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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

More consistent than your staging environment

This Can Not Be Denied

Debugging Webdev Javascript Programming Frontend
15 hours ago 241.2K views 1 shares
This Can Not Be Denied
Your IDE comes equipped with breakpoints, step-through debugging, variable watchers, call stack inspection, and literally EVERYTHING you could ever dream of to hunt down bugs like a professional detective. But do you use any of that? ABSOLUTELY NOT. Instead, you're out here smashing that console.log() button like it's the only debugging technique that exists in the known universe. "I got here" - truly the pinnacle of software engineering diagnostics. Why spend 30 seconds learning the debugger when you can spend 3 hours sprinkling console.logs throughout your entire codebase like cursed breadcrumbs? It's not lazy, it's *tradition*.

Junior Dev 2026 Requirements

Javascript Webdev React Programming Linux
14 hours ago 239.6K views 1 shares
Junior Dev 2026 Requirements
Junior positions in 2026 apparently require you to have landed on the moon, maintained a codebase for 12 years (before you graduated high school, naturally), mastered every JavaScript framework that's ever existed simultaneously, run GTA 6 in the Artemis 2 spacecraft, and be fluent in literally every programming language including Pascal and the Linux kernel itself. Oh, and you need to know Angular, React, React Native, Angular Native, and Vue—preferably all at once in some kind of quantum superposition state. The job market has officially entered its villain arc. Entry-level positions now demand the resume of a NASA engineer crossed with Linus Torvalds. Meanwhile, the salary? Competitive. Which means they'll tell you after three rounds of interviews.

How Has The Internet Come To This

Webdev Networking Programming
19 hours ago 211.4K views 1 shares
How Has The Internet Come To This
We've gone full circle, folks. Back in the dial-up days, the internet was this magical portal where you could be anyone, do anything, and pretend your real life didn't exist. Fast forward to today, and we're all desperately trying to touch grass and remember what human interaction feels like without a screen between us. The irony is beautiful: we built this incredible global network to connect humanity, and now we need to actively disconnect from it to feel human again. Between doomscrolling, infinite feeds designed by algorithms that know you better than you know yourself, and the constant barrage of notifications, the internet went from being an escape pod to being the thing we need an escape pod from. Plot twist: the real bug was in the social network all along.

We Are All Copilot This Blessed Day

Microsoft AI Azure Programming Cloud
1 hour ago 33.3K views 2 shares
We Are All Copilot This Blessed Day
Microsoft really looked at their product naming strategy and said "what if we just called everything the same thing?" Now we've got 80 different Copilots talking to each other like some kind of corporate identity crisis. There's a Copilot inside your Copilot, a Copilot for your Copilot, and apparently a physical keyboard key to summon them all like you're casting a spell in a very boring RPG. The diagram looks like a spider's fever dream, with lines connecting everything to everything else. It's the tech equivalent of naming all your kids "Steve" and then wondering why family dinners are confusing. Someone in Redmond's marketing department definitely got promoted for this galaxy brain move. Fun fact: There are now more products named Copilot than there are developers who can remember what each one actually does. Good luck explaining to your PM which Copilot you need budget approval for.

Found This In My Commit History Today

Git Programming Debugging
8 hours ago 130.1K views 1 shares
Found This In My Commit History Today
The emotional rollercoaster of a developer captured in two consecutive commits, mere hours apart. First commit: "fixed it I love my life" - that dopamine hit when your code finally works and you feel like a genius. Second commit: "i hate my life" - when you realize your fix broke three other things, or worse, it didn't actually fix anything and you just fooled yourself. The best part? Both commits happened on January 3rd, probably during the post-holiday return to work when your brain is still in vacation mode and the bugs are particularly vicious. This is basically the developer's version of "how it started vs how it's going" but compressed into a single workday.

Finally

Hardware
16 hours ago 240.0K views 0 shares
Finally...
You've been waiting since October 2025 to upgrade your dev machine, watching RAM prices shoot up from €100 to €450 like some cursed cryptocurrency chart. You told yourself you'd wait for prices to drop. You told your manager you'd wait for prices to drop. You've been running Chrome with 8 tabs open like some kind of medieval peasant. Then February 2026 rolls around and prices finally dip by like €50. That's it. That's the "drop." But you know what? After months of pain, you'll take it. The market has broken you. You're buying that RAM and you're gonna pretend it was worth the wait because the alternative is admitting you should've just bought it 9 months ago when it was still €100. The tech hardware market is basically just Stockholm syndrome with extra steps.

