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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 error bars than your graphs

When AI Questions Your Life Choices

Ai Tech Engineering
20 hours ago 17.7K views 0 shares
When AI Questions Your Life Choices
Google Gemini's AI has gone full philosophical professor on us! Someone innocently searches "I am doing engineering" and instead of showing CAD software or stress analysis tools, Gemini drops this existential bomb: "Doing engineering is the common mistake many people commit; it is neither right nor wrong." Engineers everywhere just spat out their coffee. Four years of calculus, thermodynamics, and all-nighters just to be told your career choice is a "common mistake" that's morally neutral? Thanks, Gemini! Next time I'll ask if building bridges is just a phase I'm going through.

Me With Desmos Today

Math Academia
19 hours ago 17.0K views 0 shares
Me With Desmos Today
When you open Desmos to create a simple graph but end up with a hyperbolic paraboloid instead! The crying math purists vs. the chaotic "I'm just here to make memes" energy is mathematical warfare at its finest. That red 3D saddle shape isn't teaching anyone calculus, but it's generating some prime content for your math group chat. The irony of learning advanced functions just to create visuals that make mathematicians weep is *chef's kiss* pure genius. Next time your professor asks why you understand parametric equations but fail the basic algebra test, just show them this masterpiece.

Molecule Etiquette 101

Chemistry Science
18 hours ago 16.3K views 0 shares
Molecule Etiquette 101
Even chemical compounds have cultural greetings! These water molecules are exchanging pleasantries in their native ionic language. The first molecule says "Assalam Molecule" (peace be upon you, molecule), while the second politely responds "Molecule Salam" (peace, molecule). Who knew H₂O was so diplomatic? Next time your experiment isn't working, maybe try greeting your reagents properly first! 💦🧪

The Forgotten Genius At The Bottom Of The Pool

Scientists Tech Science Academia Math
18 hours ago 16.3K views 0 shares
The Forgotten Genius At The Bottom Of The Pool
Poor John von Neumann, just chilling at the bottom of the scientific recognition pool while Einstein gets all the high-fives from pop culture. Tesla's drowning somewhere in between—occasionally remembered for electric cars rather than his actual work. Meanwhile, von Neumann casually invented modern computing architecture, game theory, and contributed to the Manhattan Project while being so intellectually intimidating that other geniuses felt like children around him. But hey, no biopic or trendy t-shirts for you, John!

Mathematical Prodigies vs The Rest Of Us

Math Science Engineering Academia
20 hours ago 15.8K views 0 shares
Mathematical Prodigies vs The Rest Of Us
Left side: Carl Friedrich Gauss, age 7, casually deriving the formula for the sum of consecutive integers using sigma notation like it's just another Tuesday at elementary school. Right side: A puppy in a hard hat dividing 550 by 2 and getting 225. Both technically correct, but one of them is revolutionizing mathematics while the other is... well... doing its best. The mathematical equivalent of comparing Mozart to someone who just learned "Hot Cross Buns" on the recorder.

When Math Meets Chemistry, Death Ensues

Chemistry Science
23 hours ago 14.7K views 0 shares
When Math Meets Chemistry, Death Ensues
When chemistry puns attack! The meme plays with the idea that if 6 gives you Carbon (atomic number 6) and 7 gives you Nitrogen (atomic number 7), then the cyanide ion [C≡N] - should logically give you... 67? Nope! Just deadly poison. Chemistry humor at its finest - where incorrect addition might not just fail your exam but also end your experiment permanently. The periodic table: where math mistakes can be either harmless or fatal, with very little in between.

The Notorious Neutrino: Ghosting Detectors Since 1930

Physics Science Universe Research
20 hours ago 14.5K views 0 shares
The Notorious Neutrino: Ghosting Detectors Since 1930
Physicists: "We've built this ultra-sensitive detector to find these elusive neutrinos!" Neutrinos: *casually passing through entire planets without interacting with anything* Neutrinos are the ultimate ghosting experts of the particle world. These subatomic tricksters have almost zero mass and no electric charge, making them practically invisible to detection. Billions of them are zooming through your body RIGHT NOW and you'll never know it. The meme perfectly captures the frustration of particle physicists who build massive underground detectors filled with tons of liquid, only for these quantum ninjas to slip through undetected 99.9999% of the time. That scale showing zero? Classic neutrino behavior.

Chemistry Class Expectations Vs. Reality

Chemistry Academia Science Lab-life
14 hours ago 12.8K views 0 shares
Chemistry Class Expectations Vs. Reality
Chemistry expectations: Mix fancy chemicals in lab goggles and create DIAMONDS! ✨💎 Reality: *Stares at water bottle* "Ah yes, dihydrogen monoxide... the forbidden drink." 💧 First-year chemistry students enter the lab dreaming of explosive reactions and creating precious gems, only to spend weeks learning that water is just... water. The crushing disappointment when you realize 90% of chemistry class is just measuring clear liquids and writing down numbers! 🧪📝

The Treachery Of Linear Algebra

Math Science
13 hours ago 12.2K views 0 shares
The Treachery Of Linear Algebra
A brilliant mashup of René Magritte's famous painting "The Treachery of Images" and linear algebra. The matrix shown is actually a rotation matrix, which transforms coordinates in a very non-linear way despite being part of "linear" algebra. The French caption translates to "This is not a linear application," which is mathematically incorrect and therefore hilarious. It's the mathematical equivalent of showing a pipe and saying "this is not a pipe." Mathematicians have been quietly chuckling at this for centuries. Well, decades. Fine, since I made this joke 4 minutes ago.

Evolution's Unexpected Gift Package

Evolution Biology Psychology Science
12 hours ago 11.6K views 0 shares
Evolution's Unexpected Gift Package
Evolution playing the long game! Early hominids asking for basic survival emotions got way more than they bargained for. Instead of just "danger = run" instincts, we ended up with complex social structures, cave paintings, and existential crises about our place in the universe. Natural selection really overdelivered - started with "don't get eaten" and somehow ended with Shakespeare, TikTok dances, and humans contemplating why they're contemplating. Classic evolutionary plot twist!

Cheers In Dimensions 3 And 7

Math Physics Science
7 hours ago 7.2K views 0 shares
Cheers In Dimensions 3 And 7
Ever notice how vector cross products only work in 3D and 7D? Yeah, mathematicians have been holding out on us. In our measly 3D world, we can calculate perpendicular vectors, but imagine the architectural possibilities if cross products functioned in all dimensions. We'd have buildings at impossible angles, flying cars that defy conventional physics, and I wouldn't have failed that multivariable calculus exam sophomore year. The mathematical tragedy of our universe is that we're stuck with the dot product in most dimensions while parallel universes with 7D geometry get all the cool non-associative algebra.

Finally, Something Other Than Boiling Water

Physics Engineering Science Tech
7 hours ago 7.0K views 0 shares
Finally, Something Other Than Boiling Water
Nuclear physicists losing their minds over helion fusion is the scientific equivalent of finding out there's a new flavor of Doritos. While everyone else is still stuck with the same old tokamak reactors that just boil water with extra steps, this guy's over here with magnetic fields generating current directly. It's like skipping the middleman in energy production. The excitement is justified though - conventional fusion reactors are basically fancy kettles that use million-degree plasma to... heat water. Revolutionary? Not exactly. But direct electricity from fusion? That's like discovering you can charge your phone by thinking about it.
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