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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 AI models question their training data

Leave Me Alone

AI Programming Python
22 hours ago 215.1K views 1 shares
Leave Me Alone
When your training model is crunching through epochs and someone asks if they can "quickly check their email" on your machine. The sign says it all: "DO NOT DISTURB... MACHINE IS LEARNING." Because nothing says "please interrupt my 47-hour training session" like accidentally closing that terminal window or unplugging something vital. The screen shows what looks like logs scrolling endlessly—that beautiful cascade of gradient descent updates, loss functions converging, and validation metrics that you'll obsessively monitor for the next several hours. Touch that laptop and you're not just interrupting a process, you're potentially destroying hours of GPU time and electricity bills that rival a small country's GDP. Pro tip: Always save your model checkpoints frequently, because the universe has a funny way of causing kernel panics right before your model reaches peak accuracy.

Looks Good To Me

Git Agile Programming Debugging
14 hours ago 136.5K views 1 shares
Looks Good To Me
The inverse relationship between thoroughness and effort. Someone submits a 2-line bugfix? You'll scrutinize every character, suggest refactoring the entire module, and debate variable naming for 20 minutes. Someone drops a 47-file PR that touches half the codebase? "LGTM" and you're back to scrolling Reddit. It's not laziness—it's self-preservation. Nobody has the mental bandwidth to review a small country's worth of code changes, so we just trust that someone else will catch the bug that inevitably ships to production next Tuesday.

Teaching Python

Python Programming
8 hours ago 134.3K views 1 shares
Teaching Python
Guy's literally teaching Python to pythons. The students are attentive, coiled up on the floor, probably taking notes in their own way. Meanwhile the instructor is standing on a bucket because even he knows better than to get too close to his audience during office hours. The laptop's there for remote learning support, naturally. Props to whoever decided the best way to teach a programming language named after Monty Python was to use actual reptiles. The commitment to the bit is chef's kiss.

Open-Source Archaeology

StackOverflow Git Programming
22 hours ago 204.9K views 0 shares
Open-Source Archaeology
Every developer's proudest moment: getting complimented on code you copy-pasted from Stack Overflow at 3 AM. The secret to writing "clean and beautiful" code? Find someone else who already solved your problem six years ago and ctrl+c, ctrl+v your way to glory. It's not plagiarism, it's called "leveraging the open-source community." The real skill isn't writing the code—it's knowing which GitHub repo to raid and having the confidence to accept credit for it with a straight face.

Manager Does A Little Code

Backend Security Devops Programming Debugging
21 hours ago 200.8K views 0 shares
Manager Does A Little Code
When your manager decides to "optimize" the codebase by shutting down "unnecessary" microservices, and suddenly 2FA stops working because—surprise!—everything in a microservices architecture is actually connected to everything else. Elon casually announces he's turning off "bloatware" microservices at Twitter (less than 20% are "actually needed"), and within hours people are locked out because the 2FA service got yeeted into the void. Classic move: treating a distributed system like it's a messy closet you can just Marie Kondo your way through. "Does this microservice spark joy? No? DELETE." Pro tip: Before you start playing Thanos with your infrastructure, maybe check what those services actually do. That "bloatware" might be the thing keeping your users from rage-tweeting about being locked out... oh wait. 💀

Finally Inner Peace

Git Webdev Programming
20 hours ago 194.5K views 0 shares
Finally Inner Peace
You know that feeling when you discover a GitHub repo that looks like it'll solve all your problems, and then you check the commit history? Most of the time it's either "last updated 4 years ago" or the dreaded "initial commit" from 2019. But 5 hours ago? That's the developer equivalent of finding a warm pizza in an abandoned building—suspicious but absolutely delightful. It means the maintainer is not only alive, but actively working on it RIGHT NOW. No more praying to the open-source gods that your issue will get answered sometime before the heat death of the universe. No more forking a dead project and becoming the reluctant maintainer yourself. Just pure, unadulterated hope that your pull request might actually get merged. This is what serenity looks like in the chaotic hellscape of dependency management.

When It's Cold!

Programming Hardware
41 minutes ago 14.6K views 1 shares
When It's Cold!
Normal people when it's cold: hold hands for warmth like civilized humans. Programmers when it's cold: clutch their laptop/phone charger brick like it's a portable radiator. That power adapter running at full throttle? Chef's kiss. Nothing says "I've optimized my survival strategy" quite like using your device's thermal output as a hand warmer. Bonus points if you're running a build process or training a model just to generate extra BTUs. Who needs gloves when you've got a 65W USB-C charger pumping out heat like a tiny furnace? The real question is: are you team laptop-on-lap-for-maximum-warmth or team external-GPU-mining-rig-as-space-heater?