It's A Matter Of Motivation

Programming Gamedev
18 hours ago 235.3K views 0 shares
It's A Matter Of Motivation
Capitalism bros really thought they had a point until Wikipedia editors woke up and chose violence by documenting literally ALL of human knowledge for FREE. Meanwhile Minecraft players are out here building the Colosseum block by block at 3 AM because someone said they couldn't. Open source devs? They're fixing bugs in their sleep and maintaining critical infrastructure that runs half the internet without getting paid a SINGLE PENNY. And volunteer firefighters are literally running into BURNING BUILDINGS to save lives while Karen from corporate thinks people won't work without a quarterly bonus. The audacity of thinking money is the only motivator when passion, community, and spite are doing the HEAVY LIFTING out here!

Yet Another Download Manager

Programming Webdev Bash Linux
18 hours ago 231.9K views 0 shares
Yet Another Download Manager
Someone built a TUI (Terminal User Interface) download manager and now they're fishing for upvotes on Reddit like it's revolutionary. Meanwhile, the entire internet collectively yawns because there are literally hundreds of existing download managers—wget, curl, aria2, yt-dlp, axel, you name it. The Buzz Lightyear meme format nails it: one proud developer standing in front of an endless sea of identical clones, all doing the exact same thing. It's the programming equivalent of reinventing the wheel, except this time the wheel has a fancy ASCII progress bar. The TUI part is especially chef's kiss because nothing says "please validate my weekend project" quite like adding terminal colors to a task that's already been solved a thousand times over.

Mythical Response From Mythos

AI Gcp Programming Python
19 hours ago 225.8K views 0 shares
Mythical Response From Mythos
Someone asked Google's Mythos AI to write a todo app in Python and apparently received a response so profound it broke their entire worldview. Fourteen words. That's all it took. The kind of wisdom that makes you question everything you know about software development and contemplate leaving civilization to seek enlightenment in Tibet. But here's the kicker: they hit the usage limit right after, so we'll never know what cosmic truth was revealed. Did Mythos tell them "just use Todoist"? Did it suggest they reconsider their life choices? Was it a zen koan about the futility of task management? The real tragedy is that humanity may never know what wisdom could shatter a developer's perception of reality. Though honestly, if fourteen words about a todo app send you running to Tibet, maybe programming was getting a bit too intense anyway.

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I Built A Skill That Makes LLMs Stop Making Mistakes

AI Programming
22 hours ago 225.4K views 0 shares
I Built A Skill That Makes LLMs Stop Making Mistakes
So you thought asking ChatGPT to "not make any mistakes" would somehow unlock god mode and generate a million-dollar app? Sweet summer child. That's like telling your code to "just work" and expecting production-ready software. The universe doesn't operate on vibes and polite requests, my friend. The delicious irony here is that adding "don't make mistakes" to your prompt is about as effective as putting a "No Bugs Allowed" sign on your IDE. ChatGPT is still gonna hallucinate dependencies that don't exist, suggest deprecated methods from 2015, and confidently tell you that your syntax error is actually a feature. But sure, the magic words will fix everything! The buff dude staring intensely at his screen really sells the energy of someone who genuinely believes they've cracked the code to AI perfection. Spoiler alert: ChatGPT read your instruction, nodded politely, and then proceeded to make mistakes anyway because that's what LLMs do best—sound confident while being spectacularly wrong.

Dynamic Programming

Algorithms Programming
21 hours ago 222.7K views 0 shares
Dynamic Programming
You spend HOURS psyching yourself up to finally conquer dynamic programming, ready to unlock the secrets of the universe. You click on that tutorial with the determination of a warrior entering battle. And then—BOOM—first sentence: "so we use hash set." That's it? THAT'S the big secret? The confusion hits you like a freight train. The cat's bewildered stare is literally your brain trying to process how something that sounds so intimidating boils down to... data structures you already know. The gap between the mystique of "dynamic programming" and the reality of "just memoize stuff bro" is absolutely sending me. 💀

Does Anyone Bother To

Programming
22 hours ago 217.4K views 0 shares
Does Anyone Bother To
Your computer wants to save a screenshot as some cryptographic hash nightmare that looks like someone fell asleep on their keyboard. You, being the rational human you are, immediately click "Yes" without even thinking about it. Because who needs descriptive filenames when you can play a fun game of "guess which random string of characters is my database schema diagram" six months from now? Bonus points if you have 47 files that all start with "Screenshot" followed by timestamps that mean nothing to anyone.
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