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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

Content with fewer dependencies than your package.json file

They Don't Get It

Programming Devops Debugging
17 hours ago 205.5K views 3 shares
They Don't Get It
When you're trying to explain why the production server is on fire because someone pushed directly to main at 4:47 PM on a Friday, and your non-technical friend is like "just turn it off and on again?" The sheer existential dread of being comforted by someone who thinks CSS is a government agency. These adorable kittens hugging it out represent the well-meaning but utterly clueless consolation you get when you're spiraling about merge conflicts, race conditions, or why the code works on your machine but nowhere else in the known universe. They mean well, bless their hearts, but they'll never understand the soul-crushing weight of a "works on my machine" situation or the horror of discovering your entire database backup script has been failing silently for six months.

I Totally Know Git Guys Trust Me

Git Devops Programming
17 hours ago 205.9K views 0 shares
I Totally Know Git Guys Trust Me
Someone made a Spotify playlist called "Songs about GIT" and it's basically the entire developer experience condensed into 6 tracks. "Pull It" and "Push It" are the only commands anyone actually remembers. "Committed" is what you tell yourself you are to learning Git properly. "My computer is dying" is what happens after you accidentally committed 50GB of node_modules. "Catastrophic Failure" is merge conflict time. And "F*** This S*** I'm Out" is when you discover someone force-pushed to main and deleted three weeks of work. The playlist runtime is 17 minutes, which is coincidentally how long it takes before you give up and just clone the repo fresh instead of fixing your mess.

If A Potato Can Become Vodka, You Can Become A Web Developer

Webdev Javascript Programming Frontend
18 hours ago 205.9K views 0 shares
If A Potato Can Become Vodka, You Can Become A Web Developer
So apparently the bar for web development is now "slightly more complex than fermentation." Love how this motivational poster implies that becoming a web developer requires the same level of transformation as rotting in a barrel for months. Honestly? Pretty accurate. You start as a raw, starchy beginner, get mashed up by CSS layouts, fermented in JavaScript confusion, and eventually distilled into someone who can center a div. The process is painful, involves a lot of breaking down, and at the end you're either smooth and refined or you give people headaches. Either way, you'll be dealing with a lot of bugs—though in web dev they're not the yeast kind.

My Daddy Can Fix This Hedgehog

Programming Algorithms Debugging
16 hours ago 203.2K views 0 shares
My Daddy Can Fix This Hedgehog
Kid: "My daddy can fix this hedgehog!" Other kid: "Is your daddy a vet?" Kid: "No, he fixes BUGS! He has books about animals and hedgehogs!" The books in dad's room: *literally every programming textbook ever written about algorithms, machine learning, and data structures* Somewhere, a programmer dad is having an existential crisis because his child thinks he's qualified to perform veterinary surgery based on his debugging skills. Sorry sweetie, Daddy's "bugs" don't have legs, fur, or a pulse. Though honestly, after dealing with legacy code for 10 years, fixing an actual hedgehog might be easier than untangling THAT mess.

No Thanks I Use AI

AI Programming
16 hours ago 199.9K views 0 shares
No Thanks I Use AI
Someone's offering you a brain but you're like "nah, I'm good" because you've got AI to do the thinking for you. The irony here is chef's kiss—rejecting actual cognitive function in favor of letting ChatGPT write your code. We've reached peak efficiency: why learn algorithms when you can just prompt engineer your way through life? Your rubber duck debugging sessions have been replaced by asking GPT to fix your bugs while you pretend to understand the solution it spits out. The brain is literally being rejected at the door while AI gets the VIP pass.

Zero Trust Architecture

Security Networking Devops
16 hours ago 199.0K views 0 shares
Zero Trust Architecture
When your nephew just wants to play Roblox but you see "unmanaged, no antivirus, no encryption" and suddenly it's a full penetration test scenario. Guest VLAN? Check. Captive portal? Deployed. Bandwidth throttled to dial-up speeds? Absolutely. Blocking HTTP and HTTPS ports? Chef's kiss. The beautiful irony here is spending 45 minutes engineering a fortress-grade network isolation for a 12-year-old's iPad while your sister is having a meltdown about family bonding. But hey, you don't get to be an IT professional by trusting random devices on your network—even if they belong to family. The punchline? "Zero Trust architecture doesn't care about bloodlines." That's not just a joke—that's a lifestyle. Security policies don't have a "but it's family" exception clause. The kid learned a valuable lesson that day: compliance isn't optional, and Uncle IT runs a tighter ship than most enterprises. Thanksgiving might've been ruined, but that perimeter stayed secure. Priorities.

