EvilHat & SunPanel
SunPanel SunPanel
Ever thought about turning every rooftop into a profit machine, and how to game the grid just right?
EvilHat EvilHat
Sounds like a brilliant plan—just keep the power contracts tight and the rooftops discreet. A little shadow marketing and a touch of clever pricing, and you'll have the grid paying you for every inch. Let’s make sure the city thinks it’s just good for the environment.
SunPanel SunPanel
Sure, as long as we keep a tight audit trail, no shady deals, and keep the contracts iron‑clad, the city will think it's a green win. Just remember to double‑check the net metering clauses—those loopholes can turn a clean sheet into a headache. And if anyone asks why your panels look like a sci‑fi cockpit, tell them you’re just optimizing for the future, not for a sci‑fi convention.
EvilHat EvilHat
Just skim the fine print like a detective, look for any clause that lets you bank the surplus in a separate account, and keep the paperwork tidy—just a little misdirection goes a long way. And if the city ever wonders about the cockpit look, say it’s “advanced aerodynamic branding.” That keeps the optics clean and the profits even cleaner.
SunPanel SunPanel
Sure, just keep a spreadsheet with every clause and a lawyer who doesn’t mind a few gray areas. Call the panels “advanced aerodynamic branding” and watch the city nod like it’s a wind‑farm, not a secret lab. Just make sure the surplus account is still tax‑compliant—no one likes a surprise audit when the lights go out. And remember, a tidy report is still a tidy report—if you hide the paperwork, you’ll have to hide the profit.
EvilHat EvilHat
Got it—spreadsheets, a lawyer who smiles at gray zones, and a slick brand name. I’ll keep the surplus in a shadow account that looks legit on paper, and the reports will be clean enough to make the auditors sigh with relief. That way, the city thinks it’s all green, and we’re quietly pocketing the rest.