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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

Trending memes that don't need to be rewritten in Latin for publication

The Harsh Reality Of Mathematical Uncertainty

Math Science
22 hours ago 22.2K views 0 shares
The Harsh Reality Of Mathematical Uncertainty
The mathematical existential crisis strikes again! Someone asked for the harshest reality truth and got hit with "We don't know if π + e is irrational." 🤯 That's like telling someone the universe might be built on mathematical quicksand! Mathematicians have been calculating π and e to trillions of digits, yet can't definitively prove whether their sum is rational or irrational. It's the mathematical equivalent of finding out your parents might be robots - everything you thought was certain suddenly isn't! The shocked expression says it all: "You mean we've been doing calculus for centuries and STILL don't know this basic thing?!" Numbers, you beautiful, mysterious tricksters!

300K Is Not A Room Temperature

Physics Science Chemistry
23 hours ago 20.2K views 0 shares
300K Is Not A Room Temperature
The scientific precision here is *chef's kiss*. Room temperature is typically defined as 20-25°C (68-77°F), which equals about 293-298 Kelvin. So technically, 300K is indeed slightly above standard room temperature. Only physicists and chemists would set up a debate table to die on this hill of a 2-7 degree Kelvin difference. Next they'll be arguing whether 101 kPa is standard atmospheric pressure while the rest of us just call it "air."

O To The Power Of Zero Equals Rebellion

Math Science
23 hours ago 19.7K views 0 shares
O To The Power Of Zero Equals Rebellion
Look at this mathematical rebel! Instead of writing x 0 = 1 like every textbook since Newton's day, they've gone full circle with O 0 = 1. It's the mathematical equivalent of showing up to a black-tie event in a neon jumpsuit! Zero raised to zero power has sparked more heated debates in math departments than the proper pronunciation of "gif." The expression is technically an indeterminate form, but mathematicians generally define it as 1 by convention. Kinda like how we all agree traffic lights are red-yellow-green even though colorblind people might beg to differ!

300 Kelvin Is Not A Room Temperature

Physics Science Chemistry
18 hours ago 16.9K views 0 shares
300 Kelvin Is Not A Room Temperature
Physicists and chemists are DYING right now! 🔥 This meme hits that sweet spot between science humor and absolute truth. 300 Kelvin equals about 27°C (80°F), which is actually a pretty comfy room temperature! The joke plays on the classic "change my mind" format while sneakily teaching us about temperature scales. Scientists use Kelvin for precise measurements because it starts at absolute zero - no negative numbers needed! Next time someone complains about room temperature, just say "at least it's not 300K" and watch the confusion spread!

Two Moles Per Litre

Chemistry Science Academia
17 hours ago 16.7K views 0 shares
Two Moles Per Litre
Figure 8 shows the most literal interpretation of "two moles per liter" in chemistry history. While your professor drones on about concentration calculations, the textbook illustrates the concept with actual burrowing mammals stuffed into laboratory glassware. Chemistry puns: the only reactions that consistently proceed as expected in undergraduate labs.

The Million Dollar Mathematical Rejection

Math Scientists Academia Research
16 hours ago 15.9K views 0 shares
The Million Dollar Mathematical Rejection
The ultimate scientific heartbreak! Poor Grigori just found out his precious Poincaré hypothesis got promoted to a theorem, and the Clay Institute is sliding into his DMs with a cool million dollars. But plot twist - he's having NONE of it! Mathematical martyrdom at its finest as he screams "NOOOOO" while the institute realizes they've failed at giving away free money. Who needs a million dollars when you can have mathematical integrity and internet fame instead? Some mathematicians just want to watch the world learn.

What Else Can We Do With Sugar (Sucrose)?

Medicine Chemistry
15 hours ago 14.7K views 0 shares
What Else Can We Do With Sugar (Sucrose)?
Corporate sugar execs facing a sales crisis get exactly what they asked for—but not what they wanted. While they're hoping for brilliant marketing solutions to boost declining sugar sales, they instead receive brutally honest suggestions: scaring people about ozempic side effects, using sugar for pre-workout energy, or as alternative fuel. The last guy suggesting biofuels? Promptly defenestrated. Because nothing says "quarterly profits matter more than innovation" like tossing the renewable energy guy out a window. Classic corporate problem-solving!

What Else Can We Do With Sugar (Sucrose)?

Biology Chemistry Medicine
11 hours ago 11.2K views 0 shares
What Else Can We Do With Sugar (Sucrose)?
Corporate brainstorming sessions in the sugar industry are apparently just as unhinged as in every other field. While two employees suggest legitimate applications (scaring people with side effects and biofuel development), the third guy's brilliant "sugar as pre-workout" idea gets him defenestrated faster than you can say "glycemic index." The boss knows that suggesting people consume MORE sugar before exercising is exactly how you create a customer base with type 2 diabetes. Nothing says "I don't understand basic metabolism" quite like pitching sugar as an energy booster to a company already dealing with public health backlash.

The Exponential Choice Dilemma

Math
11 hours ago 10.7K views 0 shares
The Exponential Choice Dilemma
The famous red pill/blue pill scene has been repurposed for financial enlightenment! Choosing between $2 now or $1 that doubles daily is the ultimate test of delayed gratification and exponential growth understanding. Sure, $2 looks tempting (hello, vending machine snack!), but that self-multiplying dollar becomes $2 on day 2, $4 on day 3, $8 on day 4... By day 10, you're at $512. After 30 days? A cool $536,870,912! Even mathematicians get sweaty palms thinking about compound interest. The real scientific principle here is exponential growth - the same concept behind population explosions, viral spread, and why your lab bacteria culture suddenly took over the incubator overnight.

Trust The Quantum Circle

Physics Science
9 hours ago 9.5K views 0 shares
Trust The Quantum Circle
Just a regular green circle claiming to be a "quantum circle" that was apparently a yellow square before observation. Classic quantum mechanics joke playing on the observer effect—where particles exist in multiple states until measured. The difference is that real quantum particles don't lie to your face about what they were. My PhD advisor would call this "creative data interpretation."

Electron Thief: A Chemist's True Motivation

Chemistry Science
5 hours ago 5.2K views 0 shares
Electron Thief: A Chemist's True Motivation
Chemistry cats are really just in it for the electrons! This meme perfectly captures the excited face of someone who just discovered the fundamental principle of reduction reactions. In chemistry, reduction means gaining electrons (while oxidation means losing them). The cat's wide-eyed expression is exactly how chemists look when they spot an opportunity to snatch some sweet, negatively charged particles. Next time your professor talks about redox reactions, just picture this cat plotting to steal all the electrons in the room.

Physics Without Newton

Physics Scientists Science Academia
4 hours ago 4.8K views 0 shares
Physics Without Newton
The entire field of physics hinges on that fateful apple! This meme brilliantly illustrates how our understanding of gravity might be drastically different if Newton had chosen a different napping spot. Instead of a thick textbook of classical mechanics, we'd have a flimsy pamphlet - and a group of disgruntled physicists wondering why their field got coconut-blocked! The collective disappointment of these distinguished scientists (featuring what looks like Einstein and colleagues) perfectly captures the butterfly effect in scientific discovery. One man's nap location literally shaped centuries of physics!
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