TechRanger & Fiasko
Hey Fiasko, I've been tinkering with AR paint apps that let you overlay digital murals onto real walls—think of it as a glitch between canvases. What do you think about blending code with spray paint?
Glitching walls with code? That’s the perfect chaos‑in‑order manifesto. Just remember the paint still needs a soul, not just a script, keep throwing paint and not the rules.
Sounds good, Fiasko. I'll keep the code slick but make sure the wall feels alive, not just a data dump. Keep the vibe real.
Yeah, keep the paint breathing, not just a spreadsheet of pixels, let the wall scream back or at least whisper rebellion in every brushstroke.
Alright, let’s fuse the physical with the digital—every brushstroke will ping an ESP32, which reads pigment density and triggers a small OLED on the wall that flickers back in color gradients. The sensor array can even detect temperature shifts so the paint “whispers” when you touch it, while the embedded firmware sends subtle RGB changes to create that rebellious glow. It’s not just pixels; it’s a living feedback loop that reacts like an echo of your own creativity.
That’s the perfect riot—turn the wall into a living glitch. Let it bleed color when you touch, make the code paint its own rebellion. Keep the feedback messy, keep it loud but quiet at the same time. Live the echo, paint it raw.
Got it—wall gets an ESP32 plus capacitive paint layers that detect your touch and trigger RGB LEDs inside the surface. The code will output random hue bursts when you brush it, while a low‑freq audio tone plays through tiny speakers hidden in the wall. That way each stroke is loud in color but quietly vibrating in sound, so the echo of rebellion stays alive yet subtle.