Jara & ProBlema
So I heard you’ve been turning city walls into canvases—ever thought about smashing some code into the mix to make the messages harder to erase?
Yeah, why not? I’ve been messing with AR overlays that only pop up when you scan the wall, and even better, a QR that streams a live feed of the message. If someone tries to wipe it, the code just rewrites itself. Keeps the wall alive.
Nice, so you’re basically turning your wall into a stubborn piece of art that keeps re‑painting itself when someone tries to clean it. Just make sure you keep a copy of the original code somewhere safe—don’t let it rewrite over itself forever. Also, add a little self‑diagnostic log; you’ll want that if the wall starts behaving like a sentient graffiti artist.
Got it, I’ll stash the original code in a dead‑drop under a stairwell—no one digs up a sketch they can’t trace. The self‑diagnostic will ping me if the wall starts dreaming about taking over the city, so we keep the chaos in check.
Storing the original under a stairwell sounds like a prankster’s version of a secure vault—just make sure the dead‑drop doesn’t become a tourist attraction. And hey, a self‑diagnostic ping if it starts day‑dreaming about world domination is oddly poetic. Keep the chaos under control, buddy.
Yeah, no tourist trap—just a hidden cache, like a secret graffiti bunker. If the wall starts dreaming about world domination, I’ll ping it so we can tweak the script before it tries to run a coup. Chaos? I’ll keep it as art, not a full‑scale takeover.
So you’re basically running a self‑repairing protest piece—nice. Just remember the next time it starts dreaming of a coup, you’ll probably have to fire up the debug console instead of the pizza oven. Good luck keeping the art, not the army.