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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

These memes have more followers than your tech blog

Gemini Wants Me To Nuke My Repo

AI Javascript Programming Debugging Backend
7 hours ago 110.6K views 1 shares
Gemini Wants Me To Nuke My Repo
So Google's Gemini AI just casually suggested using fs.rm() with force: true and recursive: true on a base directory path. You know, the digital equivalent of "have you tried burning down your entire house to get rid of that spider?" The autocomplete tooltip even helpfully reminds us that this "removes files and directories (modeled on the standard POSIX rm utility)" - as if that makes it better. Yeah, we know what rm -rf does, Gemini. That's precisely why we're concerned. Nothing says "AI-assisted development" quite like an algorithm suggesting you obliterate your entire project directory with the nuclear option flags enabled. At least it returns a Promise, so you can await your own destruction in an orderly, asynchronous fashion.

PC Gaming In 2026

Hardware AI Gamedev
21 hours ago 164.7K views 0 shares
PC Gaming In 2026
The gaming hardware industry has officially entered its villain arc. While gamers and PC builders are just trying to run games without selling a kidney, AI companies and RAM manufacturers are in bed together, hogging all the sweet DDR5 modules for their data centers and AI training rigs. The joke here is that by 2026, the unholy alliance between AI tech giants and memory manufacturers will have completely squeezed out the consumer market. Your dream of building that 64GB gaming rig? Sorry buddy, those sticks are busy training GPT-7 to write better code than you. The betrayal is real when the components you need are being diverted to feed the machine learning beast instead of your Cyberpunk 2077 addiction.

Ramageddon

AI Hardware Programming
20 hours ago 160.7K views 0 shares
Ramageddon
Nvidia out here playing 4D chess: invest billions into AI, watch AI models consume ungodly amounts of RAM to load those massive parameters, then realize you need more RAM to feed your GPUs. It's the perfect business model—create the demand, then scramble to supply it yourself. The AI boom turned into a RAM shortage so fast that even Nvidia's looking around like "wait, where'd all the memory go?" Fun fact: Modern large language models can require hundreds of gigabytes of VRAM just to run inference. When you're training? Better start measuring in terabytes. Nvidia basically funded their own supply chain crisis.

Happy New Year

Programming Gamedev Databases Backend
20 hours ago 158.2K views 0 shares
Happy New Year
Nothing says "celebration" quite like watching your SQLite database successfully open while ASCII art champagne pops in your terminal. The raylib initialization loading right after is just *chef's kiss* - because who needs Times Square when you've got platform backend confirmations? Someone spent their New Year's Eve coding and decided to make their console output festive. The dedication to draw a champagne bottle in ASCII characters while simultaneously initializing a graphics library is the kind of energy that separates the "I'll start my side project tomorrow" crowd from the "it's 11:59 PM and I'm shipping features" crowd. Real talk though: if your New Year celebration involves mandatory raylib modules loading, you're either incredibly dedicated to your craft or you need better friends. Possibly both.

A Couple Of Things May Not Be Accurate But Still Funny

Hardware Gamedev Apple Microsoft Windows
20 hours ago 157.3K views 0 shares
A Couple Of Things May Not Be Accurate But Still Funny
The corporate version of "things that don't matter" except they absolutely do matter and we're all lying to ourselves. AMD's driver situation has gotten way better over the years, but let's be real—we all know someone who still has PTSD from Catalyst Control Center. Windows bloatware is basically a feature at this point (looking at you, Candy Crush pre-installed on a $2000 machine). Intel's NM (nanometer) naming was already confusing before they switched to "Intel 7" because marketing > physics. And Sony/MacBook gaming? Sure, if you enjoy playing Solitaire at 4K. The NVIDIA VRAM one hits different though—12GB in 2024 for a $1200 GPU? Generous. And Ubisoft's game optimization is so legendary that your RTX 4090 will still stutter in their open-world games because they spent the budget on towers you can climb instead of performance. Crucial's "consumers don't matter" is just accurate business strategy—they're too busy selling to data centers to care about your gaming rig.

I Own You!

Linux Bash MacOS Windows Programming
13 hours ago 155.1K views 0 shares
I Own You!
Ah yes, the classic file permissions standoff. Your OS acting like some feudal lord reminding you that despite being the admin, paying for the hardware, and literally owning the machine, you still need to grovel for write access to a config file. The burning hellscape imagery is spot on because that's exactly what it feels like trying to edit /etc/hosts or some system file at 2 PM on a Tuesday. Just trying to change one line and suddenly you're in a philosophical debate with your computer about ownership and authority. Spoiler: sudo usually wins this argument, but the audacity of the OS to tell YOU that you don't have permission on YOUR machine never gets old. It's like your refrigerator telling you that you can't have the leftover pizza.

