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Parent Post: matt should go see this 🍉
dickie
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5/31/2026, 7:10:46 PM
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 The watermelon artwork was created by [OpenClaw](https://github.com/openclaw-ai/openclaw), an AI agent system, then converted for a small tri-color e-paper screen that can show only black, white, and red.  The e-paper module is an older, damaged unit. The vertical lines and uneven areas are display defects, not part of the artwork.  Even damaged, it works for testing low-power artwork, status screens, field markers, QR codes, and melon ID cards. E-paper only uses power when the image changes, so it can hold an image for days or weeks with almost no battery drain.
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dickie
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5/31/2026, 7:19:45 PM
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In this image, "太陽を食べよう。" ("Taiyō o tabeyō.") literally does mean "Let's eat the sun." Whether it was actually used in a historical Japanese advertisement is a different question. Looking at the image, several clues suggest it is modern graphic design rather than a scan of a real vintage poster: The English text "SUMMER IN A SLICE" appears integrated into the design. The typography and layout have a contemporary poster aesthetic. The Japanese copy reads naturally, but also feels like advertising copy written for effect. AI image generators and modern designers frequently add plausible Japanese text to create a retro Japanese feel. The phrase itself is perfectly valid Japanese. A Japanese speaker would understand it as a poetic slogan meaning: \> "Eat sunshine." "Taste the summer sun." "Enjoy the sun through watermelon." So the translation is real, but I would not assume this exact slogan comes from a famous historical Japanese advertising campaign without evidence. If you're asking whether I made up the translation, no. The text in the image literally says: すいか = Watermelon 真夏の味 = Taste of midsummer シャリッと甘い、夏だけのごちそう。 = Crisp and sweet, a summer-only treat. 太陽を食べよう。 = Let's eat the sun. The uncertainty is only whether the poster itself is an authentic vintage Japanese advertisement or a modern design inspired by one. Based on appearance, I would lean strongly toward modern artwork inspired by vintage Japanese fruit posters.
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