If you use a general search engine to simply look for WigglyPaint, you’ll see your answer. Right at the top of the results are wigglypaint.com, wigglypaint.art, wigglypaint.org, wiggly-paint.com, and half a dozen more variations. Most offer WigglyPaint, front-and-center, usually an unmodified copy of v1.3, sometimes with some minor “premium features” glued onto the side or my bylines peeled off. If you dig around on these sites, you can read about all sorts of fantastic WigglyPaint features, some of which even actually do exist. Some sites claim to be made by “fans of WigglyPaint”, and some even claim to be made by me, with love. Many have a donation box to shake, asking users to kindly donate to help “the creators”. Perhaps if you sign up for a subscription you can unlock premium features like a different color-picker or a dedicated wiggly-art posting zone?
2026-02-22 21:04:33 +01:00
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Another, apparently less rigorous approach, but potentially very good in the real world, is to provide the source code itself, and ask the agent to reimplement it in a completely novel way, and use the source code both as specification and in order to drive the implementation as far as possible away from the code itself. Frontier LLMs are very capable, they can use something even to explicitly avoid copying it, and carefully try different implementation approaches.