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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

Memes that don't need a README to be understood

Someone's Not Going To Get A Seat On The Bus..

Hardware Gamedev Programming
13 hours ago 329.6K views 1 shares
Someone's Not Going To Get A Seat On The Bus..
So someone ordered a "gaming chair" online and received what appears to be an actual bus seat with armrests. Not even a nice bus seat—we're talking the kind of public transit seating that's seen things you don't want to know about. The fabric pattern, the industrial gray padding, the utilitarian design... it's literally a seat ripped straight from public transportation. The seller probably thought "well, technically people DO sit on buses while gaming on their phones, so it counts as a gaming chair, right?" Peak marketplace logic. Somewhere out there, a bus is missing seat #47 and a developer is about to experience the worst posture of their debugging career. At least it's probably built to withstand the abuse of thousands of commuters, so it'll definitely survive a few rage quits.

Vibecoder Asked For Last Minute Interview Tips

AI Programming Python
20 hours ago 359.5K views 0 shares
Vibecoder Asked For Last Minute Interview Tips
Someone's out here applying for machine learning positions with "vibecoding" as their primary qualification. You know, that cutting-edge ML technique where you just kinda feel what the model should do instead of actually understanding the math. The OP's response? "Yesssirr" – the sound of someone who's about to walk into an interview and confidently explain how gradient descent is when you slowly walk down a hill. The brutal "Best of luck with the interview!" at the end is chef's kiss. That's not encouragement, that's a eulogy. Somewhere, a hiring manager is about to ask about backpropagation and get an answer about good vibes propagating through the neural network.

The Ultimate Terminal Trap

Linux Hardware Gamedev Windows
23 hours ago 354.1K views 0 shares
The Ultimate Terminal Trap
Valve really played 4D chess here. They marketed the Steam Deck as this revolutionary handheld gaming device for Windows gamers who just want to play their Steam library on the go. Innocent enough, right? Wrong. The thing runs Linux under the hood, and before you know it, you're googling "how to install custom proton versions" and reading Arch Wiki at 2 AM. It's the perfect gateway drug. You start by just playing Elden Ring in bed, then you're SSH-ing into your Deck, tweaking performance settings via command line, and suddenly you're dual-booting your main rig because "maybe Windows really IS bloat." Valve didn't just make a handheld console—they made a sleeper agent that converts gamers into Linux enthusiasts one frame-time optimization at a time.

Reason Behind Premature Exhaustion Of Tokens

AI Webdev Programming Frontend
21 hours ago 348.0K views 0 shares
Reason Behind Premature Exhaustion Of Tokens
Asking Claude Opus to center a div is like using a flamethrower to light a birthday candle. Sure, it'll work, but you just burned through your entire monthly token budget to learn that display: flex; justify-content: center; align-items: center; exists. Nothing says "I have more money than sense" quite like consuming 200K tokens for what amounts to a two-line CSS solution that's been copy-pasted since 2015. Your API bill just screamed in agony while Claude generated a 47-paragraph essay on the philosophical implications of horizontal alignment before finally giving you the answer. Meanwhile, your coworker just Googled it in 3 seconds. But hey, at least you got to feel like you're living in the future while bankrupting yourself over basic frontend tasks.

Bro I Literally Told You This Is Not Good Idea

Programming Webdev Agile Frontend Backend
19 hours ago 341.2K views 0 shares
Bro I Literally Told You This Is Not Good Idea
You know that moment when your client insists on adding seventeen different features that completely contradict each other, and you're sitting there like "bestie, I promise you don't want this," but they're ADAMANT? And then you build exactly what they asked for because they're paying the bills, and suddenly the entire application is stuck in a tree, unable to move forward OR backward, just... existing in a state of pure architectural chaos? Yeah. That's what happens when you let users dictate technical decisions without any pushback. The developer tried to warn them, probably sent a whole essay in Slack about scalability concerns and user experience nightmares, but noooo—they wanted it THEIR way. Now look at this beautiful disaster, dangling precariously between branches of bad decisions and "but the user wanted it!" The app works, technically, but at what cost? AT WHAT COST?!

Watching Me Lose 5 Games In A Row

Hardware Gamedev
21 hours ago 333.6K views 0 shares
Watching Me Lose 5 Games In A Row
Your gaming PC sitting there with its RGB lights and high-end specs, watching you blame everything except your own skill. "It's the lag," you say. "The matchmaking is broken," you insist. Meanwhile, your rig is internally screaming "I have 32GB of RAM and a 4090, maybe it's not the hardware, chief." That cat's expression is exactly what your $3000 machine looks like when you rage quit for the fifth time and start Googling "how to improve aim" instead of just practicing. The PC isn't judging you... it's just concerned about its life choices and wondering if it could've been used for something more productive like training ML models or rendering Blender scenes. At least when your code fails five times in a row, you can blame the compiler.

