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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 faster than developers adopting the latest IDE theme

This Is The End Hold Your Breath And

AI Programming Debugging
20 hours ago 280.3K views 1 shares
This Is The End Hold Your Breath And
Finding someone's Instagram? Cute, wholesome, maybe a little flirty. Finding someone's ChatGPT? That's like discovering their browser history, therapy sessions, and shower thoughts all rolled into one horrifying package. Your ChatGPT history is where you asked "how to center a div" for the 47th time, debugged code at 2 AM with increasingly desperate prompts, and maybe even asked it to explain Kubernetes like you're five (three times). It's the digital equivalent of someone reading your diary, except your diary is filled with half-baked algorithms, existential questions about async/await, and that one time you asked it to write a breakup text in Python comments. The sheer panic on that face is justified. Some things were meant to stay between you and your AI overlord.

Stay In Your Lane Bruv

Backend Webdev Agile Programming Frontend
23 hours ago 324.9K views 0 shares
Stay In Your Lane Bruv
You know that junior dev who just finished a React tutorial and suddenly thinks they're qualified to redesign your entire microservices architecture? That's what's happening here. The vibe coder—bless their heart—has wandered into a system design meeting armed with nothing but confidence and a Figma account. The architects are giving them that look. You know the one. The "please stop talking before you suggest we store everything in localStorage" look. System design meetings are where you discuss scalability, data flow, and whether your database will survive Black Friday traffic. It's not the place for "what if we just made it look cooler?" Stay in your lane, focus on those CSS animations, and let the backend folks argue about CAP theorem in peace.

Incredible How Pretty Much The Entire Github Homepage Is Useless

Git Webdev Programming Frontend
22 hours ago 320.6K views 0 shares
Incredible How Pretty Much The Entire Github Homepage Is Useless
GitHub's homepage has become a masterclass in corporate bloat. You land there and it's just... marketing fluff, hero images, and calls-to-action that nobody who actually uses GitHub needs. We all just type "github.com/username/repo" directly into the address bar or have it bookmarked anyway. The red striped overlay here is doing the lord's work—showing us what we already knew but were too polite to say. That entire beautiful, carefully designed homepage? Useless pixels. The only thing developers actually need is the search bar and maybe the profile dropdown. Everything else is just there to impress investors and confuse new users. Real developers skip the homepage entirely and go straight to their repos, issues, or PRs. The homepage is basically the LinkedIn feed of code hosting—technically exists, but nobody's there by choice.

Together We Are Powerful

Frontend Webdev Programming Backend
21 hours ago 295.7K views 0 shares
Together We Are Powerful
The eternal divide between creative insecurity and engineering solidarity. Designers see a new hire as competition, immediately questioning their worth and value. Meanwhile, engineers? They're just happy to have another warm body who understands what a merge conflict is. There's actually some truth here: design is often subjective and political, where one person's vision can overshadow another's. Engineering is more collaborative by necessity—nobody wants to be the only one on-call when production goes down at 2 AM. Plus, more engineers means less chance you'll be the one debugging that legacy code nobody wants to touch. Designers compete for creative ownership. Engineers unionize against the backlog.

At Least He Closes Brackets Like Lisp

AI Algorithms Programming Python
19 hours ago 271.4K views 0 shares
At Least He Closes Brackets Like Lisp
When you can mentally rotate a 4D hypercube in your head but suddenly become illiterate when asked to visualize nested loops. The buff doge confidently shows off his spatial reasoning skills, while the wimpy doge just stares at four nested for-loops like they're written in ancient Sumerian. The punchline? That glorious cascade of closing brackets: } } } } – the telltale sign of someone who either writes machine learning code or has given up on life. It's the programming equivalent of those Russian nesting dolls, except each doll contains existential dread and off-by-one errors. The title references Lisp's infamous parentheses situation, where closing a function looks like )))))))) – except now we've upgraded to curly braces. Progress!

Lady Gaga Private Key

Security Networking Programming
17 hours ago 268.4K views 0 shares
Lady Gaga Private Key
When Lady Gaga accidentally tweets what looks like someone's entire private key from 2012, and a programmer decides to format it properly with BEGIN/END tags like it's a legit PEM certificate. Because nothing says "secure cryptography" like a pop star's keyboard smash going viral. The beauty here is that Lady Gaga probably just fell asleep on her keyboard or let her cat walk across it, but to security-minded devs, any random string of gibberish immediately triggers the "oh god, did someone just leak their SSH key?" reflex. The programmer's brain can't help but see patterns in chaos—it's like pareidolia but for cryptographic material. Pro tip: If your actual private key looks like "AAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHRHRGRGRGRRRRG," you've either discovered a new compression algorithm or your key generation ceremony involved too much tequila.

