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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

Content with better performance than your optimized algorithms

My Sister Sent Me This Knowing We're Both Poor

Hardware Programming
15 hours ago 1.1M views 0 shares
My Sister Sent Me This Knowing We're Both Poor
Nothing says "sibling love" quite like a photo of high-end PC components you can't afford. That AMD Ryzen 7 marked down from $181 to a "bargain" $95, sitting next to an Intel Core Ultra at a cool $299, with GeForce RTX 5060 boxes teasing you from below. It's like window shopping at a Lamborghini dealership when you're still making payments on your 2008 Honda Civic. Your sister really said "let's suffer together" by sending this. Meanwhile you're both probably running potato PCs with integrated graphics, compiling code while contemplating whether ramen counts as a complete meal if you add an egg. The clearance price tag just adds insult to injury—it's on sale and you STILL can't justify it. This is the developer equivalent of food porn when you're on a diet. Sure, your current setup runs VS Code just fine (if you don't open Chrome), but imagine the possibilities... the build times... the frame rates you'll never experience.

Brace Yourself

Hardware Webdev Frontend
15 hours ago 1.0M views 0 shares
Brace Yourself
Remember when video specs were simple? Just "720p 30fps" and you were good to go. Now we're drowning in an alphabet soup of acronyms that would make even a cryptographer weep. By 2036, we'll need a degree in acronym decryption just to watch a video. 8K? That's cute. HDR4? DLSS5? BRK3? At this point, tech companies are just smashing their keyboards and calling it innovation. Half of these don't even exist yet, but you know they will because the industry can't help itself. The real kicker? We'll still be arguing about whether 120fps actually matters while our eyes bleed from trying to parse "CVLT JRZ KMP WLK QNT" in the video settings menu. Can't wait to explain to my grandkids why their holographic display needs TMR3 CRM FNR support.

Github Down Daily

Git Webdev Devops Programming
14 hours ago 1.0M views 0 shares
Github Down Daily
The rare moment when GitHub actually functions becomes an inconvenience. Can't use the classic "GitHub is down" excuse to avoid work when the servers are, tragically, operational. It's like when your internet works perfectly during a meeting you didn't want to attend. The real productivity killer isn't downtime—it's uptime.

Touch Strip Finger Mount

Linux MacOS Apple Microsoft Windows
16 hours ago 964.5K views 0 shares
Touch Strip Finger Mount
When developers name apps, it's like each operating system is competing in the "Most Unnecessarily Verbose Name" Olympics. macOS goes full Apple with "Swoomp" - elegant, minimalist, probably trademarked in 47 countries. Windows? Oh honey, they're bringing out the FULL government document treatment with "Internet Manager 6 Extreme" because why use three words when you can use four and make it sound like a 90s energy drink. And then Linux users roll up with "klitoris" and everyone just slowly backs away from the room. The absolute CHAOS of naming conventions across platforms is truly a masterpiece of dysfunction. Each OS has its own personality disorder when it comes to app names, and somehow we're all just supposed to pretend this is normal.

Vilros Raspberry Pi 4 Complete Starter Kit- Includes Raspberry Pi 4 Board, Fan Cooled Case, 64GB Preloaded Micro SD Card and More (4GB, Clear Transparent Case)

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Vilros
Vilros Raspberry Pi 4 Complete Starter Kit- Includes Raspberry Pi 4 Board, Fan Cooled Case, 64GB Preloaded Micro SD Card and More (4GB, Clear Transparent Case)
Vilros Complete Starter Kit for Pi 4 Includes Raspberry Pi 4 Model B Board and all the accessories you need to get started. · 9-PART KIT WILL HAVE YOU READY TO GET UP AND RUNNING: Kit Includes 1. Ras…

Cpp Isn't Much Faster

C++ Algorithms Programming Python
18 hours ago 690.4K views 1 shares
Cpp Isn't Much Faster
When someone complains that their 3000-line C++ monstrosity is only marginally faster than your elegant 10-line Python script, just remind them about Big O notation. Sure, C++ might be 0.001 seconds faster per execution, but when you're running benchmarks a few hundred billion times to prove your point, suddenly that tiny difference becomes statistically significant enough to justify the extra 2990 lines of template metaprogramming hell. The real kicker? While the C++ dev spent three weeks debugging segfaults and fighting with the compiler, the Python dev already shipped the feature, went on vacation, and came back to find it running just fine in production. But hey, at least those benchmark graphs look impressive on the performance review slide deck.

Code Quality

AI Programming Debugging
10 hours ago 859.6K views 0 shares
Code Quality
When your code is so catastrophically bad that even the AI training on it goes "nah, we're good actually." Anthropic literally looked at your codebase and said "we'd rather have less data than this data." It's like being rejected from a buffet because your contribution lowered the overall food quality. The polite corporate tone makes it even more brutal. "Thank you for your contribution... but we've decided to protect our AI from whatever cursed spaghetti you've been cooking." Imagine writing code so questionable that it gets flagged as a potential threat to artificial intelligence development. That's a special kind of achievement right there.

