR.

Couldn't Agree More

Gamedev AI Programming
14 hours ago 162.4K views 0 shares
Couldn't Agree More
You know what's wild? Warner Bros. has been sitting on a patent for the Nemesis System—that revolutionary AI mechanic from Shadow of Mordor where enemies remember you, evolve, and create emergent narratives—since 2015. It's one of the most innovative gameplay systems in decades, and instead of letting other devs iterate on it and push gaming forward, it's locked behind legal walls collecting dust. The whole thing is basically the software patent debate in a nutshell. Imagine if someone patented "for loops" back in the day. We'd still be writing GOTO statements like cave dwellers. The gaming industry (and honestly, the entire tech world) thrives on building upon each other's ideas. Patents like this don't protect innovation—they strangle it in its crib. So yeah, nobody cares about your corporate acquisition drama, Warner Bros. Just let the patent expire so the rest of us can actually make games better. Is that too much to ask?

Devs: "Nice. One More." 🦍

Programming Webdev Frontend
12 hours ago 155.7K views 0 shares
Devs: "Nice. One More." 🦍
The eternal divide between designers and developers strikes again! When a company hires another designer, existing designers spiral into an existential crisis wondering if their Figma skills aren't cutting it anymore. Meanwhile, developers? They're out here forming the Justice League, ready to welcome their new coding comrade with open arms and a Slack invite. More devs = more people to blame when production breaks = MORE POWER. It's giving "strength in numbers" energy while designers are stuck in their feelings wondering if their color palette choices were really THAT bad.

Platform Exclusivity

Gamedev Microsoft Windows Linux
12 hours ago 151.1K views 0 shares
Platform Exclusivity
DirectX strutting around like it owns the gaming world because it's Microsoft's proprietary darling. OpenGL is sitting there knowing full well it can't quite match DirectX's performance and Windows integration. But then Vulkan rolls in like "hold my beer" and absolutely obliterates the competition with cross-platform dominance and near-metal performance. Vulkan is basically what happens when the industry got tired of DirectX's Windows-only shenanigans and decided to create something that actually works everywhere—Linux, Windows, Android, you name it. Lower overhead, better multi-threading, and it doesn't care what OS you're running. DirectX may have the throne on Windows, but Vulkan is the people's champion.

The Biggest Tragedy In Programming

Programming Debugging
9 hours ago 127.4K views 0 shares
The Biggest Tragedy In Programming
You spent 45 minutes crafting the most elegant regex pattern known to mankind. It works flawlessly. You're proud. Then you look at it six months later and have absolutely zero clue what sorcery you summoned. Not even a comment to guide your future self. Just raw, cryptic hieroglyphics staring back at you like "good luck, buddy." The real tragedy? You'll spend another 45 minutes trying to decode your own genius instead of just rewriting it from scratch. We've all been there—regex is write-once, read-never code at its finest.

Indie Devs Can Stay Up Until 2 A.M. And Wake Up At 6

Programming Webdev Frontend Backend
15 hours ago 122.9K views 0 shares
Indie Devs Can Stay Up Until 2 A.M. And Wake Up At 6
The indie dev experience: grinding until 2 AM on your passion project, crawling out of bed at 6 for your actual job that pays the bills, checking your bank account and wondering if ramen comes in bulk at Costco, scrolling through your empty Discord server, and somehow still believing that your app will be the next big thing. The optimism is either inspiring or concerning, and honestly, it's probably both. That emoji in the title says it all—laughing through the pain while your AWS bill arrives.

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Seymour The Computer Is On Fire

Testing Devops Programming Debugging Backend
23 hours ago 122.5K views 0 shares
Seymour The Computer Is On Fire
When production is literally burning down with errors flooding the logs at 100.0.x addresses and someone asks what's happening, the only reasonable response is "unit testing." Sure, the server farm is experiencing a catastrophic meltdown, but at least those unit tests passed locally on your machine, right? Nothing says "I have everything under control" quite like deflecting from a live infrastructure disaster by mentioning your 80% code coverage. The red wall of error messages? Just aurora borealis. The IP addresses screaming in pain? Perfectly normal. But hey, the tests are green in CI/CD, so technically we're doing DevOps correctly.

This Is Real

Programming Debugging
17 hours ago 122.0K views 0 shares
This Is Real
Solid advice from the trenches. The moment you glance at the clock or start sweating about a deadline, your machine instantly transforms into a sloth running on dial-up. That progress bar? It just added 15 minutes. Your build that usually takes 30 seconds? Now requires a PhD in patience. The computer knows. It always knows. Stay calm, pretend you have all the time in the world, and maybe—just maybe—your deploy will finish before the heat death of the universe.
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