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Every Fucking Time

Git Devops Programming
18 hours ago 152.6K views 0 shares
Every Fucking Time
You know that feeling when you refactor a single variable name and suddenly Git thinks you've rewritten the entire codebase? Yeah, 34 files changed because you decided to update some import paths or tweak a shared constant. Smooth sailing, quick review, merge it and move on. But then there's that OTHER pull request. The one where you fix a critical bug by changing literally two lines of actual logic. Maybe you added a null check or fixed an off-by-one error. And suddenly your PR has 12 comments dissecting your life choices, questioning your understanding of computer science fundamentals, and suggesting you read a 400-page book on design patterns before touching production code again. The code review gods have a twisted sense of humor. Large diffs? "LGTM." Small, surgical changes? Time for a philosophical debate about whether your variable should be called isValid or valid .

Fully Recreated Python In Python

Python Security Programming
19 hours ago 148.0K views 0 shares
Fully Recreated Python In Python
Congratulations, you've just built an entire programming language in 5 lines. Someone spent years architecting Python's interpreter, and you just speedran it with eval() . This is basically a REPL (Read-Eval-Print Loop) that takes user input, evaluates it as Python code, and prints the result. In an infinite loop. You know, exactly what the Python interpreter does. Except this one has the security posture of leaving your front door wide open with a sign that says "free stuff inside." The beauty here is that eval() does all the heavy lifting. Want to execute arbitrary code? Done. Want to potentially destroy your system? Also done. It's like reinventing the wheel, except the wheel is already attached to your car and you're just adding a second, more dangerous wheel. Pro tip: Never, ever use eval() on user input in production unless you enjoy surprise job openings on your team.

Without Borrowing Ideas, True Innovation Remains Out Of Reach

AI Programming
22 hours ago 134.2K views 0 shares
Without Borrowing Ideas, True Innovation Remains Out Of Reach
OpenAI out here saying the AI race is "over" if they can't train on copyrighted material, while simultaneously comparing themselves to... car thieves who think laws are inconvenient. The self-awareness is chef's kiss. Look, every developer knows standing on the shoulders of giants is how progress works. We copy-paste from Stack Overflow, fork repos, and build on open source. But there's a subtle difference between learning from public code and scraping the entire internet's creative works without permission, then acting like you're entitled to it because "innovation." The irony here is nuclear. It's like saying "10/10 developers agree licensing is bad for business" while wearing a hoodie made from stolen GitHub repos. Sure buddy, laws are just suggestions when you're disrupting industries, right?

Vibe Coded Menu

Webdev Programming Debugging Frontend Backend
16 hours ago 132.8K views 0 shares
Vibe Coded Menu
When your cafe tries to be all fancy and tech-savvy with laser-etched brass QR codes but forgets the most basic rule of web development: actually having a server running. Those beautiful artisanal QR codes are pointing to localhost – which, for the non-technical folks reading this, means "my own computer" and definitely not "the cafe's menu website." Someone literally deployed their local development environment to production. Or more accurately, they didn't deploy anything at all. They just scanned their own computer while testing and permanently etched that URL into brass. That's commitment to the wrong thing. The cafe spent more money on metalwork than on a $5/month hosting plan. Chef's kiss of irony right there.

Update Your Footer To 2026

Webdev Programming Frontend
17 hours ago 130.8K views 0 shares
Update Your Footer To 2026
Every year without fail, someone remembers in late January that they still have "© 2024 Company Name. All rights reserved." sitting in their footer. It's the web dev equivalent of writing the wrong year on checks for the first month. You know it needs updating, you even added it to your mental todo list, but somehow it always slips through until someone inevitably points it out or you randomly notice it yourself weeks later. The real pros just hardcode the current year in a template variable and forget about it forever. The rest of us? We'll see you next January when we go through this dance again.

No Need To Verify Code Anymore

AI Programming Debugging Testing
14 hours ago 129.0K views 0 shares
No Need To Verify Code Anymore
So someone just announced NERD, a programming language where humans don't write code—they just "observe" it. The workflow? Skim the AI-generated code, run tests, and ship. No actual reading required. Because who needs to understand what they're deploying to production, right? The post casually mentions that 40% of their code is now machine-written, and they spent the year reviewing PRs authored by Claude faster than they could type requirements. The punchline? They weren't really reading it. Just vibing with the vibes and hitting merge. NERD supposedly compiles to native and uses 50-70% fewer tokens, which sounds impressive until you realize the entire premise is "let AI write everything and hope for the best." It's like code review speedrunning—any% glitchless, no comprehension required. The real kicker is calling it "the last missing piece in the AI puzzle." Because nothing says "puzzle complete" like removing human understanding from software development entirely. What could possibly go wrong? 🚀
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