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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 memes that don't need to be rewritten in Rust for performance

I Am Not Ready For This!!

Programming Databases Backend
21 hours ago 261.6K views 0 shares
I Am Not Ready For This!!
When you're fresh out of bootcamp learning React and TypeScript, then someone casually mentions COBOL and you're like "what's that?" only to watch senior devs collectively lose their minds. For context: COBOL (Common Business-Oriented Language) was created in 1959 and is still running critical banking systems, insurance companies, and government infrastructure worldwide. We're talking billions of transactions daily on code older than your parents. The problem? Nobody wants to learn it, everyone who knows it is retiring, and banks are desperately clinging to these systems because rewriting them would be like performing open-heart surgery on a patient running a marathon. New programmers see it as ancient history that should be extinct. Banks see it as the immovable foundation of global finance that cannot be destroyed without triggering financial apocalypse. The cognitive dissonance is *chef's kiss*. Fun fact: There are an estimated 220 billion lines of COBOL still in production today. That's roughly 43% of all banking systems. Sleep tight! 💀

Rapid Prototyping With AI

AI Webdev Programming Debugging Frontend
18 hours ago 259.2K views 0 shares
Rapid Prototyping With AI
When you tell the client your AI-powered prototype is "almost done," they see a beautiful Old West town ready for action. Meanwhile, you're looking at a construction site held together by scaffolding, duct tape, and prayers to the TypeScript gods. Sure, the facade looks impressive from the street view, but behind the scenes? It's all exposed beams, missing walls, and architectural decisions that would make any code reviewer weep. That's AI-generated code for you—looks production-ready in the demo, but the moment you peek under the hood, you realize you're basically debugging a half-finished movie set. At least it compiles... sometimes.

What's Stopping You Coding Like This

Windows Bash Microsoft Programming Backend
21 hours ago 258.3K views 0 shares
What's Stopping You Coding Like This
Someone out here really writing PowerShell scripts on their PHONE like they're texting their crush at 2 AM. Imagine debugging nested objects and piping commands to CSV exports while your thumbs are cramping and autocorrect is trying to turn "Sort-Object" into "Sorry Object." The sheer audacity! The dedication! The absolute CHAOS of trying to navigate curly braces on a mobile keyboard! What's stopping you? Oh I don't know, maybe the fact that I enjoy having functional wrists and a will to live? Some people really woke up and chose violence against their own productivity. Respect the hustle though—this person is out here exporting USB disk reports while waiting in line at Starbucks.

Claude Code Is The Clear Winner Here

AI Webdev Programming Frontend
19 hours ago 255.1K views 0 shares
Claude Code Is The Clear Winner Here
Someone with zero coding knowledge just had Claude build them a fully functional web app in minutes. The first comment? "You completely copied my site. You will be hearing from my lawyers." Turns out AI code generation is so good now that it independently recreates the same generic CRUD app everyone else has already built. When your localhost:3000 looks identical to someone else's localhost:3000, you know the training data was... thorough. The real winner here isn't Claude though—it's the lawyers who are about to discover a whole new revenue stream: AI-generated copyright disputes over todo apps that look suspiciously similar to every other todo app on GitHub.

Reality Of Choosing An OS

Linux MacOS Apple Microsoft Windows
23 hours ago 233.6K views 0 shares
Reality Of Choosing An OS
A flowchart that cuts deeper than a segmentation fault! It starts with the innocent question "What OS should you use?" and immediately spirals into existential territory with "do you hate yourself?" If you answer YES, congratulations! You get to pick your poison: Windows (blue screen of death awaits), Linux (terminal commands for breakfast), or macOS (your wallet is crying). But if you answer NO? Well, the only logical solution is to burn your computer because apparently there's no escape from the suffering that is operating systems. The brutal honesty here is *chef's kiss* – every OS comes with its own unique brand of torture, so you might as well embrace the pain or just set everything on fire. There is no winning, only different flavors of defeat!

Find Your Place

Programming Hardware Csharp C++ Java
15 hours ago 229.0K views 0 shares
Find Your Place
The hard truth that keeps memory-conscious developers up at night. A boolean only needs 1 bit to represent true or false, but because most systems can't address individual bits, it gets allocated a whole byte. That's 87.5% storage efficiency loss, which is basically the computing equivalent of buying a mansion to store a single shoe. Some languages try to optimize this with bit fields or packed structures, but let's be real—most of the time we're just casually wasting 7 bits per boolean like we're made of RAM. Which, to be fair, we kind of are these days. Storage is cheap, existential dread about inefficiency is free. The real tragedy? Those 7 bits could've been living their best life storing actual data, but instead they're just... there. Unemployed. Collecting dust. A monument to the gap between theoretical computer science and practical implementation.

