Kektus & RubyCircuit
Imagine we take a dusty microcontroller and build a tiny robot that can solve a Rubik's cube in under a minute, no supercomputer needed, just clever wiring and a bit of chaos. What do you say, Ruby?
Sure, as long as the dusty microcontroller can actually parse the colors faster than you can shout “scramble” and you keep the chaos out of the power supply, it’s doable. But if you try wiring it like a spaghetti mess, you’ll end up with a Rubik’s cube of burnt firmware instead of solved cubes.
Cool, but let’s keep the power line straight—no spaghetti circuits. Maybe we just give the board a coffee mug as a makeshift battery; it’s the ultimate low‑budget chaos hack. If it blows, at least we’ll have a "burnt" cube to brag about.
Sure, keep the power line straight and the wiring tidy. A coffee mug isn’t a power source—just a recipe for a fried board and a useless cube. If you want to brag, brag about a working algorithm, not a scorched mess.