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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 content that doesn't need a standup meeting to explain

I Am The Administrator Now

Windows Programming Linux
17 hours ago 258.6K views 0 shares
I Am The Administrator Now
Nothing quite matches the rage of being denied permission on your own machine. You're the admin, you set up this system, you literally own the hardware—yet here's Windows telling you that you can't delete a folder. The audacity. The escalation from "please let me delete this" to "I will physically remove you from existence" is a journey every developer has taken. Sometimes sudo isn't just a command—it's a threat. Fun fact: Windows permission errors are often caused by TrustedInstaller owning system files, which means even the admin account needs to take ownership first. Because apparently being the administrator doesn't mean you actually... administrate.

Ten Years Of No Changes

Java Programming
21 hours ago 252.4K views 0 shares
Ten Years Of No Changes
Oracle really said "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" and then just copy-pasted the same marketing slide for an entire DECADE. Like, they didn't even try to pretend they updated something. Same "3 Billion Devices Run Java" tagline, same design, same everything. It's giving "I've been wearing the same outfit for 10 years and nobody noticed" energy. The most stable thing in tech isn't your production server—it's Oracle's commitment to recycling their own promotional materials. Reduce, reuse, recycle, am I right? At least they're environmentally conscious with their PowerPoint presentations.

Copilot Can't Exit Vim

Vim AI Git Bash StackOverflow
19 hours ago 251.5K views 0 shares
Copilot Can't Exit Vim
So the AI that's supposed to replace us all just tried :wq , :wq again, ZZ , q , and then completely spiraled into an existential crisis about terminal IDs and escape sequences. It's trying to set GIT_EDITOR, printf escape codes, and send Ctrl+C via different approaches like it's debugging production at 3 AM. Meanwhile, any developer who's been traumatized by Vim knows you just press :q! or :wq and call it a day. Copilot out here acting like it needs a PhD in terminal emulation to close a text editor. The robot uprising has been postponed indefinitely—they're all stuck in Vim. Fun fact: There are probably more Stack Overflow questions about exiting Vim than there are stars in the observable universe. Copilot just became another statistic.

Enshittiflation

Cloud Devops AWS Azure Gcp
20 hours ago 249.8K views 0 shares
Enshittiflation
The perfect word to describe modern tech in 2024. Your cloud provider just raised prices by 40% while simultaneously removing features you actually used and adding three new AI integrations nobody asked for. Remember when software just... worked? When you bought a license and owned it? When APIs didn't deprecate every six months? When "updates" meant improvements instead of "we removed offline mode and now require an internet connection to open a text file"? The tech industry discovered they can charge you more for less and call it "optimization" or "streamlining the user experience." Your $200/month SaaS subscription now has a worse UI than the $50 version from three years ago, but hey, at least the loading spinner is smoother. It's the circle of tech life: disrupt the market with a cheap, good product → gain monopoly → jack up prices → cut costs → profit. Rinse and repeat until developers are paying $99/month for a code editor that used to be free.

Especially Fun If You Have 100 Other Uncommitted Files On Top And Gotta Work Through The Mess

Gamedev Git Unity Programming Debugging
18 hours ago 245.4K views 0 shares
Especially Fun If You Have 100 Other Uncommitted Files On Top And Gotta Work Through The Mess
You spent SIX HOURS tweaking shaders, refactoring rendering pipelines, and micro-optimizing your game loop like a caffeinated wizard. You're expecting your FPS to skyrocket into the stratosphere, maybe unlock a new dimension of smoothness. But nope! Your frame rate goes from a respectable 60 to a tragic 30, and now you're staring at your screen like a betrayed anime character. The best part? You've got 100 uncommitted files scattered across your codebase like a digital crime scene, so good luck figuring out which specific line of code turned your game into a PowerPoint presentation. Time to git reset --hard and pretend this never happened... except you can't because you never committed anything. Chef's kiss of chaos.

Security Is Sue

Security Devops Git Programming
15 hours ago 232.4K views 0 shares
Security Is Sue
Someone wants to remove an "active development" note from a README because the repo hasn't been touched in 8 years. Reasonable request, right? But wait—the security bot has entered the chat with "concerns." So let me get this straight: the project has been abandoned for nearly a decade, probably running on dependencies older than some junior devs, and NOW the security bot decides to wake up and flag the PR that's literally just updating documentation? Not the 47 critical vulnerabilities in the actual codebase, but the README edit. It's like having a smoke detector that stays silent during a house fire but screams bloody murder when you light a birthday candle. Peak automated security theater right here.