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Let Me Get This Straight, You Think OpenAI Going Bankrupt Is Funny?

AI Programming
17 hours ago 166.4K views 0 shares
Let Me Get This Straight, You Think OpenAI Going Bankrupt Is Funny?
So OpenAI is burning through $44 billion like it's debugging a production incident at 2 AM, and everyone's making jokes about them running out of runway by 2027. The tech world is basically split into two camps: those nervously laughing at the irony of an AI company that can't figure out sustainable business models, and developers who've become so dependent on ChatGPT that the thought of it disappearing is genuinely terrifying. The Joker here represents every developer who's been copy-pasting ChatGPT code for the past year. Yeah, it's funny that a company valued at $157 billion might go bankrupt... until you realize you've forgotten how to write a for-loop without AI assistance. The cognitive dissonance is real: we mock their business model while simultaneously having ChatGPT open in 47 browser tabs. It's like watching your favorite Stack Overflow contributor announce retirement. Sure, you can laugh, but deep down you know you're about to be very, very alone with your bugs.

The Lore Of A Vibe Coder

AI Programming
16 hours ago 164.4K views 0 shares
The Lore Of A Vibe Coder
The AI hype cycle speedrun, perfectly captured in four stages of clown makeup. Started with the promise that AI would revolutionize everything, got seduced into thinking you could skip fundamentals and just prompt your way to a senior dev salary. Then reality hit: those "free" AI tools either got paywalled harder than Adobe Creative Cloud or started running slower than a nested loop in Python. Now you're sitting there with zero transferable skills, a LinkedIn full of AI buzzwords, and the crushing realization that "prompt engineer" isn't actually a career path. The kicker? While you were vibing, the devs who actually learned their craft are still employed. Turns out you can't Ctrl+Z your way out of not knowing how a for-loop works.

Is Anyone Surprised

Programming
16 hours ago 156.6K views 0 shares
Is Anyone Surprised
So you've got 18 years of experience, you're a senior dev, you've seen things, you've debugged nightmares, you've survived legacy codebases... and then someone has the AUDACITY to ask what your actual skill level is. The answer? "No idea." Because honestly, after nearly two decades of coding, you've reached that enlightened state where imposter syndrome and god complex somehow coexist in perfect harmony. You can architect entire systems in your sleep but also Google "how to center a div" every other Tuesday. The duality of senior devs is truly magnificent. The real skill level? Somewhere between "I can build anything" and "I have no clue what I'm doing" depending on which hour of the day you ask.

Confusion Of Da Highest Orda

Javascript Webdev Programming
10 hours ago 155.7K views 0 shares
Confusion Of Da Highest Orda
Congratulations, you've created a monster. What started as innocent sarcasm has now spiraled into a beautiful nightmare where your friend is writing code that looks like let numeroDeUsuarios = 42; while reading JavaScript documentation in English. The cognitive dissonance must be LEGENDARY. Imagine debugging sessions where half the codebase is in Spanish and the other half is whatever language autocomplete decided to vomit out that day. Stack Overflow answers? Useless. Error messages? In English. Variable names? ¡En español, amigo! Your friend has accidentally invented the most chaotic bilingual programming experience known to humanity. The real tragedy? He probably thinks he's doing it RIGHT because Duolingo gave him a little green owl of approval. Someone stop him before he starts naming functions obtenerDatosDelServidor() and wonders why his team wants to quit.

Modern Devs Be Like

Debugging Webdev Programming StackOverflow
11 hours ago 153.4K views 0 shares
Modern Devs Be Like
The accuracy is devastating. Modern developers have basically turned into professional copy-paste artists who panic the moment their WiFi drops. "Vibe coding" and "jr dev" are having the time of their lives in the shallow end, while "reading doc" is drowning in the background because nobody actually reads documentation anymore—why would you when Stack Overflow exists? But the real kicker? "Debugging without internet" is literally at the bottom of the ocean, dead and forgotten. Because let's be honest, trying to fix bugs without Google is like trying to perform surgery blindfolded. No Stack Overflow? No ChatGPT? No frantically searching "why is my code broken"? You might as well be coding in the Stone Age. The evolution is complete: we went from reading manuals to Googling everything to now just asking AI to write our code. Documentation? That's boomer energy. Debugging offline? That's a skill your ancestors had.
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