Five Hours Wasted

Debugging Gamedev C++ Programming
15 hours ago 266.6K views 0 shares
Five Hours Wasted
Nothing quite like the special kind of rage that comes from debugging C for hours, only to realize the "bug" was actually a feature you forgot you implemented. Or worse—it was working exactly as intended and you just didn't understand your own code anymore. The progression here is beautiful: starts with innocent optimism, discovers something's wrong, descends into debugging hell trying to fix it, then finally achieves enlightenment (or insanity?) when you realize there was never anything to fix. Those five hours? Gone. Vaporized. Could've been playing the game instead of hunting phantom bugs. Bonus points for doing this in C where every "bug" could legitimately be undefined behavior, a segfault waiting to happen, or just your pointer arithmetic being spicy. The paranoia is justified, which makes the realization even more painful.

Upwards Mobility

Backend Golang AWS Programming Java
12 hours ago 241.9K views 0 shares
Upwards Mobility
The corporate ladder speedrun: destroy a perfectly functioning system, make it objectively worse, get promoted, then bail before the dumpster fire you created becomes your problem. Peak software engineering right here. Dude took a Java service that ran flawlessly for 5 years and convinced management it needed a complete rewrite in Go with microservices because "modernization." The result? Slower performance, double the costs, and a memory leak that strikes at 2 AM like clockwork. But hey, that 20-page design doc had enough buzzwords to secure the L6 promotion. The best part? After getting the promo, they immediately transferred to a "chill Core Infra team" where they won't be on call for the disaster they created. Some poor new grad is now inheriting a $550k total comp nightmare. That's not upward mobility—that's a tactical extraction after carpet bombing production. Pro tip: If your promotion depends on creating "scope" and "complexity" instead of solving actual problems, you're not engineering—you're just resume-driven development with extra steps.

One Of The Most Favorite

Testing Programming Debugging
12 hours ago 209.6K views 0 shares
One Of The Most Favorite
Classic QA engineer joke that never gets old because it's painfully accurate. We test for zero beers, integer overflow, negative values, random gibberish input—basically everything except "where's the bathroom?" because that's what actual users do. They don't follow your happy path; they ask questions your system wasn't designed to answer and suddenly your entire architecture is on fire. The real tragedy? QA finds 47 edge cases, you fix them all, feel like a hero, then production explodes because someone tried to use the app while their phone was upside down during a leap year. You can't win. The users will always find that one scenario you never imagined, and it'll be the dumbest thing you've ever heard, yet completely valid.

When You Have To Checkout The Master Branch

Git Devops Programming
11 hours ago 207.9K views 0 shares
When You Have To Checkout The Master Branch
Remember when everyone used "master" before the great renaming to "main"? Yeah, those legacy repos are still out there, lurking in production like ancient artifacts. You're working on your feature branch, everything's modern and clean, then someone asks you to check something on master and suddenly you're transported back to 2019. The branch still works perfectly fine, but saying "git checkout master" feels like you're about to get cancelled by your CI/CD pipeline. It's like finding a working floppy disk drive in 2024—technically functional, but you feel weird using it.

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Finally Got The Open GL Working In My Audio Visualizer

C++ Hardware Gamedev Programming Debugging
10 hours ago 203.2K views 0 shares
Finally Got The Open GL Working In My Audio Visualizer
When you finally get OpenGL rendering working after three days of segfaults and "undefined reference" errors, and everyone's impressed by the pretty particle effects while you're sitting there proud that your GPU is actually doing the work instead of melting your CPU. They think it's about the visuals. You know it's about that sweet, sweet hardware acceleration and those glorious 60 FPS with 2% CPU usage. The real flex isn't the sparkles—it's the efficiency, baby.

Suddenly People Care

AI Programming Debugging Backend Cloud
5 hours ago 104.2K views 0 shares
Suddenly People Care
For decades, error handling was that thing everyone nodded about in code reviews but secretly wrapped in a try-catch that just logged "oops" to console. Nobody wrote proper error messages, nobody validated inputs, and stack traces were treated like ancient hieroglyphics. Then AI showed up and suddenly everyone's an error handling expert. Why? Because when your LLM hallucinates or your API call to GPT-4 fails, you can't just shrug and refresh the page. Now you need graceful degradation, retry logic, fallback strategies, and detailed error context. The massive book represents all the error handling knowledge we should've been using all along. The tiny pamphlet is what we actually did before AI forced us to care. Nothing motivates proper engineering practices quite like burning through your OpenAI API credits because you didn't handle rate limits correctly.
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