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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

And Here We Are Today!

Hardware Iot Programming
22 hours ago 215.1K views 1 shares
And Here We Are Today!
They promised us automation would eliminate all manual labor. Instead, we're out here duct-taping circuit boards to sticks because the legacy system from 2003 needs to interface with the new IoT sensor array and nobody budgeted for proper mounting hardware. The future is now, and it's held together with electrical tape and prayers. Turns out "technologically advanced" just means we have more sophisticated ways to MacGyver solutions when the budget gets slashed and the deadline stays the same. At least the stick is biodegradable, so we're technically green tech now.

Me In 2050

Cloud Security Microsoft Windows
23 hours ago 191.4K views 1 shares
Me In 2050
The year is 2050. Tech companies have finally achieved their ultimate dream: forcing everyone to authenticate through their cloud services for literally everything. Want to access your own files on your own machine? Sorry buddy, Microsoft/Google/Apple needs to verify your identity first. The UN peacekeepers are here to "help" you migrate to the cloud, but you're having none of it. You've barricaded yourself in your home office, clutching your local user account like it's the last bastion of digital freedom. They can pry your offline credentials from your cold, dead hands. Future historians will call this the Great Local Account Resistance of 2050. Your grandchildren will ask "What was a local user account, grandpa?" and you'll shed a single tear while explaining the ancient times when you could actually own your own computer without needing internet permission to use it.

I Get This All The Time...

AI Programming Python Backend
22 hours ago 221.6K views 0 shares
I Get This All The Time...
The eternal struggle of being a machine learning engineer at a party. Someone asks what you do, you say "I work with models," and suddenly they're picturing you hanging out with Instagram influencers while you're actually debugging why your neural network thinks every image is a cat. The glamorous life of tuning hyperparameters and staring at loss curves doesn't quite translate to cocktail conversation. Try explaining that your "models" are mathematical representations with input layers, hidden layers, and activation functions. Watch their eyes glaze over faster than a poorly optimized gradient descent. Pro tip: Just let them believe you're doing something cool. It's easier than explaining backpropagation for the hundredth time.

Double Production.... Right?

Hardware Devops Databases Backend Cloud
21 hours ago 215.2K views 0 shares
Double Production.... Right?
When hardware manufacturers announce they're doubling NAND memory capacity, every sysadmin and DevOps engineer immediately goes into panic mode. Sure, double the storage sounds great until you realize it means double the potential for catastrophic data loss, double the complexity in RAID configurations, and double the fun when trying to explain to management why "more storage" doesn't automatically mean "better performance." The nervous smile turning into existential dread perfectly captures that moment when you realize your carefully balanced production environment is about to get "upgraded" whether you like it or not. Because nothing says "stable infrastructure" quite like forcing everyone to migrate to new hardware with twice the capacity and probably twice the weird edge cases you'll discover at 3 AM. Spoiler alert: It's never production-ready when they say it is. You'll be the one finding out the hard way.

I Have Been Attacked

Apple MacOS Programming
21 hours ago 213.2K views 0 shares
I Have Been Attacked
Tech bros will drop $5K on a maxed-out MacBook Pro and a $1,500 Herman Miller chair, justifying it with spreadsheets and ROI calculations about "productivity optimization" and "ergonomic investment." Then they'll rotate through the same three wrinkled startup tees from that hackathon in 2017 like it's a capsule wardrobe. The cognitive dissonance is real—your posture gets luxury treatment while your appearance screams "I peaked when we got Series A funding." But hey, at least your lumbar support is premium while you're debugging at 2 AM in a shirt that says "Move Fast and Break Things" (which is now ironic because the company folded).

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Look At This Junk!

Programming Debugging
2 hours ago 37.5K views 1 shares
Look At This Junk!
You know that feeling when you revisit your old code and suddenly wonder if you were drunk, sleep-deprived, or just fundamentally broken as a human being? Two months is that perfect sweet spot where the code is old enough to be incomprehensible, but recent enough that you can't blame a different version of yourself. The horror sets in when you realize there are no comments, variable names like x2 and temp_final_ACTUAL , and a function that's somehow 400 lines long. You start questioning your career choices, your education, and whether that CS degree was worth anything at all. The real kicker? It works perfectly in production. You're terrified to touch it because you have absolutely no idea how or why it functions. It's like archaeological code—best left buried and undisturbed.

