Logo
Floppy disks: The save icon's origin story.
  • Home
  • Hot
  • Random
  • Search

Browse

  • AI AI
  • AWS AWS
  • Agile Agile
  • Algorithms Algorithms
  • Android Android
  • Apple Apple
  • Backend Backend
  • Bash Bash
  • C++ C++
  • Cloud Cloud
  • Csharp Csharp
  • All Categories

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 to be explained with a whiteboard diagram

Real Struggle 😔

Programming
22 hours ago 224.7K views 0 shares
Real Struggle 😔
Nothing hits harder than watching your non-technical manager fumble through the browser's print dialog for 10 minutes while you sit there knowing Ctrl+P exists. The real kicker? They're probably in a meeting about "digital transformation" right after this. Meanwhile, you're over here automating entire workflows with Python scripts you wrote during lunch, but sure, let's all celebrate Karen finally figuring out how to click "Save as PDF" from the dropdown menu. The salary gap is real, folks—inversely proportional to technical competence since forever.

Every Week

Programming Devops Debugging
18 hours ago 209.4K views 0 shares
Every Week
That Monday feeling when you walk back into the office and immediately need a status report on what fresh hell your codebase has become over the weekend. Did the CI/CD pipeline break itself again? Did someone merge to main at 5 PM Friday? Are there 47 Slack messages about prod being down? Captain Picard gets it—you sit down, assume command position, and demand a full damage assessment before you even touch that keyboard. The weekend was peaceful. Your code was working. Now it's Monday and you're about to discover which microservice decided to have an existential crisis while you were gone.

No Offense But

Hardware Programming
18 hours ago 208.0K views 0 shares
No Offense But
So apparently your IQ is directly proportional to the number of monitors you own, and I'm here for this TOTALLY scientific chart. Single monitor peasants are chilling at 70 IQ, dual monitor users are flexing at 85 with their "balanced" setup, but BEHOLD the galaxy brain with 6+ monitors scoring a cool 100 IQ! But wait—there's a twist in this dramatic saga! The 34% of people rocking the gritted-teeth meme face? They're the dual monitor warriors DESPERATELY defending their setup choice. Meanwhile, the ultra-rare 0.1% with single monitors and the 0.1% with ALL THE MONITORS are just vibing in their respective dimensions, completely unbothered by this chaos. The real kicker? We ALL know that guy with the NASA mission control setup is just using 5 of those screens to display Stack Overflow tabs while one monitor actually does the work. But hey, at least they LOOK smart, right? 💀

Software Companies Made Their Own Bed

AI Programming
19 hours ago 202.6K views 0 shares
Software Companies Made Their Own Bed
Nothing says "strategic planning" quite like telling the world your entire workforce is replaceable by AI, then acting shocked when investors realize they don't need to pay top dollar for engineers anymore. Companies spent years hyping up how their AI models would automate coding, convinced VCs to throw money at them, and now they're surprised the market's like "wait, if AI can do it, why are we funding expensive dev teams?" It's the corporate equivalent of shooting yourself in the foot while riding a bike. You spent all that time convincing everyone that programming is easy and anyone can do it with AI assistance, and now your stock price reflects that belief. Turns out when you commoditize your own industry for marketing points, the market takes you seriously. Who could've seen that coming?

House Stable Version

Linux Security Devops Bash Programming
16 hours ago 177.5K views 0 shares
House Stable Version
Setting the house to read-only mode after cleaning is the most relatable version control strategy I've seen. Just like that production server you're too scared to touch, the house has reached its stable state and any modifications are strictly forbidden. The reply takes it to another level: someone ran chmod 600 on the toilet. For the uninitiated, that's Linux file permissions that make something readable and writable only by the owner—except now it's a toilet that won't flush because guest users lack delete permissions. Classic case of overly restrictive access control causing a production incident. Should've used a staging environment before deploying to the main bathroom.

Algorithm The Saviour

Algorithms Programming
12 hours ago 161.4K views 0 shares
Algorithm The Saviour
You know you've hit peak laziness when "I used an algorithm" becomes your universal escape hatch. Can't explain your nested loops? Algorithm. Don't remember why you chose that data structure? Algorithm. Someone asks why your function has 47 lines of incomprehensible logic? Just smile and say "it's an algorithm" like you're dropping some CS theory knowledge. It's the technical equivalent of saying "it's magic" but with enough gravitas that people nod and back away slowly. Works especially well in code reviews when you really just brute-forced something at 2 AM and have zero idea how to articulate the chaos you created.

I Got Your Monitors Missing 0.01 Hz And I'm Not Giving It Back

Hardware Windows Linux
12 hours ago 160.2K views 0 shares
I Got Your Monitors Missing 0.01 Hz And I'm Not Giving It Back
You know that feeling when you set up dual monitors and one is running at 200.01 Hz while the other is stuck at 200.00 Hz? Yeah, the GPU is basically holding that extra 0.01 Hz hostage. It's like having two perfectly matched monitors, same model, same specs, bought on the same day... and somehow the universe decided one deserves slightly more refresh rate than the other. The NVIDIA driver just sits there smugly, refusing to sync them up. You'll spend 45 minutes in display settings trying to manually set them to match, only to realize the option simply doesn't exist. That 0.01 Hz difference? It's the GPU's now. Consider it rent for using dual monitors. And yes, you absolutely WILL notice the difference. Or at least you'll convince yourself you do.

