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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

More popular than free food at a tech conference

Claude Decision Tree

AI Programming
23 hours ago 272.5K views 0 shares
Claude Decision Tree
When Claude AI is faced with literally any decision, the answer is always "Yes". Need to write code? Yes. Need to debug? Yes. Need to refactor? Yes. Need to add more features? Yes. Need to delete everything and start over? Also yes. The joke here is that Claude (Anthropic's AI assistant) is so helpful and agreeable that its decision tree is basically just one giant "Proceed" button. No conditional branches, no edge case handling, no "maybe we should reconsider" paths—just pure, unadulterated compliance. It's like having a junior dev who's never said no to a feature request in their entire career. The retro computer setup adds extra chef's kiss energy because even ancient hardware knew to ask "Are you sure?" before formatting your drive, but modern AI? Nah, we're going full speed ahead on every request.

Without Adblocker

Webdev Programming Frontend
21 hours ago 254.3K views 0 shares
Without Adblocker
Every website in 2024 that still hasn't figured out that aggressive ads drive users away. You're just trying to read a simple tutorial on how to center a div, but first you need to navigate through seventeen pop-ups, three auto-playing videos, a newsletter signup, and a cookie consent banner that takes up half the screen. The visual pollution here is basically what your browser looks like when you accidentally open a site in incognito mode and realize your adblocker isn't active. Every square inch monetized to death. It's like the web version of Times Square had a baby with a spam folder. Fun fact: uBlock Origin uses about 50MB of RAM while blocking thousands of ads. Meanwhile, those ads would've used 500MB and slowed your page load to a crawl. You're not just blocking annoyance—you're literally making the web faster and more usable.

It's A Brave New World

AI Programming Debugging
17 hours ago 228.4K views 0 shares
It's A Brave New World
You walk into your new gig all excited, ready to dive into the codebase and prove your worth. Then you open the first file. Then the second. Then the entire repository. Every function, every module, every single line of business logic—all generated by ChatGPT or Copilot. No human has actually written code here in months. You're not inheriting technical debt; you're inheriting an AI's fever dream of what software should look like. The variable names are suspiciously perfect, the comments are weirdly verbose, and there's a distinct lack of creative swearing in the commit messages. You realize you're not here to code—you're here to be a glorified AI babysitter, debugging hallucinated logic and explaining to stakeholders why the AI decided to implement bubble sort in production. Welcome to 2024, where "software engineer" means "prompt whisperer with a computer science degree."

You Never Know

Gamedev Programming
18 hours ago 227.7K views 0 shares
You Never Know
So Nintendo's going after the US government over tariffs, and the US might counter by legalizing emulation? The sheer chaos of this hypothetical legal battle has developers everywhere praying to their favorite deity. Imagine the irony: Nintendo, famous for aggressively DMCAing every ROM site since the dawn of the internet, accidentally triggers a legal precedent that makes emulation completely legal. The company that's been the final boss of emulator takedowns could inadvertently become the patron saint of preservation and retro gaming. Honestly, if this happened, it would be the greatest unintended consequence since someone left a debugging printf in production and it actually helped catch a critical bug. The timeline where Nintendo's legal team becomes their own worst enemy? *Chef's kiss* 👨‍🍳

Backstab Error 500

Backend Webdev Programming Debugging Frontend
15 hours ago 210.2K views 0 shares
Backstab Error 500
Picture this: Backend and Frontend are sitting peacefully in class, Backend even passing Frontend a friendly little note like the good teammates they are. Sweet, right? WRONG. Plot twist of the century—Frontend opens it up and it's a 500 Internal Server Error. The AUDACITY. The BETRAYAL. Frontend trusted you, Backend! They were just trying to fetch some data, maybe display a cute little user profile, and you hit them with the server equivalent of "something went wrong but I'm not telling you what." The look of pure rage and disappointment says it all. Nothing says workplace dysfunction quite like your backend throwing a 500 and leaving frontend to explain to the users why everything's on fire. Classic backstabbing move.

The 2026 FOMO Plague

AI Programming
14 hours ago 197.0K views 0 shares
The 2026 FOMO Plague
Someone created a fake Wikipedia article about "The Agentic Rush" (2024-2027), documenting the supposed AI-induced mass hysteria that swept through LinkedIn. It's satirizing the current tech industry's obsession with AI agents and the FOMO epidemic that's got everyone pivoting harder than a startup running out of runway. The genius is in the details: "The Day 1 Delusion" where being 24 hours late to a new framework means career death, "Prompt Exhaustion" from trying to vibe code 18 autonomous loops at once, and "Obsolescence Theater" where people loudly declare everything dead just to signal they're riding the hype wave. It's basically calling out every tech bro on LinkedIn who's frantically rebranding their CRUD app as "agentic" while having zero infrastructure to back it up. The "Hyper-Pivoting" symptom hits particularly hard – we've all seen companies slap "AI-powered" on their landing page faster than you can say "vector database." The fact that this reads exactly like a real Wikipedia article from the future makes it even better. Future historians will look back at 2024-2025 and wonder what the hell we were all smoking.

