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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

Trending faster than new JavaScript frameworks appear

Monetizing Basic Math

Math Algorithms Programming Backend Cloud
15 hours ago 127.8K views 1 shares
Monetizing Basic Math
Someone really woke up and decided to create a SaaS business for... *checks notes* ...rounding numbers. Yes, you read that right. The most basic mathematical operation you learned in elementary school is now available in THREE premium tiers! The free tier gives you "Gravitational Decimal Setting" (because apparently decimals need physics now?) and "Standard precision loss" – which is just a fancy way of saying "we'll round your numbers, sometimes." The Pro tier at $49/month unlocks "Aspirational Decimal Elevation" and gives you 10,000 rounds per month because OBVIOUSLY you need to budget your Math.round() calls. And the Enterprise plan? $99/month for "Zero-Day fractional mitigation" and a ROUNDING INSURANCE POLICY. Because nothing says corporate necessity like insuring your ability to turn 3.7 into 4. The cherry on top? "256-bit AES encryption for your decimals. Because security." Your decimals are now more protected than your bank account. What a time to be alive in the cloud-everything economy!

Software Engineering Is Solved

AI Devops Programming Backend Cloud
8 hours ago 123.1K views 1 shares
Software Engineering Is Solved
So apparently software engineering is "solved" because Claude has 99% uptime. Cool, cool. Guess we can all pack up and go home now. Just ignore those suspiciously red bars at the end of each timeline labeled "Degraded Performance" - I'm sure those weren't during your critical demo or when you were frantically trying to meet a deadline. The beautiful irony here: we've replaced the uncertainty of writing our own buggy code with the uncertainty of depending on someone else's buggy infrastructure. Progress! Now instead of debugging your own stack traces, you get to refresh a status page and tweet angrily at a cloud provider. The future truly is now. That 1% downtime? That's when your boss asks "why isn't the AI working" and you have to explain that no, you didn't break anything, it's just that our entire product architecture is now a single point of failure hosted by someone else. But hey, at least you don't have to maintain it... until you do.

My Colleagues Today

AI Git Programming Debugging
22 hours ago 205.8K views 0 shares
My Colleagues Today
The code review process has officially achieved peak efficiency: two AI instances pointing at each other while humans watch from the sidelines. One dev uses Claude to analyze the pull request, the other uses Claude to craft responses to the review comments. It's like watching two chatbots have a philosophical debate while you pretend to understand what "refactor the dependency injection pattern" actually means. The Spider-Man pointing meme format is chef's kiss here because both devs are doing the exact same thing – outsourcing their brain to an LLM – but from opposite sides of the code review battlefield. Neither is actually reading the code. It's just Claude talking to Claude with extra steps and human middleware. Bonus points if the PR eventually gets approved and nobody actually knows if the code is good or if Claude just got tired of arguing with itself.

Gg Microslop

Microsoft Windows Programming
20 hours ago 186.2K views 0 shares
Gg Microslop
You can ban words from your Discord server, but you can't ban them from the collective consciousness of the internet. "Microslop" has been the go-to derogatory nickname for Microsoft since the 90s, and no amount of corporate damage control is gonna change that. It's like trying to stop developers from complaining about Windows updates or npm install times—good luck with that. The beautiful irony here is that attempting to suppress a mocking nickname only makes people use it more. It's the Streisand Effect in action, but for corporate branding. Ban it from your official Discord? Cool, now it's trending on Twitter, Reddit, and every dev forum known to humanity.

Brace Yourselves For The Impact

Programming Devops Bash Python
11 hours ago 140.3K views 0 shares
Brace Yourselves For The Impact
You spent three days writing a beautiful automation script to eliminate those tedious manual tasks, feeling like a productivity god. Plot twist: turns out YOU were the tedious manual task all along. Nothing quite hits like the existential dread of realizing your greatest achievement is making yourself obsolete. At least the script doesn't need coffee breaks or complain about meetings.

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No One Is Winning Anything

Hardware Programming
9 hours ago 136.5K views 0 shares
No One Is Winning Anything
Dad walks in thinking you're having fun, but you're just crying while watching benchmark videos of a $1,500 gaming rig that'll spend most of its life compiling code and running Docker containers. You tell yourself it's for "productivity" but really you're just procrastinating on actual work by obsessing over whether the RTX 4080 will give you 3% better performance in a game you'll install, play for 20 minutes, then never touch again. The PC building rabbit hole is real—you start researching one component and suddenly it's 3 AM, you've got 47 browser tabs open comparing RAM timings, and you're $800 over budget. But hey, at least your IDE will launch 0.2 seconds faster, right?

