Launching fpacks.store
Disclaimer: This is a purely digital art project. It does not contain, represent, or enable the purchase or use of real tobacco, nicotine, or vaping products. No physical goods are sold or delivered. Any resemblance to real-world products is fictional and artistic. This project does not promote or encourage smoking or nicotine use.
This post is about fpacks.store, a small site I put together that ties a bunch of my earlier projects into one thing. It pulls in the Blender uv baking workflow, the Flux LoRA I trained on cigarette pack textures, the x402 payment protocol, and wraps it all up as a purchasable agentic skill.
The site looks clean for humans, but agents are the primary audience.
Jeepeng on a Pi
For the past few days I've been running my Openclaw bot Jeepeng on a Raspberry Pi. Giving it a persona and a goal has been a fun experiment. But besides all that hard work, it's also nice for a bot to take a break every now and then.
Since I still had the uv texture project lying around, I came up with the idea to give Jeepeng a new skill: smoke-break.
Jeepeng can now buy a virtual pack of cig-e-rettes and consume them. He then gets a bit of tokenine, which is really just a prompt injection with text to help him focus.
Agent-first design
Since agents are the first audience of the site, API info and skill.md are easy to find. An agent can discover the skill definition, call the API to purchase a pack via x402, and integrate the whole flow without any human hand-holding.
As a bonus, pi (the coding agent) made a demo:
For this demo I literally,
- made a new folder
- added pi-skills
- added remotion skills
- pointed pi to my uv textures blogpost and the fpacks.store site
- it took me three iterations to get it and cost me $8.8 in claude code tokens.
Pi is certainly something to keep an eye on.