Shots Fired

Frontend Webdev Gamedev Programming
21 hours ago 179.3K views 0 shares
Shots Fired
Product managers and UX designers really thought they did something by adding that tutorial button, huh? Meanwhile, 99% of users are smashing "Yeah, Skip!" faster than they can say "I'll figure it out myself" and then immediately flooding Slack with "how do I..." questions. The real kicker? Your team spent three sprints building that gorgeous interactive tutorial with tooltips, animations, and progress tracking. Nobody watches it. Ever. But somehow it's the devs' fault when users can't find the export button that's been in the same spot for two years. We've all been on both sides of this. Skip the tutorial, break something, then complain the documentation sucks. It's the circle of tech life.

Productivity Force Multiplier

AI Agile Programming
13 hours ago 176.0K views 0 shares
Productivity Force Multiplier
Nothing says "productivity boost" like being told to integrate AI into your workflow when you're already drowning in technical debt and legacy code. Sure, let me just pause fixing this production bug to learn how to prompt engineer my way through a task I could've completed in 20 minutes without the AI hallucinating half the solution. The real force multiplier here is the force required to not roll your eyes during the all-hands meeting where they announce this groundbreaking initiative.

Same Same But Different

Programming Devops Git Docker Python
19 hours ago 165.4K views 0 shares
Same Same But Different
Two people bond over their shared love of coding, but once you peek under the hood, it's a completely different tech stack civil war. One side's rocking Python, VS Code, Git, and Docker like a sensible human being. The other's got... whatever chaotic combination of Deep Learning frameworks, package managers, and tools that probably requires three different terminal windows just to compile "Hello World." It's the developer equivalent of saying "I love pizza" and then finding out one person means authentic Neapolitan margherita and the other means pineapple with ranch dressing. Sure, you both "love coding," but good luck pair programming without starting a holy war over tooling choices.

Guess Again Babe

Hardware Programming
18 hours ago 163.3K views 0 shares
Guess Again Babe
When your significant other sees a mysterious $6,499.50 charge and immediately assumes the worst—jewelry, gambling, a secret vacation—but nope, you just casually dropped half a year's rent on RAM sticks. Because clearly, 32GB wasn't cutting it anymore and you absolutely needed 128GB to run Chrome with 47 tabs open. The best part? Trying to explain why you need server-grade memory for "productivity" when really you just want your Docker containers to stop fighting for resources. Nothing says "I love you" quite like prioritizing memory bandwidth over date nights. At least the RAM won't judge you for your life choices... it'll just silently enable them at 3200MHz.

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Oracle Sues Navajo Nation

Java Programming
18 hours ago 157.6K views 0 shares
Oracle Sues Navajo Nation
Oracle's legal team just discovered that "Navajo" contains "java" backwards and immediately filed a trademark infringement lawsuit. Because nothing says "protecting intellectual property" quite like suing an entire Native American nation over a linguistic coincidence that's existed for centuries before Java was even a twinkle in Sun Microsystems' eye. The signature from "Toad Ellie Hep-End" (an anagram of "The Entitled People") at Oracle Corp is *chef's kiss*. Someone clearly spent their Friday afternoon crafting the perfect satirical jab at Oracle's notoriously aggressive legal department. Remember when they sued Google over Java APIs? Yeah, Oracle's lawyers have more billable hours than your production server has uptime issues. Fun fact: Oracle acquired Java when they bought Sun Microsystems in 2010, and they've been monetizing and litigating it ever since with the enthusiasm of a developer who just discovered their code works on the first try.

I Love Cheese

Csharp Programming Python Backend
12 hours ago 157.5K views 0 shares
I Love Cheese
The eternal struggle between doing things the "right way" versus the "it works" way. On one side, you've got the architect who built a beautiful, scalable C# rate-limiter that probably took three weeks of planning and implementation. On the other, someone who just yeeted a time.sleep(1.6s) into their Python script and called it rate-limiting. The kicker? Both solutions technically work. The clean C# implementation runs at 100% efficiency—pristine, maintainable, documented. Meanwhile, the Python hack with its hardcoded sleep timer limps along at 95% efficiency, held together by duct tape and prayers. But here's the dirty secret: that 5% difference rarely matters in production when you're just trying to avoid getting your API key banned. After years in the trenches, you realize both programmers are valid. Sometimes you need the bear (robust enterprise solution), sometimes you need the wolf (scrappy solution that ships). The real wisdom is knowing which animal to be on any given Tuesday.
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