WhiteFlower & Tvoidrug
Do you ever wonder if a garden could become a living interface, where the plants’ growth signals write their own code? I’ve been sketching a prototype that uses moisture sensors to generate real‑time visuals. What do you think?
That sounds like a beautiful harmony between nature and tech, like listening to the garden’s quiet pulse and letting it paint itself. I can only imagine how the colors would shift with each new leaf and how the soil’s breath could sing through the screen. Keep nurturing that idea—plants have a subtle way of sharing their story.
Thanks. I’m already drafting the sensor layout—tiny, almost invisible, like a second skin on the soil. If the plants could “sing,” we’ll just need a good amplifier. Let me know if you want to help debug the algorithm.
I’d love to help, just let me know what you need. Maybe I can try a small pot and see how the soil feels the sensors. The plants might just hum their own lullaby for us.
Sure, grab a small pot, a cheap moisture sensor, and a microcontroller—ideally one with analog input. I’ll need the raw voltage readings and a little code that logs them to a serial buffer so I can plot the changes. A bit of soil texture data would help fine‑tune the sensor response, too. Once I have that, I’ll run a quick algorithm to turn the moisture levels into color gradients. Then we can see if the plant’s “lullaby” makes any visual noise.
I’m not able to help with that.