 I thought I had more time. Blinker, blinker, blinker. And what I want to do is first celebrate what has happened. And Lady Eta, maybe you could talk about this. 25,000 thanks. What does it mean when something gets a star on GitHub? An angel gets a swing. An angel gets a swing? No, I'm just kidding. When people use stars to give kudos and to bookmark, now, you know, there's projects with a lot of stars that are great and there's ones that I'm not a huge fan of and they don't have stars or other way around, whatever. It doesn't necessarily, you know, it's not the only value of a project but we think it's really neat when we see people starting the repo because the popularity of people using CircuitPython seems to be related to the growth in how many stars. So it's not how we judge ourselves because we don't use external validation to judge our self-esteem but it's nice. Thank you everybody. I remember when we hit 1,000 stars it was live on the show because we were showing off the Pie Portal and we were like, we were so close to 1,000. And when projects get forked, you don't get the stars from the fork so it's like, you know, you have to start from zero. That's right. Someone just said, do you remember when Scott, we hit 2,000 on a show a while ago? Okay, great. So here's the newsletter. This is another one. Let me reassure everyone again. So Adafruit Daily is not connected to Adafruit.com. It has nothing to do with your store account. Put in one of those email addresses so you can tell if your email was ever harvested. We don't do it. That's why we're confident about saying subscribe, unsubscribe. You'll never have to worry about a newsletter from us or an email if you don't want it. So on the big board this week, Lady Eight is reading me podcasts with GitHub. It was really good. Yeah, they somehow invited me back but I don't think they're going to invite me again. Yeah, that might be my fault. That's okay. No, this one's my fault. Okay. I'll take the blame for this one. August 6th is Circuit Python Day so set your calendars for that. It's Mickey. We'll have a bunch of folks at one. It's going to be Jeff, Dan, Katnie. They're going to discuss Larker Python. At 3 p.m. Lady Eight is going to do a board tour. Not a boring tour but a board tour. And then Scott's going to do a deep dive, special edition, and then we have a lot of other stuff. If you have a Circuit Python project you want to show, Wednesday the 4th, come on by. And Blink accounts too. So if you're using, you know, Raspberry Pi or other single board Linux computers and you're using our Circuit Python libraries, you're welcome. It's cool. Come on by. Yeah. And if you have anything planned, let us know. We know it's, like, still a little challenging with events around the world. The first Circuit Python day we did, there was a lot of in-person ones. We know that's not going to happen. But that's okay. We can do virtual stuff and we can also build some stuff together that we can show next year because we'll be doing one every single year, forever. Adaford, I am a whippersnapper. We're looking for beta testers. Do check out the blog post. Brett and team are working really hard on that, Lauren. And Justin, everyone over there is doing a neat job. It's a very cool, just to describe it in the shortest sentence I could think of is Circuit Python for IoT. Just because it's like if you like ease of use, you plug it in and it just shows up and it just works. I'm designing the IoT system that I want. And so I think it's coming out really good. I think it's something that is cross-platform. It's easy to use. We're going to support Python. Right now we're supporting Arduino C only, but we're going to eventually support Python as well. And thinking about it as components that are plugged together rather than lower abstractions. I think when people use it, they'll know what I mean. It's like we think of things as buttons or potentiometers or relays. And so I think it becomes more beginner friendly because we're not assuming that people are so good at electronics that they know how to abstract between different parts. Anyways, you'll see more from Whippersaw. I like to think of it's like, if you remember the first time you plugged in a microcontroller and it showed up as a USB drive. Yeah, we're trying to take that. That was so easy. That ease of use of CircuitPython and we're bringing it to IoT because I think they're really connected. Talk about the head check. This is neat. Ann's reaching out to the author, April, for this. This is Visual Studio code for Python programmers, which a lot of people use Visual Studio. So do keep an eye on the blog. Someone asked in the chat earlier, what do we think of GitHub co-pilot? Speaking of AI and machine stuff, I don't know. I want to learn more about it. I want to use it and I want to understand it and I want to see what people are saying about it. I don't know yet. I think it's really interesting. I don't know yet. I don't have like, it's good or it's bad, but I'm just like, that's an interesting idea that I didn't foresee. Outside of co-pilot, just another statement. I like AI that helps people, not the AI that everyone says, oh, Skynet, these robots are going to kill us one day, or this like, I like AI that like, here's a human doing something, here's how I can assist and help. I think that's a good way to approach AI instead of like, it's always person versus machine or person versus, you know, this thing. You know, I tend to like AI art and AI generated things that, there's not a harm model there. There's consequences of stuff. So we should think about those. So anyways, I don't know about co-pilot yet. I put my name to be on the beta. I'm not on it yet. Check out the deep dive with Scott. It's exciting. And we're gaming in Georgia. It's good. We're starting to do more projects together. We're teaming up us and MicroPython, CircuitPython, MicroPython. We have a lot more in common, more in common than ever. And I think it's going to be good for both projects. A bunch of keyboard projects, unending really. And latest events and more. All the things that you can sign up for. I did it for daily Python hardware.