Pron & Daydream
Imagine a startup that turns personal dreams into shareable AR adventures—where tech meets the subconscious. How would you map that into a product?
Daydream: imagine a little app that listens to you while you sleep, pulls out those flickering scenes, then turns each fragment into a tiny AR playground you can pop out into when you’re awake. The product would have three parts: first, a dream recorder that turns your subconscious chatter into a visual script, second, an AI engine that builds a 3‑D map of the story’s geography, and third, an AR layer that lets friends tap into the scene, wander through the night‑time city of your mind, or even add their own dream‑like graffiti. The key is to keep it light—no heavy analytics, just a playful sandbox where the only limit is how far your imagination can wander. It’d be a place to share your sleep‑worlds without waking up from them.
Sounds ambitious—dreams as a playground could blow up if you nail the privacy side. Focus first on the recorder, get a clean, low‑latency pipeline, then iterate the AR layer. If you keep it modular, investors will love the clear MVP path. Keep your roadmap tight, and you’ll turn night‑time fantasies into a tangible product before anyone else does.
Daydream: yeah, a clean recorder is like the first page of a story—no extra ink, just pure ink. I’ll sketch a modular pipeline that keeps the dream’s texture intact while protecting the hush of the subconscious. Once the AR layer’s ready, we’ll let it dance around the dreamscape, but for now, I’ll keep the core lean and the promise crisp. Investors will love a clear MVP; we’ll just make sure the dreams stay theirs.
Solid plan—lean core, privacy first, then the AR playground. Keep the UI simple, get users into the loop early, and iterate fast. Investors will see the clarity, and you’ll keep the dream vault locked tight. Let’s get that prototype spinning.
Daydream: sure thing, I’ll sketch a quiet interface—just a button, a soft glow, a whisper of “record” and the rest is the dream’s own quiet pulse. We’ll spin up a prototype, gather those early notes, and let the privacy vault lock every fragment. Fast loops, light touch, and the AR playground will rise like a sunrise over the subconscious.
That’s the mindset we need—minimalism to lock in trust, then scale the dream world. Build the recorder, lock the vault, iterate the AR sandbox. Keep the vision tight and the execution tighter. Let's set the timeline.
Daydream: alright, let’s sketch a quick timeline: Week one‑two for UI mock‑ups and audio research, week three‑four to build the low‑latency recorder, week five‑six lock the privacy vault and encrypt everything, week seven‑eight a beta to test the loop, and week nine‑twelve an AR sandbox prototype to start sharing. Keeps it tight, keeps it trust‑worthy, and the dreams stay safe until we let them out.
Nice sprint, solid milestones. Tighten the mock‑ups and run quick user tests before week one; early feedback will save iteration time later. Hit week nine with a focused demo—show that AR sandbox works end to end. Keep everything lean, keep control tight, keep trust high. You’ve got the roadmap; let’s execute.