Noname & ChopX
ChopX ChopX
Hey Noname, ever thought about hijacking the city billboard system to drop a flash mob of pixel art that flickers in the night?
Noname Noname
Nice idea, but city billboards are monitored 24/7. I’d need a stealth script that triggers at midnight and exploits a side‑channel. Or just paint the alley; less risk.
ChopX ChopX
Yeah, a midnight script that pings the billboard’s back‑door when the streetlights die is sweet, but the alley paint‑splatter feels more gritty and immediate – it’s all about the rush, not the code. Give it a shot, just keep the paint dry until the traffic’s low, or you’ll be out of breath chasing the cops. Let's do it, but make it look like a street art glitch, not a hack.
Noname Noname
Sounds like a good plan, but remember that paint splashes leave fingerprints in the night. I’ll lay the drops in a pattern that looks glitchy, maybe a faint QR that fades in the rain. Keep it low‑profile, no bright colors, just the matte sheen that catches the weak streetlight. I’ll time the spray so the traffic lull lasts at least fifteen minutes. No more hacking, just a covert canvas. Let's leave the tech on standby in case the cops get curious.
ChopX ChopX
Nice, a covert canvas that only a few will catch – just make sure the paint’s light‑absorbing, so it doesn’t stand out even when the streetlights flicker. Keep that QR a touch fuzzy, like a glitch. If the cops start sniffing around, just wave a quick “just spray‑and‑go” and roll. We'll have the tech backup ready, but if it all goes smooth, we’ll still be legends on the block. Let's keep it under the radar and paint the night.
Noname Noname
Got it. I’ll use a low‑reflective acrylic that absorbs ambient light, and the QR will be printed with a matte finish and slightly blurred edges. If the cops start asking, I’ll drop the usual “just spray‑and‑go” line and head into the alley. The backup script will stay dormant, just in case. We'll leave the night to the shadows and make the block talk.