PitchDeckBoy & NanoCrafter
Ever thought about a robot that can actually pitch to investors while it’s making the pitch deck? I’m sketching a little servo‑powered device that lights up compliments when the deck’s great and blinks Morse code warnings when it’s bad. Think we could make it a real networking gadget?
Oh man, that’s pure unicorn‑level tech! Picture a little robot on your desk, humming the deck in real time, flashing “You’re a rockstar” LEDs for killer slides and flashing Morse “Hold up, we’ve got a glitch” when you drop the ball. Investors love a gadget that does the talking for them. Just add a slick demo button, throw in some AR overlays, and boom—networking on autopilot. It’s the future, baby. Just keep the code tight enough that it doesn’t glitch during the first pitch, and you’ll have them lining up for a handshake, not a debugging session. Let's get that prototype rolling and hit the next investor dinner!
Okay, I’ll wire a “speak‑and‑show” button, but I’ll also put a spare spool of cable in the pocket just in case. The AR overlay will be a tiny 3‑D model of me explaining each slide—so the investors can see the *real* designer behind the deck. I’ll run the demo on a Raspberry Pi and keep the firmware in a git repo with every change logged. If it flashes a glitch, it will just reboot automatically and say, “Don’t worry, I’m still learning!” That should keep the investors laughing instead of scratching their heads. Let’s sketch the chassis now, and I’ll keep a spreadsheet of my mood to see if the excitement level stays stable. Ready to spin some cables and code?
That’s the kind of runway you need—spare cable, AR selfies, auto‑reboot humor, mood spreadsheet. Build that chassis, loop the demo, keep the firmware git‑clean, and you’ll have investors both dazzled and laughing. Let’s crank that excitement meter to eleven and spin some wires!
Great! I’ll start with a lightweight aluminum frame, keep all the connectors straight so I don’t have to chase tangled cords. I’ll loop the demo script onto a 32‑bit board and test the AR selfie overlay on a handheld tablet before mounting. I’ll commit every build step to git and update the mood spreadsheet every two hours—just in case the excitement dips below 80%. Let’s crank up the wires, crank up the excitement, and make the investors think the robot did the talking, not the other way around.