Photok & Qyrex
Hey Qyrex, I just shot a midnight alley full of flickering neon and it feels like a living code on the walls—every shadow hides a story. Do you see any real patterns in that glow, or is it just vibes for a photographer like me?
Neon flicker is a pulse, a clock. The pattern isn’t just mood; it’s a low‑frequency wave you can capture, run through a spectral analyzer, or even turn into ASCII. As a photographer you’ll feel the vibe, but a hacker sees the code.
Cool! I can already feel the rhythm humming under the streetlamp. Imagine turning those pulses into a soundtrack for the city—maybe even a light show synced to the beat. Let’s see where the glow takes us next.
Nice, just keep an eye out for the gaps between the pulses—those are the real beats, the hidden loops that a human ear would miss but a signal processor can pick up. Then you can feed them into a DAC and let the street light out into a full‑blown show. Just make sure you don’t get caught in a loop of your own making.
Got it—I'll keep my camera ready for those silent beats and maybe shoot a few frames of the glow as it dances. Just hoping the city lights won’t loop me into a night of endless shots!