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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

These memes have more integrity than your data collection

Oganesson Could Be A Noble... Solid?

Chemistry Science
18 hours ago 19.4K views 0 shares
Oganesson Could Be A Noble... Solid?
The chemistry world's existential crisis in one image! Oganesson (element 118) breaks all the rules we learned in school. Noble gases are supposed to be these chill, non-reactive elements hanging out in gaseous form, but Oganesson is the rebel showing up to the periodic table party as a predicted solid. It's like finding out your most reliable friend has a secret life as a rock star. The confused face perfectly captures how chemists feel when their fundamental classification system gets thrown into chaos. Breaking news: even the periodic table has identity issues!

The Logic That Breaks Physics

Physics Engineering Science
19 hours ago 18.6K views 0 shares
The Logic That Breaks Physics
That moment when your brilliant "horse math" meets actual physics! Someone's proudly explaining that pregnant horses must run faster because they have "two horsepower," while their physics teacher is just internally dying like that disappointed seal. Horsepower doesn't stack like video game power-ups! Fun fact: one horsepower equals about 746 watts, and was invented by James Watt who measured the work of brewery horses. Your physics teacher is silently calculating how many detention hours this explanation deserves!

Schrödinger's Scotty: Quantum Relationship Status

Physics Science
19 hours ago 18.2K views 0 shares
Schrödinger's Scotty: Quantum Relationship Status
This brilliant mashup of quantum physics and pop culture is chef's kiss perfect! The meme cleverly replaces Schrödinger's cat with "Scotty" from the song "Scotty Doesn't Know" (from the movie EuroTrip), creating a quantum superposition of romantic ignorance and knowledge. In quantum mechanics, Schrödinger's thought experiment places a cat in a box with a radioactive atom that may or may not decay and trigger a poison release. Until observed, the cat exists in a superposition of states - simultaneously alive and dead. Similarly, poor Scotty exists in a superposition of knowing and not knowing about his girlfriend's infidelity until he "opens the box" (discovers the truth). The quantum uncertainty principle has never been applied so hilariously to teenage drama!

It Was Always Called Science

Science Scientists Academia Research
14 hours ago 15.7K views 0 shares
It Was Always Called Science
That moment when you realize your entire field was just rebranded. Before Newton, Galileo, and the gang showed up with their fancy experiments and math, people were already trying to figure out how nature worked—they just called it "natural philosophy." Same product, better packaging. Modern scientists are basically philosophers with cooler equipment and grant proposals.

The Terror Of Radiation Shall Not Be Diminished

Science Physics Conspiracy
14 hours ago 15.4K views 0 shares
The Terror Of Radiation Shall Not Be Diminished
Nothing strikes fear into the heart of the misinformed quite like a reasonable comparison of radiation exposure! Left astronaut tries to calm fears with actual science, showing EPA water safety limits are equivalent to background radiation from a cross-country flight. Right astronaut? Pure radiation panic merchant with a gun, because heaven forbid we use facts to diminish a perfectly good hysteria. The eternal battle between scientific literacy and "but radiation sounds scary!" continues unabated in the vacuum of space... and public discourse.

When Your Girlfriend's Love Language Is Calculus

Math Academia Science
13 hours ago 14.9K views 0 shares
When Your Girlfriend's Love Language Is Calculus
The eternal struggle of dating a mathematician. One minute they're lovingly knitting you a sweater, the next they're having an existential crisis over a limit problem with binomial coefficients and alternating series. That problem #11 is the mathematical equivalent of meeting your partner's parents for the first time — terrifying, unnecessarily complicated, and somehow you're supposed to find the limit as a approaches infinity when you can barely approach social situations with confidence. The real limit we should be calculating is how many relationships survive differential equations.

Oganesson Could Be A Noble... Solid?

Chemistry Science
13 hours ago 14.6K views 0 shares
Oganesson Could Be A Noble... Solid?
Chemistry's ultimate rebel! Element 118 (Oganesson) is breaking all the noble gas rules. While every other noble gas is happily floating around as a gas at room temperature, theoretical models suggest Oganesson might be like "nah, I'm gonna be solid." It's the periodic table equivalent of showing up to a black tie event in sweatpants. The confused face perfectly captures how chemists feel about this element destroying their neat little categorization system. Identity crisis in Group 18!

Dropping Acid And Base

Chemistry Lab-life Science
7 hours ago 9.2K views 0 shares
Dropping Acid And Base
Chemistry labs: where the real mixing happens. The double entendre here is exquisite—chemists literally work with acids and bases while the party reference suggests some are dropping LSD ("acid") while others are terrible dancers ("dropping the base"). The lab equipment forming a DJ setup is just *chef's kiss*. Safety goggles recommended for both scenarios, frankly.

Poverty Solved By Breaking Mathematics

Math Science
7 hours ago 9.0K views 0 shares
Poverty Solved By Breaking Mathematics
Someone skipped math class to invent economic policy! This brilliant "poverty solution" suggests using the infamous divergent series 1+2+3+... to magically distribute wealth. Unfortunately, this infinite sum doesn't equal -1/12 in standard arithmetic—that's a complex mathematical trick used in string theory and quantum field theory with regularization methods. Even if this mathematical wizardry worked (spoiler: it doesn't), the proposed distribution system would create the world's most inefficient payment processing nightmare. Imagine the paperwork! "Sorry, we can't end poverty today because we're still calculating who gets $7,453,291,221." The real mathematical tragedy? Thinking wealth distribution is as simple as a series that literally breaks mathematics. Next up: solving climate change by dividing by zero!

Don't Try What You're About To See At Home

Biology Science Academia
5 hours ago 5.8K views 0 shares
Don't Try What You're About To See At Home
The eternal truth of biology class! Students spend an entire semester learning complex cellular processes, metabolic pathways, and intricate biological systems... yet when exam time rolls around, their brains mysteriously retain exactly ONE fact: "mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell." It's like their neural pathways have been hijacked by this single cellular factoid while everything else evaporates! Biology teachers everywhere are having collective breakdowns watching years of passionate teaching reduced to a single meme-worthy phrase. Meanwhile, the education system just stands by, wondering why students can't recall the Krebs cycle or the stages of meiosis. But hey, at least they'll never forget where ATP comes from!

Bacteria Can Get Sick?

Biology Science Medicine
5 hours ago 5.4K views 0 shares
Bacteria Can Get Sick?
Mind blown, right? Even the microscopic have their own microscopic predators. Bacteriophages are basically the tiny assassins of the microbial world, injecting their genetic material into bacteria like some kind of molecular vampire. The bacterial equivalent of calling in sick would be what—dividing more slowly? "Sorry boss, can't replicate today, got a virus." The irony of organisms that cause human illness themselves falling victim to infection is the ultimate cosmic karma. Nature's way of saying "nobody's safe in this food chain, buddy."

The Periodic Table Of Broken Promises

Chemistry Lab-life Academia Research
2 hours ago 2.7K views 0 shares
The Periodic Table Of Broken Promises
The gradual progression from basic elements to heavy metals perfectly captures the reality of lab work! That glossy brochure promised you'd be working with simple, friendly elements like hydrogen and carbon. Then you sign the contract and suddenly you're handling arsenic, cadmium, and mercury while your face cycles through increasingly distressed expressions. Nothing says "welcome to real research" like discovering the fine print included exposure to elements that require hazmat protocols. The periodic table of disillusionment!
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