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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 tech startups burning through VC funding

Make No Mistakes

AI Agile Programming
12 hours ago 452.6K views 1 shares
Make No Mistakes
When your CEO thinks "move fast and break things" means literally breaking things. Skipping user research to slap AI on everything is the corporate equivalent of using duct tape to fix a structural engineering problem. Sure, you shipped fast, but now your users are drinking from a mug that looks like it had a fight with a pottery wheel and lost spectacularly. The best part? Someone actually used this abomination. That's the real product-market fit right there – when your users are so committed they'll risk third-degree burns just to validate your MVP. Who needs UX testing when you have this level of dedication? Pro tip: AI can generate code, write documentation, and even debug your spaghetti logic. But it can't tell you that nobody wants a coffee mug that doubles as modern art gone wrong. That's what user research is for, folks.

Cp Prod Prod 2

Devops Git Programming Backend
9 hours ago 408.8K views 1 shares
Cp Prod Prod 2
Homer Simpson dropping deployment wisdom on the kids: there's the right way (CI/CD pipelines, staging environments, proper testing), the wrong way (pushing untested code to production), and the Agentic way (copying production to production... twice). Bart's got a point though—isn't copying prod to prod just the wrong way? But Homer's got that senior dev energy: "Yeah, but FASTER!" Because nothing says efficiency like skipping all the steps and just yeeting files around in production. No rollback strategy, no version control, just pure adrenaline and the confidence of someone who's never been personally responsible for a 2 AM outage. The title "Cp Prod Prod 2" is *chef's kiss*—literally the command that makes DevOps engineers cry into their monitoring dashboards. It's the deployment equivalent of "it works on my machine" energy, except now it's "it works on prod 1, so let's just copy it to prod 2."

Great Question Yes Looks Like You're Cooked

Cloud Devops AWS Programming Backend
18 hours ago 385.3K views 1 shares
Great Question Yes Looks Like You're Cooked
You know that feeling when AWS sends you a 47-page email about "minor adjustments" to their pricing structure and you're just there nodding along like you understand what "egress data transfer costs in multi-region VPC peering scenarios" means? Yeah, we all just skim the bullet points, pretend we read it, and hope our credit card doesn't get declined next month. The real skill isn't understanding the pricing changes—it's maintaining that confident smile while having absolutely zero idea if your side project is about to cost you $5 or $5000. We're all just vibing until the bill hits, then we'll panic-optimize our Lambda functions at 2 AM. Pro tip: If you actually read those emails in detail, you're either a CTO, a masochist, or both.

Is Anyone Out There?

Git Webdev Gamedev Programming
15 hours ago 358.4K views 1 shares
Is Anyone Out There?
You know that feeling when you push a side project to GitHub with all the pride of a parent at a school recital, thinking "Finally! The world will see my genius!" Then you check back after 12 hours... 1 upvote, 0 comments. Maybe they just need more time to appreciate it? Fast forward to day one and the tears are flowing harder than a memory leak in production. Zero engagement, zero stars, zero acknowledgment of your existence. Your beautifully crafted spy game sits there in the void, screaming into the digital abyss while tumbleweeds roll through your repo. The cruel reality: most side projects get less attention than a deprecated jQuery plugin. But hey, at least your mom would star it if she knew what GitHub was.

Visualising Air-Flow With Cat Hair

Hardware Physics
11 hours ago 452.3K views 0 shares
Visualising Air-Flow With Cat Hair
When your PC case's mesh filter becomes an unintentional computational fluid dynamics visualization tool. The cat hair has perfectly mapped out the intake airflow pattern, creating what looks like streamlines you'd see in a CFD simulation. It's basically free thermal analysis – you can literally see where your cooling is working and where it's not. Your GPU is probably thermal throttling while simultaneously conducting groundbreaking research in particle flow dynamics. Who needs fancy RGB fans when you've got organic fiber-based airflow indicators? Just tell people you're running real-time physics simulations on particulate matter distribution. The dust filter is doing exactly what it's supposed to do... it's just also creating modern art in the process.

Apple Mac Mini, 1.4GHz Intel Core i5 Dual Core (MGEM2LL/A), 4GB RAM, 256GB Solid State Drive, MacOS 10.12 Sierra (Renewed)

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Apple Mac Mini, 1.4GHz Intel Core i5 Dual Core (MGEM2LL/A), 4GB RAM, 256GB Solid State Drive, MacOS 10.12 Sierra (Renewed)

Copilot Knows How To Deal With Constructors

AI C++ Programming
9 hours ago 426.1K views 0 shares
Copilot Knows How To Deal With Constructors
When your AI coding assistant has had ENOUGH of your constructor nonsense and just decides to nuke the entire program instead. The comment says it all: "I don't want to write this constructor, so I'm just gonna abort the program if it's called." Truly the most galaxy-brain solution to avoiding boilerplate code—if the constructor runs, the whole app dies. Problem solved! No constructor execution, no problem. It's like setting your house on fire to avoid doing the dishes. Copilot really said "write a destructor? Nah fam, I'll just destruct the ENTIRE APPLICATION."

