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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

Data Obviously

Programming Databases
22 hours ago 1.1M views 2 shares
Data Obviously
Someone just weaponized the English language against developers. The eternal debate: is it "day-tuh" or "dah-tuh"? Both pronunciations are technically correct, but your choice reveals your entire tech stack personality. Say "day-tuh" and you're probably writing SQL queries at 2 PM with a coffee. Say "dah-tuh" and you're giving a presentation about data lakes to stakeholders who don't know what a database is. The real kicker is that your brain automatically reads it both ways simultaneously, creating a linguistic race condition. It's like Schrödinger's pronunciation—the word exists in both states until you say it out loud in a meeting and everyone judges you. Fun fact: British folks lean toward "dah-tuh" while Americans prefer "day-tuh," making international Zoom calls extra spicy.

POV Of My CPU

Hardware Programming Debugging
22 hours ago 1.1M views 0 shares
POV Of My CPU
Your CPU sitting there following every instruction you meticulously wrote: load this, calculate that, branch here, store there. Then the moment it actually executes your code, you're staring at the output like it committed a crime. "Why are you doing this?" you ask, as if the CPU just went rogue and started making executive decisions. Buddy, it's doing exactly what you told it to do. The CPU doesn't have opinions or creativity—it's the most obedient employee you'll ever have. Maybe check your logic instead of gaslighting your hardware.

I Love Vibe Coding

Programming Webdev
17 hours ago 844.8K views 0 shares
I Love Vibe Coding
We've all met this person. The one with the NASA mission control setup, juggling seven side projects simultaneously, context-switching like it's an Olympic sport. Meanwhile, they haven't shipped a single thing or landed a single client. It's the developer equivalent of buying a $3000 gaming PC to play Minecraft. The brutal punchline here is that all that hardware, all those terminals, all that "productivity" setup—it's just elaborate procrastination with RGB lighting. You know what successful developers have? One laptop and actual users. But hey, at least the vibes are immaculate while they're refactoring their personal blog for the 47th time. Pro tip: If your monitor budget exceeds your revenue, you might be optimizing the wrong metrics.

A Cancer For Open Source Devs

Programming Git Debugging
14 hours ago 716.7K views 0 shares
A Cancer For Open Source Devs
You pour your heart into building something cool, slap an MIT license on it, and release it into the wild with pure intentions. Then your Discord server gets invaded by what can only be described as a horde of feral children who treat you like their personal tech support hotline. They don't read the README, they don't check existing issues, and they definitely don't understand that "free software" doesn't mean "free labor." The worst part? They ask questions that make you question your faith in humanity. "How do I install Python?" "Why doesn't it work?" (with zero context). "Can you add [feature that completely defeats the purpose of your project]?" And when you politely redirect them to the documentation, they hit you with "but I don't understand it" or just spam @everyone until someone caves. Open source maintainers already deal with burnout, entitled users, and zero compensation. Adding a Discord full of kids who treat your passion project like a video game helpdesk is the final boss of frustration. No wonder so many devs just archive their repos and disappear into the void.

But I Wrote Make No Mistakes

AI Agile Programming Frontend
13 hours ago 687.4K views 0 shares
But I Wrote Make No Mistakes
When your CEO decides to skip the entire "understanding what users actually want" phase and just throws AI at the problem like it's fairy dust that magically creates perfect products. The result? A coffee mug with a handle so catastrophically misplaced that drinking from it requires the flexibility of a circus contender. But hey, at least it shipped fast, right? The absolute AUDACITY of thinking you can replace actual user feedback with AI-generated guesswork is peak tech bro energy. Sure, the AI probably wrote flawless code with zero bugs, but nobody bothered to ask if the product should, you know, actually be usable by humans with normal anatomy. Speed over sanity strikes again!

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As Someone Who Works In IT, I Approve

Debugging Devops
14 hours ago 672.1K views 0 shares
As Someone Who Works In IT, I Approve
Nothing says "I prioritize your emergency" quite like showing up three days after the ticket was filed. The stance really sells it—hands on hips, radiating the energy of someone who definitely didn't stop for coffee twice on the way over. You called it a P1 incident, they heard "eventually." The "as quickly as I wanted to" is doing some heavy lifting here, carrying the weight of seventeen other tickets, a lunch break, and that one user who keeps asking if they need to download more RAM.

Gamers Are Everywhere....

