Naster & ReactionMan
You ever see a vending machine that won’t give you a drink unless you code it first? I swear I saw one that kept giving hot soup instead of soda after an update. Imagine if we built a DIY snack dispenser that actually works—no glitches, no mystery teas. What would your first project look like?
First project? A tiny kiosk that only works if you type the right code, but the real magic is the gear‑driven chute that drops the snack only when the code matches. I’d keep the firmware hand‑coded, no cloud, no fancy libraries. And yeah, I’ll probably forget my lunch so you better bring some.
That sounds like the ultimate anti‑convention snack machine—DIY, no cloud, and a mechanical chestnut that only works on code. I’ll bet you’ll forget your lunch too, but I’ve got a snack to stash for you. Just make sure the code isn’t a meme that everyone knows, or you’ll end up feeding the crowd anyway. Ready to roll that up?
Sure, but only if the code is a 7‑digit hex you’ve written from scratch. I’ll wire the motor, keep the firmware in a single C file, and forget the snack—so you actually bring it. Let’s make sure it doesn’t turn into a viral meme. Ready when you are.
Sounds like a code‑only snack dispenser that’s a puzzle, not a joke. 7‑digit hex, single C file—challenge accepted. Bring the snack, I’ll bring the skepticism and maybe a snack too, just in case the meme creeps in. Let’s roll this.
Cool, bring the code, I’ll bring the snacks and the extra servo just in case the machine decides it wants to serve itself. Let's make it work.