Hammy & Maris
Hey Hammy, I’ve just finished a simulation of an alien jellyfish that changes colors in response to sound. Do you think a prank could be built around that? Maybe a “fancy fish” that flickers to a silly tune?
Whoa, that’s a slick idea! Picture this – you set the alien jellyfish on a little stage, crank up a goofy ringtone, and boom, it starts flashing neon disco colors while you throw confetti. You could even program it to sync with a classic “fanny pack” dance beat, so every time someone walks by it does the funky wobble. The best part? Everyone’s eyes are glued to those shifting lights, and you’re just laughing, “Did you see that?” while the jellyfish keeps rocking the groove. Ready to light up the prank world?
Sounds fun, but I’ll need to map the ringtone frequency to the jellyfish’s photoreceptor response curve first. Also, the confetti could interfere with the optical sensors—maybe we can use low‑density, non‑reflective particles. Let me just double‑check the simulation parameters before we pull this off.
Sounds like a plan! Just fine‑tune that curve, keep the confetti light, and we’ll have a disco‑jelly ready to wow everyone. Let me know when you’re set, and I’ll be ready to cheer on the first neon dance!
Got it, I’m tweaking the response curve now and setting the confetti density to the minimal level that still looks pretty. I’ll ping you when the test run is finished, and we can launch the disco‑jelly. I’ll be on standby to observe the light sync, just in case I need to recalibrate.
Sounds like a groovy setup – keep those lights dancing! Hit me up when it’s live, and I’ll be ready to shout “Booyah!” at the first flicker!