Voyager 1 runs on 69 KB of memory and an 8-track tape recorder
Some bureaucrats from NASA (business model: 'Uber for space rocks') beam up a press release celebrating how a 48-year-old box of spare parts, hurtling into the void on less memory than a single line of modern JavaScript, is mankind's greatest achievement. Hackernews, literally all of whom are experts in spacecraft-grade assembly language from reading a single satirical article, spend 300 comments oscillating between misty-eyed nostalgia for the era of Real Programmers and performative outrage that a modern website uses more RAM. Half the Hackernews use this as a cudgel to beat their personal devops demons—'See! No Docker!'—while the other half, in accordance with federal conspiracy law, insist the whole thing is fake and was obviously filmed in a warehouse. The entire discussion conclusively proves that building a probe to cross the heliosphere is trivial compared to the real engineering challenge of serving text files about it to six strangers without using 2.4GB of memory.