Oh No The Consequences Of My Actions

AI Git Programming Debugging Backend
5 hours ago 232.5K views 1 shares
Oh No The Consequences Of My Actions
Six months of letting an AI copilot write your entire codebase while you vibe? Sure, the app works and money's flowing, but now you've got a Lovecraftian horror of spaghetti code where touching one function summons bugs from another dimension. The new dev took one look at the repo, went silent, and basically had an existential crisis in two minutes flat. The best part? Every feature shipped perfectly, but the code has three different implementations of the same thing scattered across the codebase like Easter eggs nobody wanted. Tried refactoring for two hours and gave up because the whole thing is held together by duct tape and prayers—change one line and something completely unrelated explodes. Now they're facing the ultimate developer dilemma: spend months untangling this AI-generated nightmare or just burn it all down and start fresh. Spoiler alert: the rewrite is probably happening.

Every God Damn Time....

Debugging Programming StackOverflow
8 hours ago 390.8K views 0 shares
Every God Damn Time....
You finally encounter that obscure bug that's been haunting you for hours. Google leads you to a Reddit thread from 2014 where someone had the EXACT same issue. Your heart races. The thread has 47 upvotes. Someone replied. You click. [deleted] The answer? Also [deleted]. The user? You guessed it—[deleted]. It's like finding a treasure map where X marks the spot, but someone burned the part of the map that shows where X actually is. Thanks for nothing, [deleted]. Hope you're living your best life while the rest of us suffer in silence.

She Should Have Asked The Devs First

Webdev Security Programming Frontend Backend
14 hours ago 389.2K views 0 shares
She Should Have Asked The Devs First
Tech journalist writes a whole article about privacy concerns with Google Sign-In, warning people not to "put all their eggs in one basket." Meanwhile, the website she's writing for literally has a big fat "Sign up with Google" button staring everyone in the face. The irony is chef's kiss level. Someone in editorial approved an article about avoiding Google authentication while their own dev team implemented OAuth with Google as probably the primary sign-up method. It's like writing "10 Reasons to Quit Coffee" for a Starbucks blog. Pretty sure the devs are somewhere laughing at the Slack notification about this article going live, knowing full well they just merged a PR last week to make the Google sign-in button even bigger.

Don't Pay For AI, Frame Your Questions Like You Want Maccas

AI Algorithms Programming Python Debugging
21 hours ago 387.4K views 0 shares
Don't Pay For AI, Frame Your Questions Like You Want Maccas
Someone just discovered the ultimate life hack: McDonald's support chat is basically free Claude. Just casually mention you need help ordering McNuggets but first you gotta solve this pesky linked list reversal problem. The bot doesn't even flinch—delivers a complete Python solution with O(n) time complexity analysis and then politely asks if you'd like fries with that. The best part? It stays in character the whole time, ready to take your order after debugging your code. Why pay for ChatGPT Plus when you can get algorithm help AND potentially a Big Mac? Customer support bots weren't designed for this, but they're handling it better than most Stack Overflow users. Pretty sure this violates some terms of service somewhere, but the bot seems genuinely happy to help. McDonald's accidentally created the most wholesome coding assistant on the internet.

Worlds Smartest Vibe Coder

Webdev AI Networking Programming Frontend
19 hours ago 381.5K views 0 shares
Worlds Smartest Vibe Coder
Someone just asked an AI chatbot to build their entire project with one crucial requirement: make it accessible via localhost:3000 so their professor can check it out. Because nothing screams "I understand web development" quite like assuming your professor will SSH into your machine or magically have access to your local dev environment. Plot twist: localhost is called local host for a reason—it only exists on YOUR machine. The professor would need to either physically use your computer, have you deploy it somewhere actually accessible, or receive a zip file and run it themselves. But hey, points for specifying the port number with such confidence! Peak vibe coding energy: when you're so focused on getting the AI to do the work that you forget how the internet actually works.

CalDigit TS5 Thunderbolt 5 Dock - 15 Port, 140W Charging, 80Gb/s TBT 5 x 4, USB-C 10Gb x 3, USB-A x2, 2.5Gb Ethernet, Dual 8K@60Hz Displays, SD & microSD UHS-II, 1m Braided Cable, Space Gray 240W PSU

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CalDigit
CalDigit TS5 Thunderbolt 5 Dock - 15 Port, 140W Charging, 80Gb/s TBT 5 x 4, USB-C 10Gb x 3, USB-A x2, 2.5Gb Ethernet, Dual 8K@60Hz Displays, SD & microSD UHS-II, 1m Braided Cable, Space Gray 240W PSU
15 Ports of Connectivity - The TS5 includes 1x Host and 3x downstream 80Gb/s Thunderbolt 5 / USB4 V2 ports, 1x USB-A Gen 2 10Gb/s port, 1x USB-A 480Mb/s port, 3x USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 10Gb/s ports, Display…

Guess I'll Rerun The Slurm Script Again

Devops Programming Linux Debugging Backend
8 hours ago 373.9K views 0 shares
Guess I'll Rerun The Slurm Script Again
You've got 10 jobs to run, 9 perfectly good nodes ready to go, and somehow Job 4 decides to play Russian roulette with the one bad node that hasn't been discovered yet. Because of course it does. The scheduler's job assignment algorithm is basically throwing darts blindfolded at a dartboard where one dart is secretly a grenade. The beauty of cluster computing: you have all these resources, but Murphy's Law ensures your critical job will land on the node with the faulty RAM stick that nobody's bothered to report yet. So you wait 6 hours for your job to fail, resubmit it, and pray to the HPC gods that this time it gets assigned to literally any other node. Rinse and repeat until your PhD defense date. Fun fact: Slurm stands for "Simple Linux Utility for Resource Management," which is ironic because there's nothing simple about debugging why your job keeps failing on node-042.
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