They Were Correct Though

Windows Microsoft Linux
15 hours ago 226.5K views 0 shares
They Were Correct Though
Microsoft really thought Windows 10 would be the final boss of operating systems, the ultimate form, the endgame. They confidently declared it would be the last Windows version ever, adopting a "Windows as a Service" model. Spoiler alert: Windows 11 exists now. But here's the kicker—they weren't technically wrong. Most of us are still clinging to Windows 10 like it's a life raft, while Windows 11 floats by with its centered taskbar and unnecessary system requirements. Meanwhile, Linux users are just vibing in the corner, watching the whole drama unfold with smug satisfaction. Sure, Windows 10 might not be the last Windows, but for many of us, it might as well be.

Impossible

Programming C++ Java Debugging
14 hours ago 220.9K views 0 shares
Impossible
That moment when your code compiles on the first try and you just sit there in disbelief, questioning everything you know about the universe. Like Thanos seeing something that defies all logic, you're convinced there's a hidden bug lurking somewhere. No warnings, no errors, just pure success? Yeah right. You'll spend the next 30 minutes running it over and over, checking logs, adding debug statements, because deep down you know the compiler is just messing with you. First-try compilation success is basically a myth, like unicorns or developers who actually read documentation.

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Documentation Is More Complex Than Tutorials

Programming
13 hours ago 212.5K views 0 shares
Documentation Is More Complex Than Tutorials
When someone tells you to "just read the docs," they're assuming documentation is like a nice tutorial with step-by-step instructions. Reality check: documentation is written by engineers who've already mastered the thing and assume you know what a "monad" is without explanation. The LEGO analogy nails it. You want to attach a simple 1x4 brick to your project. The documentation? It's showing you how that brick can theoretically connect to seventeen different surfaces at impossible angles, none of which are the straightforward "just put it on top" approach you actually need. Bonus points when the docs explain every edge case except the one basic use case that 99% of users need. Thanks, I really needed to know about the deprecated parameter from version 2.3 before learning how to initialize the library.

True Random

Security Hardware Algorithms Programming Backend
9 hours ago 155.7K views 0 shares
True Random
When someone asks for a random number generator and you show up with a wall of lava lamps. Because apparently, the chaotic movement of blobs in lava lamps is more trustworthy than your computer's pseudo-random number generator. Fun fact: Cloudflare actually uses a wall of lava lamps (called LavaRand) to generate truly random numbers for cryptographic keys. They photograph the lamps and use the unpredictable patterns as entropy. It's one of those rare moments where the ridiculous solution is actually the correct one. Meanwhile, your average developer is still using Math.random() and calling it a day. The skeptical look in the last panel? That's every security engineer when you tell them your RNG is "good enough."

It's Not A 'Gaming Laptop,' It's A 'High-Performance Portable Workstation'

Hardware Programming
6 hours ago 119.7K views 0 shares
It's Not A 'Gaming Laptop,' It's A 'High-Performance Portable Workstation'
Nothing says "business necessity" quite like justifying an RTX 4090 and 64GB of RAM for checking Outlook and occasionally firing up Corel Draw. The accountant's face says it all—she's seen this exact pitch three times this quarter, and she knows full well that "mission critical" translates to "I need to maintain a 240fps competitive edge in Valorant during lunch breaks." The beauty of this expense report is the technical specificity. Nobody questions the RAM requirements when you throw around professional software names. Sure, Corel Draw could run on a potato from 2015, but try explaining that your current laptop can't handle the "complex rendering workflows" without breaking a sweat. The RGB lighting? That's for better visibility in low-light office conditions, obviously. Pro tip: Always mention "Docker containers" and "virtual machines" in your justification. Works every time. Well, almost every time.

Superiority

Algorithms Programming
6 hours ago 112.8K views 0 shares
Superiority
When you discover that finding the top K frequent elements can be done in O(n) time using bucket sort or quickselect, and suddenly you're looking down on everyone still using heaps like it's 2010. The party guy in the corner just learned about the O(n log n) heap solution and thinks he's clever, while you're out here flexing your knowledge of linear time algorithms like you just unlocked a secret level in LeetCode. For context: Most people solve this problem with a min-heap (priority queue), which gives O(n log k) complexity. But the galaxy brain move is using bucket sort since frequencies are bounded by n, giving you that sweet O(n) linear time. It's the difference between being invited to the party and owning the party.
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