Let Him Cook

Windows Microsoft Programming
12 hours ago 327.6K views 0 shares
Let Him Cook
You know that moment when a Windows installer says "The wizard will now install your software" and you're like "wait, I didn't configure anything yet"? That's when you realize you're about to speedrun through 47 screens of settings you'll never get to customize. Gandalf here represents every developer who's ever frantically tried to stop an installer mid-flight because they forgot to uncheck "Install McAfee" or change the installation directory from C:\Program Files. The wizard doesn't wait for mere mortals. It installs when it's ready, not when YOU'RE ready. Also love how he's using a MacBook to deal with Windows installer problems. The irony is chef's kiss.

Vintage Metal Sign Morse Code Binary Machine,Text Art Poster Home Wall Decor, Suitable For Walls, Doors, And Fences,Aluminum Printed Plaque 8×12Inch

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Vintage Metal Sign Morse Code Binary Machine,Text Art Poster Home Wall Decor, Suitable For Walls, Doors, And Fences,Aluminum Printed Plaque 8×12Inch
Crafted from high-quality aluminum, this metal sign is rust-proof, weather-resistant, and built to last. It withstands rain, sun, and humidity, making it perfect for both indoor decor (like living ro…

Trust Me Its Mine

AI Git Programming
13 hours ago 325.8K views 0 shares
Trust Me Its Mine
When you're pair programming with an AI assistant and suddenly realize you need to claim credit for the code it just wrote. Nothing screams "totally my original work" like asking Claude to commit without attribution. The git history will just show your name, your commit message, your glory – while Claude sits there like an uncredited ghostwriter. It's the digital equivalent of copying your friend's homework but changing the font. Pro tip: at least use git commit --author="Claude <[email protected]>" if you want to keep your karma intact. But hey, who needs ethics when you've got that sweet, sweet green contribution graph to maintain?

Tmux My Beloved

Linux Devops Bash Programming
10 hours ago 286.5K views 0 shares
Tmux My Beloved
You know you've ascended to a higher plane of existence when your terminal workflow goes from chaotic screaming to serene elegance. Before tmux, you're juggling 47 terminal windows, accidentally closing the one running your production deploy, and generally living in a state of panic. After tmux? You're splitting panes like a zen master, detaching sessions like you're Neo dodging bullets, and smugly watching your SSH connection drop while your processes keep running in the background. The transformation from terminal peasant to terminal aristocrat is real. You go from "wait which window was that in" to casually prefix-c'ing new windows while maintaining perfect composure. Your coworkers still using multiple terminal tabs? They wouldn't understand this level of enlightenment.

Just Read The F***ing Docs

Programming StackOverflow Debugging
10 hours ago 275.5K views 0 shares
Just Read The F***ing Docs
Oh, the beautiful journey from arrogant newbie to humble documentation reader! You start out thinking you're some kind of code whisperer who can just *divine* how everything works by staring at it intensely enough. "Docs are for stupid people," you declare with the confidence of someone who's never encountered a poorly-named function with 47 optional parameters. But then reality hits like a truck made of cryptic error messages, and suddenly you're on both sides of the bell curve, reluctantly admitting that yes, the docs are confusing, yes, they're written like they were translated through five languages by someone who hates you personally, but YES, you absolutely have to read them anyway because the alternative is spending six hours debugging something that's literally explained in paragraph three. The real kicker? Both the enlightened souls on the edges of the curve are suffering equally, just with different levels of self-awareness about their suffering. Welcome to programming, where RTFM isn't advice—it's a lifestyle.

Disable Mouse Click

Windows Microsoft Programming
9 hours ago 263.6K views 0 shares
Disable Mouse Click
You know your UI design is absolutely galaxy-brained when you need to use your mouse to click a checkbox that disables... mouse clicking. It's like putting the fire extinguisher inside the burning room and locking the door. The Windows 98 devs really sat in a meeting, looked at this dialog, and said "Ship it!" Nobody questioned the paradox. Nobody suggested maybe using a keyboard shortcut. They just went straight to lunch and left us with this beautiful monument to circular logic. It's the software equivalent of "Press any key to continue" when your keyboard is unplugged. Chef's kiss to the UX team on that one.

Every Year This Tweet Becomes More And More Real

AI Programming
16 hours ago 254.1K views 0 shares
Every Year This Tweet Becomes More And More Real
Turns out the real programming language was the documentation we read along the way. With AI code generation, low-code platforms, and frameworks so abstracted you're basically writing YAML configs, we've come full circle to just... describing what we want in plain English. Why learn Rust's borrow checker when you can just politely ask ChatGPT to fix your memory leaks? The industry's gone from "learn to code" to "learn to prompt engineer" faster than you can say "npm install." 11.4M views because everyone knows it's true but nobody wants to admit their job is becoming increasingly indistinguishable from talking to a very pedantic rubber duck.
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