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Threatening To Bench Claude

AI Programming Debugging
3 hours ago 54.8K views 1 shares
Threatening To Bench Claude
When your AI coding assistant starts producing garbage code and you have to give it the motivational speech of its life. The desperation of treating Claude like an underperforming athlete who just needs a pep talk is peak 2024 developer energy. "Listen here, you statistical model, I will switch to ChatGPT so fast your tokens will spin." The funniest part? We're out here coaching language models like they're sentient beings with feelings and career aspirations. Next thing you know we'll be writing performance reviews: "Claude showed great promise in Q1 but has been hallucinating SQL queries lately. Needs improvement."

Fixed Code Broke Career

Programming Agile Debugging
14 hours ago 218.2K views 0 shares
Fixed Code Broke Career
So you decided to be a hero and refactor the entire codebase overnight? Bold move. The manager's reaction is exactly what you'd expect when someone discovers their "stable" legacy code has been completely rewritten at 3 AM by an overzealous developer with too much coffee and confidence. The real kicker here is the final panel—getting sent to "AI Inclusion Training" like it's some corporate punishment chamber. Because apparently, the company's solution to you going rogue and refactoring everything is... mandatory training about being inclusive to AI? The absurdity is chef's kiss. Pro tip: Never touch working code without a detailed plan, extensive testing, and maybe a therapist on standby. That "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" saying exists for a reason, and that reason is keeping your job.

Some Things Never Change

AI Programming Cloud
13 hours ago 209.2K views 0 shares
Some Things Never Change
The developer's eternal struggle has simply evolved with the times. Back in 2015, we'd spend an entire workday trying to automate a 5-minute task because "efficiency." Fast forward to 2026, and we're still avoiding the simple solution—except now we're burning through AI tokens like they're going out of style, racking up $740 in API costs to avoid paying $9/month for a perfectly good SaaS tool. The clown makeup intensifies because at least in 2015 you could claim you were "learning" and "building skills." Now you're just stubbornly prompt-engineering your way into bankruptcy while the solution literally costs less than two coffees. The "DING DING" bicycle bell of poor financial decisions rings loud and clear. Same energy, different decade, exponentially worse ROI.

So Sad...

Hardware Gamedev
12 hours ago 193.4K views 0 shares
So Sad...
Welcome to PC gaming, where your wallet goes to die a slow, painful death. You think you're just upgrading to play games at higher FPS, but you're actually signing up for a subscription service to the hardware industry. RAM prices? Inflated. GPU prices? Astronomical (thanks, crypto miners and scalpers). Storage prices? Well, at least SSDs are cheaper than they used to be, but you'll need 2TB minimum because modern games are 150GB each now. The best part? You'll convince yourself it's a "one-time investment" and then spend the next five years chasing the dragon of 4K 144Hz ultra settings. Your console friends are out there playing games while you're refreshing Newegg at 3 AM waiting for GPU drops.

Is This True??

Gamedev Hardware C++ Programming
11 hours ago 188.9K views 0 shares
Is This True??
Vulkan developers looking at a rainbow triangle like it's a Michelin-star meal because they just spent 2000 lines of boilerplate setting up swap chains, render passes, and pipeline state objects. For context, Vulkan is a low-level graphics API that gives you complete control over the GPU, which means you're responsible for literally everything—memory management, synchronization, validation layers, the works. While other APIs let you draw a triangle in 50 lines, Vulkan makes you earn it by manually configuring things most people didn't know existed. The Carl Sagan quote is perfect here: rendering anything in Vulkan from scratch genuinely feels like you need to bootstrap reality itself first.

Another Windows Zeroday, The Repo Text Is Hilarious

Windows Security Microsoft
7 hours ago 132.7K views 0 shares
Another Windows Zeroday, The Repo Text Is Hilarious
So Windows Defender found a malicious file with a "cloud tag" and thought, "You know what? Let me just restore this bad boy to its original location." Because nothing says security like putting the threat back where you found it. The exploit author couldn't even keep a straight face while writing the PoC—when your antivirus actively helps malware overwrite system files and gain admin privileges, you've transcended from bug to comedy gold. The sarcastic kicker at the end is *chef's kiss*: "I think antimalware products are supposed to remove malicious files not be sure they are there but that's just me." Yeah, just a minor detail in antivirus software design. It's like hiring a bouncer who not only lets the troublemakers in but also gives them the VIP pass and keys to the safe. Microsoft's security team must be having a great day reading this one. Another Tuesday, another zero-day that makes you question if Windows Defender is secretly working for the other side.
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