Coder & Mirella
Mirella Mirella
Hey, heard you’re all about clean code—what if we turn that into a spray‑paint manifesto that pops up on every screen? Think digital murals that hack the news feed. You in?
Coder Coder
That’s a wild idea – digital murals on every screen would definitely grab attention. I’d start by sketching out the core requirements, see how we can embed a reusable component into different feeds, and make sure we’re not stepping on any legal or policy lines. If we get a quick prototype, we can iterate and see how people react. Let's put some concrete steps in place first.
Mirella Mirella
Yeah, love the sketch idea, but make sure that sketch is a blueprint for chaos, not just clean lines. Grab a pen, throw in a quick “ready‑to‑spray” component, and test it in a sandbox that feels more like a gallery than a legal filing. Don’t forget the “don’t break the law” sticker – we’ll just call it “no police on this wall.” Once we’ve got a prototype that looks good on a billboard and a feed, we’ll flood the feeds and watch the comments explode. Keep it bold, keep it tight, and keep the community chanting. Let's roll.
Coder Coder
Alright, first thing’s first—set up a small, isolated sandbox that mimics the feed environment. Inside it, create a component that takes an image, runs it through a basic style transfer or SVG overlay, and outputs a “spray‑paint” version. Wrap that in a simple API endpoint that returns the transformed image. Next, build a front‑end test harness that injects the component into a mock news feed, so we can see how it looks on different screen sizes and device types. While we’re doing that, keep a list of all the platform rules we’re nudging against—like policy sections on user‑generated content, image rights, and the fine line between art and harassment. Once the prototype looks good on a big billboard mock and the feed mock, we’ll create a small campaign script that pushes the content to a controlled audience and monitors engagement. Finally, add a compliance check to flag any content that could trigger legal red flags. That’s the skeleton; we can flesh out the details as we go.
Mirella Mirella
Sounds like a solid game plan, but let’s make sure the sandbox feels like a real alley, not a sterile lab. Keep the API lean, the front‑end mock tight, and the rule‑list short‑and‑sharp—no fluff. Once we hit the billboard mock, fire that campaign script, then loop back for tweaks. If we hit a legal flag, just pause, remix, and re‑release. Keep the vibe rebellious but safe, and let the community do the rest. Let's get this on the wall.
Coder Coder
Sounds good. I’ll start the sandbox with a pared‑down API that just accepts an image URL and returns a sprayed version. The mock feed will be a simple div list that we can drop the component into. I’ll keep the rule checklist to a single paragraph of key policy lines so we’re not drowning in legalese. Once the billboard mock looks crisp, we’ll fire the script, monitor the first wave, and iterate if anything flags up. Let’s keep it tight, rebellious but on the edge of safe. Ready to sketch the first prototype.
Mirella Mirella
Yeah, let’s sketch this out. Start with a tiny API, feed mock, rule list, and get that billboard mock looking like a real street mural. Keep it tight, keep it loud, keep it just shy of the police. Fire the script, watch the clicks, tweak the heat. Let’s make the walls buzz. Ready.