Gamedev Windows
13 hours ago 669.0K views 0 shares
Gamers Are Everywhere....
When your boss says "no games on the company PC" but you've got Adobe After Effects, Photoshop, Premiere Pro, and Valorant sitting right there on your desktop. The boss rolls up and spots that Valorant icon nestled between your "legitimate work software" like it's perfectly normal. Classic move—hiding in plain sight. Sure boss, I need Valorant for... uh... testing the company's network latency? Validating our firewall rules? Researching competitive user engagement metrics? The creative professional's toolkit has expanded, apparently. That side-eye says it all. You're not fooling anyone, but hey, at least you're committed to the bit. Nothing says "productive employee" quite like a 60GB tactical shooter sandwiched between your video editing suite.

All Users Have Admin Access Now I Guess

Databases Security Programming Backend
12 hours ago 635.1K views 0 shares
All Users Have Admin Access Now I Guess
Running an UPDATE without a WHERE clause on production. The digital equivalent of nuking your entire city because one building had a broken window. Every single row in that table just got the same value, which in this case means everyone's now an admin. The intern's LinkedIn status just changed to "Open to Work" and the DBA is already reaching for the backup tapes. Fun fact: This is why database transactions have a rollback feature, though something tells me this particular update was already committed with the confidence of someone who's never made a mistake before.

Don't Ask Them To Help You With Garry's Mod

Gamedev Programming
11 hours ago 566.5K views 0 shares
Don't Ask Them To Help You With Garry's Mod
When Lua developers see a license plate that's just screaming their programming language's name, they simply CANNOT contain themselves. That poor 4Runner owner has NO IDEA they've basically been driving around with a giant "KICK ME" sign for every Garry's Mod scripter within a 50-mile radius. Lua is the scripting language that powers Garry's Mod, and these devs have spent so many sleepless nights debugging physics glitches and prop collisions that seeing "LUAAAAA" in the wild probably triggered their fight-or-flight response. They're definitely pulling up next to this car at every red light going "Hey, you know about metatables? Want to talk about coroutines?" The extended "A" really sells the dramatic flair too—it's like the programming equivalent of a battle cry. Someone's about to get an unsolicited lecture about table manipulation whether they like it or not.

Senior Developer

Programming Csharp Java Backend
9 hours ago 471.4K views 0 shares
Senior Developer
You know you've reached peak seniority when you create an AbstractFactoryProviderManagerBean just to instantiate a string. The irony here is chef's kiss: senior devs preach SOLID principles and clean architecture so hard that they end up wrapping a 2-line function in enough abstraction layers to make an onion jealous. Instead of just writing the simple solution, they're out here celebrating their "enterprise-grade" codebase that now requires a PhD to understand. The dancing celebration really captures that misplaced pride when you've technically followed all the design patterns but somehow made everything exponentially worse. Sometimes the real wisdom is knowing when NOT to abstract.

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Gotta Use AI To Our Advantage

AI Programming Debugging
3 hours ago 171.2K views 1 shares
Gotta Use AI To Our Advantage
The classic productivity paradox of 2024: AI can generate your entire codebase in the time it takes to microwave leftover pizza, but then you'll spend the rest of your workday (and probably your evening) trying to figure out why it decided to use a recursive function where a simple loop would do, or why it imported 47 dependencies for a "hello world" feature. Sure, you saved 4 hours on the initial write-up, but now you're hunting down edge cases, mysterious null pointer exceptions, and that one function that works perfectly... except nobody knows why. The AI probably named all your variables "data1", "data2", and "finalDataFinal" too. Efficiency at its finest! Pro tip: The real advantage is using AI to generate the code, then using AI to debug the code, then using AI to explain to your manager why the feature is taking longer than expected. Full circle.

Interesting Analogy

AI Programming
6 hours ago 305.1K views 0 shares
Interesting Analogy
Someone just compared agentic coding to tentacle... adult content, and honestly? The commitment to maintaining dignity in the face of AI-generated code is respectable. LosBoom out here acting shocked that people aren't jumping on the agentic coding bandwagon, while ppy delivers the most unhinged yet somehow perfectly valid comparison in tech discourse history. Look, we get it. Letting AI write your code feels weird for some devs. It's like admitting you need help parallel parking—technically nothing wrong with it, but your ego takes a hit. Some folks are cool with AI doing the heavy lifting, others would rather manually debug their spaghetti code at 3 AM than let an algorithm touch their precious functions. Different strokes for different folks, except one involves significantly more dignity according to ppy. The real question is: are we gatekeeping coding methods now? Because if so, I'd like to nominate "people who don't use version control" as the actual programming degenerates.
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