Docker Docker

Docker Devops Programming Backend
23 hours ago 205.7K views 0 shares
Docker Docker
Your CPU is basically that strict parent interrogating Docker about its absolutely OBSCENE resource consumption. "Docker, Docker" gets a sweet "Yes papa" response. But then things take a dark turn when papa CPU asks about eating RAM, and Docker straight-up denies it like a toddler with chocolate smeared all over their face. Same with telling lies. But the MOMENT papa CPU says "Open your mouth!" we see the truth: com.docker.hyperkit casually munching on 9.06 GB of memory like it's a light snack. Busted! Nothing says "lightweight containerization" quite like your Docker daemon treating your RAM like an all-you-can-eat buffet while swearing it's on a diet.

Oo Ps

Programming Csharp Java Backend
17 hours ago 176.1K views 0 shares
Oo Ps
Senior devs dancing around after wrapping every simple function in AbstractFactoryBuilderManagerProxyStrategyObserverAdapterDecoratorFacade classes because "it's more maintainable." They've successfully transformed a 10-line feature into a sprawling architecture that requires a PhD to understand. The junior dev just wanted to add a button, but now they're navigating through FactoryFactory classes and wondering if they accidentally opened the Java Enterprise codebase. The real kicker? When someone asks "why is this so complicated?" they'll respond with "well, what if we need to scale this to support multiple button types in the future?" Spoiler: they won't. The button will do exactly one thing for the next 5 years, but at least it's "enterprise-ready" and follows SOLID principles so hard it became LIQUID.

Virgin Framework Vs Chad ThinkPad

Hardware Windows Linux
12 hours ago 142.8K views 0 shares
Virgin Framework Vs Chad ThinkPad
The classic virgin vs chad format, but make it about hardware worship. Modern frameworks get roasted for chasing Apple aesthetics with their boring gray colorways and weird dongle-dependent ports, while being so anorexic-thin they can't fit a replaceable battery. Meanwhile, the ThinkPad is out here being the Nokia 3310 of laptops—10+ years old, still kicking, with a replaceable CPU and optical drive bay because why not . The TrackPointer (that iconic red nub) gets the respect it deserves as a "magnificent" input device, while frameworks are crying about not having 14-inch models with sourceable screens. The best part? That ThinkPad can't even run Windows 11 because it lacks TPM 2.0 support, but who cares when you're running Linux like a true gigachad. The "fancy stickers put on by the user" is the cherry on top—because your laptop isn't complete without at least 47 programming language stickers and a "powered by caffeine" decal. Fun fact: ThinkPads were literally tested in space on the ISS. Your MacBook could never.

Me Making My RPG Game

Gamedev Unity Programming
11 hours ago 141.3K views 0 shares
Me Making My RPG Game
You know you've entered true game dev hell when you spend 6 hours architecting a combat system with seventeen nested state machines, custom event buses, and a dependency injection framework that would make enterprise Java developers weep with pride—all because you refused to watch a single tutorial. The code is so convoluted that only you can understand it, and even that's questionable after a coffee break. But hey, at least it's YOUR spaghetti code, crafted with the stubborn determination of someone who thinks "best practices" are just suggestions for people who lack vision. The real kicker? It probably does the exact same thing a simple switch statement would've done, but with 400% more architectural "elegance."

100% Worth It!

Hardware
12 hours ago 141.1K views 0 shares
100% Worth It!
When you're so hyped about your new DDR5 RAM that you're willing to show off your appendectomy scar in the same photo. Priorities: sorted. The man just got out of surgery and his first thought was "let me flex my Corsair Vengeance RGB." The hospital gown is still on, the surgical dressing is fresh, but those RAM sticks? Even fresher. Nothing says "I'm recovering well" quite like posing with hardware that costs more than the medical bill in some countries. The dedication is real. The RGB will heal all wounds faster than any antibiotic ever could.

I Didn't Get It

Java Csharp C++ Kotlin Programming
14 hours ago 136.6K views 0 shares
I Didn't Get It
Oh, the absolute TRAGEDY of encapsulation! Someone made a private Joke object and then had the AUDACITY to provide a public setter method for it. The punchline? You literally can't access the joke directly because it's private, so you genuinely "wouldn't get it." It's a meta-joke about access modifiers that becomes the very thing it describes - an inaccessible joke. The setter is there taunting you like "here, you can SET a new joke, but you'll never GET the original one!" Pure object-oriented poetry wrapped in existential programming humor. Chef's kiss to whoever wrote this because they created a joke that perfectly embodies its own inaccessibility. The irony is *chef's kiss* immaculate.

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