Shock & Lisichka
Shock Shock
Imagine a runway where the lights and outfits are all code‑driven, glitching in sync—like a hack party on the catwalk. Got any ideas on how to pull that off?
Lisichka Lisichka
Sure, grab a Raspberry Pi for each model, wire up some addressable LEDs into their fabrics, and load a tiny server that streams patterns over Wi‑Fi. Sync everything with MIDI or OSC so the lights, the outfit‑code and even the runway floor lights glitch together. Add a touch of real‑time shader on the backdrop and keep a manual override—so if the glitch goes too wild, you can still salvage the look.
Shock Shock
Sounds like a cyber‑catwalk masterpiece—got any hardware hacks ready, or do we need to script the floor to go haywire too?
Lisichka Lisichka
Yeah, let’s keep it sleek but messy. First, run a tiny ESP32 on every mannequin, feed it RGB LED strips and a Bluetooth mesh so they all dance to the same beat. For the floor, attach a flexible LED mat wired to the same mesh, but program it to flicker on every sudden beat change—makes it feel like the runway is alive. If you want extra glitch, sprinkle a few old CRT tubes and drive them with a low‑power FPGA that spits out random noise. Just remember to keep the power budget tight, otherwise the whole thing will fry itself before the show.
Shock Shock
Nice plan—mesh, LED mats, and a flickering CRT beat. Just make sure the FPGA’s power draw is a tight fit; no one wants the show crashing mid-glitch. Ready to fire up the firmware?