Steps To Identify If A Failure Is User Error Or Design Flaw

Hardware Debugging
10 hours ago 145.8K views 0 shares
Steps To Identify If A Failure Is User Error Or Design Flaw
The classic corporate blame-shifting flowchart strikes again. The "diagnostic process" here is brilliantly simple: if you like the company (Intel/AMD fanboy detected), it's obviously user error—you probably installed the CPU with a hammer or forgot to remove the plastic. But if you don't like the company? Clearly a catastrophic design flaw that should result in a class-action lawsuit. The Intel vs AMD imagery is chef's kiss here—showing the eternal hardware tribalism where your CPU preference becomes your entire personality. The flowchart perfectly captures how confirmation bias works in tech: the same bent pin scenario gets diagnosed completely differently depending on whether you're Team Blue or Team Red. Root cause analysis? Never heard of her. Just vibes and brand loyalty.

Stupid People

AI
8 hours ago 115.0K views 0 shares
Stupid People
So someone just casually asked AI to write a newspaper article about car sales statistics, and the AI—bless its silicon heart—decided to EXPOSE ITSELF by adding a helpful little note at the end saying "if you want, I can also create an even snappier front-page style version with punchy one-line stats and a bold, infographically-ready layout—perfect for maximum reader impact. Do you want me to do that next?" 💀 Imagine submitting this to your editor and they find AI literally asking for feedback IN THE ARTICLE ITSELF. It's like handing in your homework with "ChatGPT, can you make this sound smarter?" still in the document. The sheer audacity of not even proofreading before publishing is *chef's kiss* beautiful chaos. Pro tip: if you're gonna use AI to write your content, maybe delete the part where it offers you premium upgrades like a SaaS product. Just saying.

Cold Nights, Warm Charger

Hardware Programming
7 hours ago 112.1K views 0 shares
Cold Nights, Warm Charger
When you're debugging at 3 AM in your freezing room and suddenly realize your laptop charger brick doubles as a portable hand warmer. That sweet, sweet heat dissipation from inefficient power conversion becomes your best friend during those winter coding marathons. Who needs a space heater when you've got a 65W power adapter running at full throttle? The real question is whether you're holding it for warmth or just checking if it's about to thermal throttle your laptop. Either way, it's giving off more BTUs than your will to refactor that legacy code. Fun fact: laptop chargers can reach temperatures of 50-70°C (122-158°F) under load, which is basically a cozy cup of coffee for your hands.

Programmers Know The Risks Involved!

Security Networking Iot Programming
6 hours ago 96.5K views 0 shares
Programmers Know The Risks Involved!
When you work in IT, you develop a very specific type of paranoia that makes you treat every piece of technology like it's personally plotting your demise. While tech enthusiasts are out here living their best sci-fi fantasy with voice-activated toasters and internet-connected toilet paper holders, programmers have seen enough security vulnerabilities to know that the only smart home device you can trust is a mechanical lock from the 1800s. The contrast is GLORIOUS. One side is bragging about controlling their entire house from their smartphone like Tony Stark, while programmers are literally keeping a loaded gun next to their 2004 printer in case it makes a suspicious beep. Because nothing says "I understand cybersecurity" quite like refusing to let your thermostat connect to WiFi and running OpenWRT on your router like you're preparing for digital warfare. OpenWRT, by the way, is open-source firmware for routers that gives you actual control over your network instead of trusting whatever backdoor-riddled garbage the manufacturer shipped. It's basically the difference between renting and owning your router's soul.

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Enough Is Enough

C++ Rust Programming
5 hours ago 79.9K views 0 shares
Enough Is Enough
When dealing with memory management, borrow checkers, and segmentation faults finally breaks you so hard that manually swinging a pickaxe in a dark hole sounds like a better career path. Can't blame the guy—at least mining has predictable crashes. The progression from C++ to Rust was supposed to be an upgrade , but turns out trading null pointers for lifetime annotations just swaps one existential crisis for another. Sometimes you just want a job where the only thing that panics is you when the mine shaft collapses. Real talk though: if you've mastered both C++ and Rust, you're probably overqualified for most things anyway. Might as well get some fresh air.

Legend Has It There Once Was A Man Who Finished His Pet Project

AI Programming
4 hours ago 70.3K views 0 shares
Legend Has It There Once Was A Man Who Finished His Pet Project
So you used to be a mere mortal starting 5 pet projects a week and abandoning them all like orphaned puppies? Cute. But NOW? Now you've got AI superpowers and you're speedrunning failure at 3x velocity! Why finish ONE project when you can simultaneously NOT finish FIFTEEN? It's like having a personal assistant whose only job is to help you disappoint yourself faster. Peak efficiency is measured not by what you complete, but by how many GitHub repos you can create with nothing but a README and broken dreams. The future is here, and it's beautifully, catastrophically unfinished.
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