- cross-posted to:
- programmer_humor@programming.dev
- cross-posted to:
- programmer_humor@programming.dev
- The Article- I Learned Rust In 24 Hours To Eat Free Pizza Morally- Sebastian Carlos - Jun 6, 2025 - This is not just a story about pizza. As a recent Phoronix article explains, the Linux Rust subsystem got into major drama because of my humble quest. - Well, here’s my side of the story, with every kernel of truth exposed. - A Moral Quest for Pizza- Despite being an experienced programmer, I found myself down in my luck financially — mostly as a result of taking extended sabbaticals to recover from burnout. - I’m not one to handle prolonged contact with the overt authoritarianism of the typical HR department. - My bank account was approaching a segmentation fault — I wish I’d held meme stocks a bit longer in 2021. - So, I entered my familiar survival mode: Grinding LeetCode, writing job applications, and cutting luxuries like overpriced sushi delivery. - One well-known hack for programmers in dire straits is, of course, the free food circuit of programming meetups. Luck had it that a Rust meetup was scheduled for the next day, with “pizza” explicitly mentioned in the event title. - The catch? I had never touched Rust. - Here’s where my conscience started throwing exceptions: I couldn’t just freeload pizza. I had to earn each slice. - I had to become a Rustacean in just 24 hours. - Ownership, lifetimes, the borrow checker — all of the Rust Book got dumped into my brain through copious amounts of cheap instant coffee and a sleepless night. - Before leaving, I hyped myself up with some push-ups, and a shower to some 80’s synthwave, singing out loud Yazoo’s “Don’t Go” (a wise omen in retrospect). The Meetup - I entered the co-working space, armed with the ability to nod knowingly at entry-level Rust concepts. - The exposed bricks and Edison bulbs enhanced the feeling of limbo, neither fully “work” nor “social event.” - Two hours in, the smell of pepperoni and Option<Pineapple> was filling the room as the ASCII progress bar of the last speaker’s fancy TUI slides had traversed just 25%. My stomach was sending system calls. - The presentation ends, and the moment of truth arrives: The food table. - I devised a plan to maximize intake and abstractly offset my monetary shortcomings. This military-grade operation involved timed passes around the table, making sure to take sizable but stealthy bites, and securing additional slices for consumption in a secluded area, only to return later for more. - The first challenge came when a legitimate Rustacean started discussing lifetimes with me, one of the hardest topics. - “That’s right…” I managed, “The lifetimes are… almost Husserlian.” - He blinked. “Husserlian?” - Did he see through my bluff? My only choice was to double down: - “Yes the, uh, German philosopher… last name Husserl… You know, we experience time as conscious beings in a temporal horizon… All is Rust. You know, man?” My sleep-deprived brain attempted to pattern-match. - He looked confused, then nodded, maybe mistaking my panic for depth. Mission accomplished. Another slice was mine. - I was on my fourth “first” slice (plus three more surreptitiously eaten ones) and ready to leave, when someone mentioned the after-party. The After-Party - What happened next exists in my memory like fragmented data blocks. - I found myself in deep conversation with a group of Venezuelan femboy Rust developers who were building something revolutionary in the “post-capitalist space.” Their programming socks were striped pink, and their confidence in their technology was infectious. - “You should buy crypto options,” one of them suggested. “I have a hunch about a meme coin. Trust me.” - In my altered state after several Aperol spritzes, this seemed like sound financial advice. I FOMOed my tiny savings at the obscure coin with a logo of the Rust crab holding a bottle of coconut oil: - Minutes later, impossibly, the value shot up 400%. Our phones buzzed with profit notifications. The only thing to do then was to celebrate by visiting that ketamine bar everyone had been whispering about. - The Kernel Incident- In our transcendent state, over hardcore techno music, we did what any group of intoxicated nouveau riche programmers would do: We pair programmed a patch to the Linux kernel’s Rust subsystem. - It essentially replaced close to 50% of the codebase with Rust, thanks to some inspired macro magic and 100% use of our brainpower. - The tests were passing until we got bored and terminated the test process. - I considered the morality of sending such a huge patch on a whim, but I was operating under a different set of ethical principles at that point — ethics of a more cosmic nature. - We submitted it at 6:47 AM with a commit message that just read: “The crab has awakened. Prima Nocta is imposed on all unsafe languages.” - commit deadbeefb9e1d3f5a6c8e2b4d7f9a1c3e5b7d9f2a4c6e8b1d3f5a7c9e2b4d6f8a Author: Sebastian Carlos <sebastiancarlos@protonmail.com> Date: Tue Jun 03 06:47:23 2025 +666 The crab has awakened. Prima Nocta is imposed on all unsafe languages. Co-authored-by: Valentina Bitcoinia <val.php.lambo@cryptofemboys.xyz> Co-authored-by: Esperanza Rustacean <esperanza.zerocost@caracas.rs> Co-authored-by: Sir Borrow Checkington <sir.borrow.checkington@vatican.va> Tested-at: The Ketamine Bar <qa@khole.io>- Pure blackout after that. I woke up two days later in my apartment. - The Reckoning- Our Linux patch had not only been rejected but had apparently been the final straw for Linus Torvalds, who announced in a profanity-laden email that he was removing all Rust code from the kernel. - “I’ve had it,” his email read. “At least C developers know when they’re drunk.” - Phoronix was in uproar about the “Ketamine Kernel Incident.” My GitHub profile had become a cautionary tale. - After soberly checking my earnings, I realized my $100 investment turned a profit of just $400 before fees and taxes. Not enough to quit my job hunt. - In retrospect, the whole experience reminded me of my last job: Good intentions, moral compromises, and spectacular burnout. - But the real shock came when I opened my wardrobe that evening, looking for clean clothes to wear to my job interview in a couple of hours: - There was a collection of striped pink programmer socks. Dozens of them, like some sort of Rust swag. Where had they come from? - But hey, at least I got pizza, and the socks were surprisingly comfortable. - Thanks for reading. If you enjoyed this story and want to help me in these trying times, consider buying me a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/sebastiancarlos. But honestly, I’ll use the money for pizza. 
- fuck medium - It’s good to know I’m not the only one who gets annoyed by them. - 123 mln usd in budget to run an ad infested blog for fuck’s 🍶 
 
- Is there a federated HTML hosting solution? - not that I know of, but you can set up static hosting e.g. on codeberg 
- Ghost has federated blogging I think now 
- @boredsquirrel @SchwertImStein - I remember mentions that there were methods to host static content on ipfs. But I didn’t do it myself. That’s not “activity pub” federated but ipfs is also distributed. - Idk if that would serve your purpose. - Yes I see but no, I meant ActivityPub 
 
 
- That page was a wonderful source of information on machine learning stuff for me while getting my bachelors degree. But still, fuck medium 
 
- Once I “Got” it (and realized the comm this is posted in) this post became good lol 
- Lol 





