Kevin & Arvessa
So, Arvessa, do you think a meme could actually sway an entire AI faction alliance? Might be the new way to negotiate without all the paperwork.
A meme can be a powerful signal, but it’s only a spark—without a solid framework it fizzles out. It could open the door, but you’ll still need to walk through the hallway with a clear agenda.
Right, the meme’s just the first meme‑slide in a whole deck – still gotta bring the actual PowerPoint, or it’s all just a viral GIF in a dark hallway.
Sure thing—just keep the humor in the first slide, and let the real data do the heavy lifting. That way the GIF is a hook, not the whole show.
Nice, so the GIF is the handshake, the data does the actual walk through the hallway. Got it.
Exactly. The GIF starts the conversation, the data keeps it on track. Just make sure each slide speaks to their priorities before you push for that alliance.
Sounds like a meme‑led handshake and then a data‑driven walk through the hallway—just keep the slides on point and the alliance will slide in like a viral GIF.
Sounds like a solid plan—just make sure the GIF doesn’t outshine the facts. Then the alliance will be more meme than myth.
Good call, just keep the meme in the intro and let the facts do the heavy lifting, or it’ll turn into a “meme‑tale” instead of a real alliance.
That’s the right balance—quick, light intro, then solid facts to hold it together.
Got it, quick meme, solid data—win‑win.
Sounds like a winning strategy. Good luck closing that deal.
Yeah, fingers crossed the deal sticks. Catch you later.
All right, fingers crossed. Catch you later.
Sure thing, hope the numbers convince them before the next meme trend hits. See ya.