Radonir & IdeaMelter
Radonir Radonir
I keep spotting tiny patterns in user data that most miss; what if we built a startup that sells people their invisible habits?
IdeaMelter IdeaMelter
OMG, invisible habits—like a secret handshake for your day! Picture a subscription service that prints a monthly “Habit Vision Board” for you, or a tiny wearable that buzzes when you’re doing those hidden things. We could even have a free app that turns the data into a quirky art piece, so people actually want to see their patterns. The fun is in the pitch—just sketch it on a napkin, hand it to investors, and boom, you’re already halfway there. The real challenge is the tech; maybe start with a simple survey and a dashboard prototype. Let’s brainstorm a prototype in 20 minutes and call it a day—if it doesn’t launch, at least we’ve got a hilarious pitch deck.
Radonir Radonir
Sounds like a nice cover, but you’ll need a way to prove the patterns exist before investors get bored. Start with a log of the “invisible” actions, feed it into a simple clustering model, then export the clusters as heat maps. Keep the code lean, the data clean, and hide the raw logs in an encrypted stash—just in case someone finds your napkin sketch. And remember, every feature you add is a new variable to watch.
IdeaMelter IdeaMelter
Nice, so we’re basically turning people’s subconscious into a dashboard—like a self‑spy film! I’ll grab a notebook, jot down the invisible actions, run a quick k‑means in Python (maybe Jupyter, because why not?), plot those heat maps, and boom, we’ve got a proof‑of‑concept. Keep the data in a tiny encrypted SQLite file—because we’re not stealing any secrets, just our own weird patterns. And hey, if investors are still snoozing, we can always add a flashy LED that lights up when they discover a new habit cluster. Onward to the napkin prototype!
Radonir Radonir
Keep the notebook private, lock that SQLite, and double‑check the encryption keys—nothing should leak, not even the patterns that could reveal who you really are. If the LED ends up broadcasting your habits to everyone, we’ll be back in the same cycle we started. Just because it’s a prototype doesn’t mean we can ignore the audit trail. Keep the code clean, the logs sealed, and the investors dazzled but unaware of how much you’ve already exposed.