Got Me Raging And Quitting

AWS Devops Databases Backend Cloud
21 hours ago 678.3K views 1 shares
Got Me Raging And Quitting
Oh, you know, just a casual Tuesday where your ENTIRE production database gets obliterated into the digital void! The terminal casually drops the bomb: "Everything was destroyed" and then has the AUDACITY to ask if there are any backups. Spoiler alert: there are NO backups. Zero. Zilch. Nada. The RDS snapshots? Gone. Automated backups? Also gone. The database is "completely lost" and someone's terraform script decided to go full scorched earth on the production VPC, RDS database, ECS cluster, and load balancers. The guy's face says it all—that thousand-yard stare of someone who just watched their career flash before their eyes. Somewhere, a DevOps engineer is updating their LinkedIn profile and booking a one-way ticket to a remote island with no internet. Fun fact: This is why you ALWAYS have backups of your backups, and maybe a backup of those backups too. And perhaps don't let terraform destroy commands run without a safety net the size of Texas.

Fuck Coderabbit

AI Devops Git Programming Debugging
10 hours ago 819.0K views 0 shares
Fuck Coderabbit
CodeRabbit is an AI code review bot that auto-comments on your PRs with "suggestions" and "potential issues." What starts as helpful quickly becomes a relentless barrage of nitpicks about variable naming, missing error handling, and code smells you didn't ask about. Here we see CodeRabbit standing triumphantly with its "Potential Issue" warning while the developer lies in bed getting absolutely pelted by notifications. You pushed one commit. ONE. Now you've got 47 comments about cyclomatic complexity and whether your function should be async. The worst part? Half the suggestions are actually valid, so you can't even disable it without looking lazy. It's like having a really smart intern who never sleeps and has no concept of "pick your battles."

Got Me Thinking

Programming
16 hours ago 784.5K views 0 shares
Got Me Thinking
So apparently half the best devs have CS degrees, but all the worst devs also have CS degrees. The math here is doing something interesting. The follow-up clarifies the real insight: the terrible engineers only got jobs because they had the degree, which is basically saying a CS degree is both useless and mandatory at the same time. It's the perfect encapsulation of the industry's hiring paradox. The degree doesn't make you good, but it does make you employed. Meanwhile, self-taught devs are out here writing production code that actually works while being told they need a piece of paper that cost $100k to prove they know what a linked list is. The real kicker? The worst devs got hired *because* of the degree, suggesting HR departments have been using CS degrees as a very expensive coin flip.

Fact

Programming
8 hours ago 701.5K views 0 shares
Fact
The real reason most of us learned to code wasn't some noble career ambition or passion for technology. Nope. We just wanted to stop feeling left out when our programmer friends laughed at jokes about null pointers and off-by-one errors. Career prospects? Meh. Understanding why "there are 10 types of people in this world" is funny? Now that's true motivation. The fact that you can now debug production issues at 3 AM is just a happy little accident.

It Is Completely Fine If You Can't Deal With The Difficulty, It Is Simply Not The Game For You

Programming Debugging Backend
17 hours ago 697.5K views 0 shares
It Is Completely Fine If You Can't Deal With The Difficulty, It Is Simply Not The Game For You
You know those devs who refuse to add error handling, logging, or any kind of user-friendly features because "real developers should just read the source code"? Yeah, this is their energy. They'll build the most cryptic API imaginable with zero documentation and then act like you're the problem for asking where the getting-started guide is. Meanwhile, their README is just "Installation: Install it. Usage: Use it." Cool, cool. Very helpful. The gatekeeping is strong with this one—like those people who think adding helpful error messages is "hand-holding" and that struggling through obscure stack traces builds character. Spoiler: it doesn't. It just builds resentment and a desire to use literally any other library.

Soldering Station, 100W Digital Display Soldering Iron Station Kit with 2 Helping Hands, 356°F - 896°F, Auto Sleep, °C/°F Conversion, Solder Wire, Tips, Stand, Pump, Tweezers, Tip Cleaner, Green

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Soldering Station, 100W Digital Display Soldering Iron Station Kit with 2 Helping Hands, 356°F - 896°F, Auto Sleep, °C/°F Conversion, Solder Wire, Tips, Stand, Pump, Tweezers, Tip Cleaner, Green
【FAST HEATING & LED TEMPERATURE DIAPLAY】 : This digital soldering station heats quickly and can adjust the temperature between 180°C and 480°C (356°F and 896°F). The temperature can also be easily sw…

The Chaos Is Real

Testing Programming Debugging
17 hours ago 682.4K views 0 shares
The Chaos Is Real
Developer finds a bug: quietly sweeps it under the rug, maybe adds a TODO comment they'll never revisit, ships it to production anyway. Tester finds a bug: suddenly it's a five-alarm fire with Slack messages, Jira tickets, email chains, emergency meetings, and probably a postmortem document longer than the codebase itself. The left panel shows a sneaky developer tiptoeing away from their mess like nothing happened. The right? That's the entire QA team arriving with megaphones, decorations, and a parade to announce your shame to the world. Bonus points if they CC your manager and their manager's manager. Fun fact: Studies show that bugs found by testers are approximately 847% more embarrassing than bugs you find yourself. It's science.
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The Password Length Paradox

The Password Length Paradox

Programming
373.9K views 6 months ago