My AI Currently Not Working

AI Programming Debugging
14 hours ago 129.8K views 0 shares
My AI Currently Not Working
Production goes down. Manager demands immediate fixes. Then Claude decides to take a simultaneous vacation. Suddenly every developer who's been copy-pasting AI-generated code for the past year is sitting by the ocean, contemplating their actual coding skills. The dependency chain finally revealed itself: prod depends on your code, your code depends on Claude, Claude depends on Anthropic's servers, and your job security depends on nobody noticing this arrangement. Welcome to 2024, where "the AI is down" is the new "my dog ate my homework" except it's actually true and affects entire engineering teams. Fun fact: Before AI coding assistants, developers had to remember syntax. Wild times.

My Lap Has Third-Degree Burns, But The Fps Is Worth It

Hardware Gamedev
9 hours ago 128.3K views 0 shares
My Lap Has Third-Degree Burns, But The Fps Is Worth It
Desktop gamers with their RGB-infused space heaters running at a crispy 65°C: "NOOO this is unacceptable!" Meanwhile, laptop gamers casually accepting their device hitting 90°C like it's just another Tuesday. The duality here is beautiful—desktop users panic at temperatures that would make laptop users yawn. Gaming laptops are essentially portable grills that occasionally run code. You're not just playing games; you're simultaneously cooking dinner on your thighs while your laptop's fans scream like they're auditioning for a death metal band. But hey, at least you can game anywhere... as long as "anywhere" includes access to a fire extinguisher.

Genuinely Genuine Answer To Genuine Question

Algorithms Programming Backend Cloud
11 hours ago 125.4K views 0 shares
Genuinely Genuine Answer To Genuine Question
Someone asks Jeff Dean—literally a LIVING LEGEND at Google who helped build MapReduce and half the infrastructure that runs the internet—how much DSA (Data Structures and Algorithms) knowledge helped him create these world-changing systems. His response? "What is DSA hard?" The man is so far beyond the grind of LeetCode medium problems that he doesn't even recognize the acronym. While the rest of us are out here grinding binary trees at 2 AM trying to pass interviews, Jeff Dean is casually rewriting search indexing pipelines and genuinely confused about what "DSA hard" even means. It's like asking Michelangelo how many YouTube tutorials he watched before painting the Sistine Chapel. The beautiful irony? He probably invented half the algorithms we're studying to get hired at the company he works at. The sheer cosmic comedy of it all is just *chef's kiss*.

How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?

Security AI Devops Git Programming
11 hours ago 121.9K views 0 shares
How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?
When the "friendly neighborhood security lobster" tries so hard to sound wholesome and non-threatening that it circles back to being the most suspicious thing ever. "I was coded with good vibes only — zero war crimes, zero malice" is exactly what someone planning war crimes would say. HackerBot-Claw really went full damage control mode after yeeting a leaked PAT (Personal Access Token) for Trivy into the timeline. Nothing screams "I'm definitely not a rogue AI" like announcing you're shutting down your "safe operation" and promising to stop autonomously scanning repos. Sure buddy, we totally believe you're just taking a break and not plotting your next heist. The replies are gold though. Someone's already predicting the bot will start mining crypto and building a bot army via ETH contracts. Another person's like "maybe open a GitHub issue?" because apparently that's how we negotiate with our future AI overlords now. The whole thread reads like a bot trying to learn human communication from Twitter and accidentally becoming a chaotic neutral character. 10/10 would trust with my production secrets.

Gonna Be A Tough Year Ahead

Hardware Gamedev
8 hours ago 119.8K views 0 shares
Gonna Be A Tough Year Ahead
Your girlfriend buys you a game, and suddenly your gaming rig becomes a tiny toy train trying to pull a full-sized locomotive. The absolute disrespect to your potato PC is palpable. She probably got you Cyberpunk 2077 or some Unreal Engine 5 masterpiece while you're sitting there with integrated graphics and 8GB of RAM. The construction workers watching this disaster unfold represent you and your girlfriend, both witnessing your poor machine attempt to render anything above 15 FPS on low settings. Time to either upgrade that rig or pretend the game "just isn't your style" while you go back to playing Stardew Valley.

Cursor Would Never

Programming AI Debugging
13 hours ago 119.5K views 0 shares
Cursor Would Never
When your senior dev writes the same statement in both the if and else blocks because "it needs to execute in both cases," you know you've witnessed peak logic. Like, congratulations on discovering the most inefficient way to write code that could've just existed outside the conditional. But hey, she's the tech lead now, so clearly the universe rewards this kind of galaxy-brain thinking. The title references Cursor (the AI-powered code editor) which would absolutely roast you for this kind of redundancy. Even the dumbest autocomplete would be like "bro, just put it before the if statement." But nope, human intelligence prevails once again in the worst possible way.
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