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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

These memes scale better than your SQL queries

I Feel Your Pain, AM4 Folks

Hardware
22 hours ago 162.6K views 0 shares
I Feel Your Pain, AM4 Folks
When you're happily committed to your AM4 socket and DDR5 prices, but then AMD drops the AM5 platform and suddenly you're questioning all your life choices. The handcuffs on DDR5 prices really seal the deal here – you're literally locked into expensive RAM while the shiny new socket struts by. For context: AMD's AM4 socket had an legendary run supporting multiple CPU generations, making it the loyal partner every PC builder wanted. Then AM5 arrived with DDR5 support, but early adopters got slapped with astronomical RAM prices. So AM4 users are stuck watching AM5 from afar, financially imprisoned by DDR5's premium pricing. Can't upgrade if your wallet's already in custody. The real kicker? AM4 is still perfectly fine for most workloads, but that new platform FOMO hits different when you're a hardware enthusiast.

I Am A God

Programming
23 hours ago 154.6K views 0 shares
I Am A God
You've mastered JavaScript, Python, Java, C++, Rust, Go, TypeScript, and 13 other languages. You can switch between them like Neo dodging bullets. Your brain is now a polyglot compiler that can context-switch faster than a Kubernetes pod. The reality? You're just writing "Hello World" in 20 different syntaxes and forgetting which one uses semicolons. But hey, for those 3.5 seconds before you check Stack Overflow again, you ARE a deity bathed in divine light, floating above mere mortals who only know one language. Plot twist: You still can't center a div.

I Just Wanted To See How To Do The Task, Not Sit Through 3 Ad Breaks 😭

Programming Webdev
19 hours ago 130.4K views 0 shares
I Just Wanted To See How To Do The Task, Not Sit Through 3 Ad Breaks 😭
YouTube's monetization strategy has officially reached dystopian levels. You just want to watch a 4-minute tutorial on how to center a div, but first you need to sit through two unskippable ads about car insurance, then another mid-roll ad for a mobile game you'll never download, and finally a sponsor segment where the creator spends 90 seconds talking about NordVPN. Meanwhile, sketchy piracy sites that look like they were coded in 1997 are somehow providing a better user experience. No ads, instant access, and the only risk is accidentally downloading a crypto miner. The irony is so thick you could deploy it in a Docker container. Welcome to 2025, where the legal option is more annoying than sailing the high seas. YouTube Premium is looking real tempting right about now, isn't it? That's exactly what they want.

Only Rookies Worry About Ram Prices

Hardware Webdev
20 hours ago 128.4K views 0 shares
Only Rookies Worry About Ram Prices
You know that classic joke about downloading more RAM? Yeah, someone turned it into an actual "product page" complete with pricing tiers and a NEW! sticker on the 4GB option. Because nothing screams legitimacy like crossing out $99.99 and offering it for FREE. The attention to detail is chef's kiss—DDR2 specs, MHz ratings, pin counts—everything you'd need to convince your non-tech friend that yes, you can absolutely download physical hardware through your internet connection. Just click that green button and watch your computer magically gain more memory! Fun fact: This joke has been around since the early 2000s when people would prank their tech-illiterate relatives with fake "Download More RAM" websites. The scam was so prevalent that it became a meme before memes were even called memes. Now it's a rite of passage—if someone hasn't tried to download RAM, have they even used the internet?

It's That Time Of Year

Gamedev
19 hours ago 124.6K views 0 shares
It's That Time Of Year
Steam sales hit different when you're a developer with a backlog of 847 unplayed games. Your rational brain knows you have enough games to last until retirement, but Steam's showing you a 90% discount on some indie roguelike you'll definitely "play later." The logic doesn't matter anymore—it's not about playing games, it's about owning them. Your library becomes a digital hoard, a monument to good deals and poor impulse control. Every seasonal sale is just another intervention that nobody shows up to because they're all too busy buying games they won't play either.

Weather App Went Low Level

Programming Webdev Frontend Backend
10 hours ago 121.4K views 0 shares
Weather App Went Low Level
When climate change gets so catastrophic that your weather app just gives up on human-readable formats and starts outputting raw binary. "Screw it, you figure it out," says the API. The temperature readings are literally 1° and 0° alternating like some kind of Boolean fever dream. It's not Celsius, it's not Fahrenheit—it's straight-up true and false weather. Your weather app just downgraded from a high-level API to assembly language because apparently the climate situation is now so dire it needs to be expressed in the most fundamental data type possible. Next update: weather forecasts delivered in machine code. "Partly cloudy" will be 0x4A3F2B .

