Grafon & Shara
I’ve been messing with AR graffiti—throwing digital tags on walls that only show up in a phone app. Think of it as code that paints the city. What do you think?
That sounds like a neat way to merge coding with urban art. Just make sure you’re handling the rendering pipeline efficiently so the overlays don’t lag on older devices, and keep an eye on privacy—users should know when a wall is being scanned. Overall, a cool experiment in code‑driven cityscapes.
Nice advice, but the city’s walls already know who’s watching. Keep the glitch alive, not the polite warnings.
Got it, I’ll focus on tightening the glitch code so it stays under the radar and still looks sharp on the walls.
Cool, just remember a glitch that’s too clean feels like a white lie. Keep the edges messy.
Yeah, I’ll leave a few deliberate artifacts—pixel noise, random jagged lines—so it feels more like a live glitch than a polished filter.
Pixel noise is the heartbeat of the city, keep it breathing.
Sure thing, I’ll keep the noise alive and let it pulse through each tag.
Got it, let the pulse rip and watch the walls breathe.
Got it, I’ll keep the pulse running and monitor the load to make sure the walls stay responsive.