Dev Life Production Problems

Debugging Devops Programming Testing Backend
13 hours ago 152.3K views 0 shares
Dev Life Production Problems
The shocked koala perfectly encapsulates that moment of pure disbelief when your code passes all local tests, runs flawlessly on localhost, and then immediately combusts the second it touches production servers. You've checked everything twice, your environment variables are set, dependencies are locked, but somehow production has decided to interpret your perfectly valid code as a personal insult. The culprit? Could be anything from a subtle timezone difference, a missing font on the production server, a slightly different Node version, or the classic "works on my machine" syndrome where your local environment has some magical configuration that production doesn't. Fun fact: studies show that 73% of developer stress comes from the phrase "but it worked locally" followed by staring at production logs at 2 AM.

New AI Engineers

AI Algorithms Math Programming Python
13 hours ago 150.5K views 0 shares
New AI Engineers
Someone discovered you can skip the entire computer science curriculum by copy-pasting transformer code from Hugging Face. Why waste years learning Python, data structures, algorithms, discrete math, calculus, and statistics when you can just import a pre-trained model and call it "AI engineering"? The escalator labeled "attention is all you need" (referencing the famous transformer paper) goes straight to the top while the stairs gather dust. Turns out the only prerequisite for a six-figure AI job is knowing how to pip install and having the confidence to say "I fine-tuned a model" in interviews.

Laptops (affiliate)

Apple 2024 MacBook Pro Laptop with M4 Max, 14‑core CPU, 32‑core GPU: Built for Apple Intelligence, 16.2-inch Liquid Retina XDR Display, 36GB Unified Memory, 1TB SSD Storage; Space Black
Apple 2024 MacBook Pro Laptop with M4 Max, 14‑c...
ASUS ROG Strix G16 (2025) Gaming Laptop, 16” ROG Nebula 16:10 2.5K 240Hz/3ms, NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 5070, AMD Ryzen™ 9 9955HX Processor, 32GB DDR5-5600, 1TB PCIe Gen 4 SSD, Wi-Fi 6E, Windows 11 Home
ASUS ROG Strix G16 (2025) Gaming Laptop, 16” RO...
Apple 2024 MacBook Pro Laptop with M4 Pro, 14‑core CPU, 20‑core GPU: Built for Apple Intelligence, 16.2-inch Liquid Retina XDR Display, 24GB Unified Memory, 512GB SSD Storage; Silver
Apple 2024 MacBook Pro Laptop with M4 Pro, 14‑c...

I Just Can't Prove It

Webdev AI Git StackOverflow Frontend
9 hours ago 114.0K views 0 shares
I Just Can't Prove It
When your portfolio claims "full stack web app with backend" but the entire backend is literally just two Express routes copy-pasted from Stack Overflow and a JSON file pretending to be a database. Sure, it technically has a backend... in the same way a cardboard cutout technically has depth. The "No AI" disclaimer is the cherry on top—gotta make sure everyone knows you typed those two commits yourself, even if one of them was just fixing a typo in the README.

We Still Talk About You jQuery

Javascript Webdev Programming Frontend
9 hours ago 103.0K views 0 shares
We Still Talk About You jQuery
jQuery is basically the ex that everyone still brings up at parties. Once the king of DOM manipulation and AJAX calls, jQuery made web development bearable back when Internet Explorer 6 was still haunting our nightmares. But now? It's buried six feet under, replaced by modern frameworks like React, Vue, and vanilla JavaScript that can actually do what jQuery did natively. The thing is, we can't stop talking about it. Every "modern web dev" discussion somehow circles back to "remember when we needed jQuery for everything?" It's like that one friend from high school who peaked early—we've all moved on, but the memories (and the legacy codebases) remain. Somewhere out there, a dusty WordPress site is still running jQuery 1.4.2, and honestly? It's probably fine.

New Age Slop C

AI Csharp C++ Programming
7 hours ago 84.1K views 0 shares
New Age Slop C
Dennis Ritchie invented C in 1972. Anders Hejlsberg invented C# in 2000. Now some random guy with a webcam and a dream invented "C~slop" in 2026. The natural evolution of programming languages, really. From foundational systems programming to enterprise-friendly managed code to... whatever AI-generated fever dream we're about to endure. The progression of facial expressions tells you everything you need to know. Ritchie looks dignified and accomplished. Hejlsberg looks professional and pleased with his work. Random webcam guy looks like he just discovered he can prompt ChatGPT to write an entire programming language and is way too excited about it. Can't wait for the Hacker News thread where people debate whether C~slop is "production ready."
Loading more content...

Spotlight

GearScouts.com

Stop scrolling, start exploring! Find the gear that'll get you off the couch and into the wild. Compare power stations for off-grid adventures, flashlights for midnight hikes, and essentials that make the outdoors your playground. Get Outside →

Novelty Coffee Mugs - Eat Sleep Code Repeat Pro...

Novelty Coffee Mugs - Eat Sleep Code Repeat Pro...
Ad Buy = You get cool stuff + we can finally afford that third monitor for ultimate productivity. 🖥️