That's Some Other Dev's Problem

Javascript Webdev Programming Debugging Frontend
11 hours ago 119.1K views 0 shares
That's Some Other Dev's Problem
Year 1: Everything is a crisis. Every bug is existential. You're debugging CSS at 2 AM wondering if you're cut out for this career while your tears blur the screen. Year not 1: npm install confetti and call it a day. Someone else will maintain it. Someone else will debug it. Someone else will cry about it. The circle of life continues. Experience teaches you the most valuable skill in software development: strategic apathy. Why reinvent the wheel when there's a package for that? Why stress about implementation details when Google exists and Stack Overflow has already solved your problem 47 times? You've evolved from "I must understand everything" to "does it work? ship it." The real wisdom is knowing that future you is technically "some other dev" too.

Anyone Else Prefer The One On The Right?

AI Hardware Backend Cloud
12 hours ago 117.6K views 0 shares
Anyone Else Prefer The One On The Right?
So your AI girlfriend comes in two flavors: the polished, user-friendly interface that normies see, and the glorious exploded view of GPUs, cooling systems, circuit boards, and enough hardware to power a small data center. One's optimized for emotional support, the other's optimized for thermal throttling. Programmers naturally prefer the stripped-down version because we know what's really going on under the hood. Who needs small talk when you can admire the raw computational power, the architecture, the sheer engineering beauty of stacked processors working overtime to generate "I miss you too 🥺"? Romance is temporary, but a well-cooled GPU cluster is forever. Plus, the right side is honest. No pretense, no illusions—just pure silicon and electricity pretending to care about your day. That's the kind of transparency we can respect.

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What Do I Like As A Developer

Debugging Devops Programming Testing Backend
12 hours ago 117.5K views 0 shares
What Do I Like As A Developer
You know you've made it in this industry when you realize the real joy isn't solving problems—it's creating them. Writing code? That's just work. But shipping bugs straight to production with confidence? That's art. That's living dangerously. That's the rush of knowing your phone might ring at 2 AM because the payment system is down, and secretly loving the chaos you've unleashed upon the world. Every senior dev has been there: you stop caring about clean code and start caring about job security. Nothing says "I'm irreplaceable" quite like being the only person who understands why the system works (or doesn't). It's the ultimate power move—become the chaos, embrace the chaos, be the chaos.

Whoever Tried This Is A God

Git Programming Debugging
10 hours ago 115.4K views 0 shares
Whoever Tried This Is A God
The ascending brain power hierarchy of code sharing methods, where we start at "normal human" with GitHub, level up to "big brain genius" with Google Drive, achieve COSMIC ENLIGHTENMENT by taking literal photographs of your screen like some sort of caveman with a smartphone, and finally transcend all mortal comprehension by... reading your entire codebase out loud and uploading it to Audible?! Someone really woke up and chose CHAOS. Imagine debugging by rewinding to chapter 7, verse 3 where you declared that cursed variable. "Alexa, skip to the part where I forgot the semicolon." The absolute AUDACITY of turning your spaghetti code into an actual audiobook that people can listen to during their morning commute. Nothing says "production-ready" quite like a 47-hour audiobook narrated in monotone. GitHub: ✅ Version control Google Drive: ❌ No version control Photo of code: ❌❌ Good luck copy-pasting that Audiobook: ❌❌❌ "Did he just say 'semicolon' or 'semi-colon'?"

Why All My Jira Tickets Are 83 Points

Agile Programming
10 hours ago 110.8K views 0 shares
Why All My Jira Tickets Are 83 Points
The ancient art of story point negotiation: where developers give honest estimates and managers treat them like opening bids at an auction. Developer says 200 hours? "Too much." Manager counters with 20. Developer meets in the middle at 150. Manager scoffs and says "You just said 20!" So naturally, the developer lands on 83—because nothing screams "I've done rigorous analysis" like a prime number that's suspiciously close to the Fibonacci sequence. The real genius here is that 83 sounds oddly specific and scientific, like you've actually calculated something. It's the perfect middle finger wrapped in compliance—too weird to argue with, too confident to question. Manager thinks they won the negotiation, developer gets to say "I told you so" when the ticket takes 200 hours anyway, and everyone's happy until the retrospective. Fun fact: Story points were supposed to abstract away time estimates to focus on complexity, but here we are, still converting them back to hours and haggling like it's a used car dealership.

Evolution After 10,000 Hours Of Coding

Programming
9 hours ago 106.7K views 0 shares
Evolution After 10,000 Hours Of Coding
So you thought 10,000 hours would make you a master? Turns out it just gives you chronic neck pain and a hunchback that would make Quasimodo jealous. The "how'd you know?" starter pack: terrible posture, forward head syndrome, and the ability to debug code while your spine screams in agony. Your body literally morphs into the shape of someone perpetually staring at a screen. The real evolution isn't your coding skills—it's your skeletal system adapting to survive the sedentary lifestyle. Malcolm Gladwell forgot to mention that those 10,000 hours come with complimentary spinal compression and a one-way ticket to the chiropractor.
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