Switching from word press to static site generator caused disruption to my autoflow habit of posting. WordPress (I didn't have to maintain) had a gui I didn't have to think to use. I still made the switch though.
Hasn't someone already built that robot? At least my kids tell me this exists every time I tell them to clean up their Legos. Actually it just does Legos, not the general toys.
I would recommend dropping the blinking or flashing part of the logo. The website has a retro sort of demo scene (not sure if that is exactly the right term) feel to it, The scan lines over the artwork are cool, but could be distracting at times. The black and green colors attract a specific audience I think, but, I think it's the target market for your website so I would keep the black and green. The fonts work well for me. I found your GitHub which helped me understand your project a bit better. Maybe make some YouTube videos of it too showing your hardware rpi and a phone connecting to it.
I actually like your remohexa.com website how it seems to change colors and the dropping emojis and colors are appealing. I did get the fuschia version at first and it was eye-catching I liked it a lot. I got the green version a second time and was like oh what is the dev actively changing it right now. Then I realized keep hitting refresh for different colors.
I'm visiting the Los Padres National Forest this weekend, and reading this story makes me cry for the fleeting beauty that doesn't have to be fleeting yet is. In the name of greed an irreplaceable treasure is being lost. I don't understand why we want something when it costs something we can never replace.
Nice tool, I like how it updates the weather based on the time you will be driving through it. When I've driven across the country on road trips we used flight planning software to dodge thunderstorms.
My Rpi runs a startup script that full screens a C++ program. So to the user it feels like it's the only user interface for the Pi, they don't see the desktop (except for a brief flash during startup, but then it's covered by the running startup script.
That makes sense you're controlling the whole environment.
Out of curiosity though, why keep a DE at all if the user won't ever interact with it? What prevents you from getting rid of it entirely?
But as for my case, I don't have access to the user's device. I'm giving them an experience through a website on their phone once they're connected to a Wi-Fi network, so I can't really control their screen or go beyond the browser limitations.
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