 It is December 16th again, and this is the Microsoft DevSync. So let's get started here. We've had some technical problems, so we'll just jump right into it. Ken, let's do you first, I know you've got a time constraint. Yeah, I'm still working on the integration with the URLs for the backend and for the continuous integration training. I haven't seen any new data. Chris, is there an ETA? When we're going to have some more data in there? Hopefully today, I did find some code changes I need to make after I talked with Michael yesterday, so I made those and testing them and yeah. So hopefully today I'll have some more data out there. Okay. Good. Yeah. So that's what I'm working on. Yesterday, well, yesterday, today and tomorrow. Okay. All right. We'll look forward to getting that online. I'm going to jump to Kevin since he kindly offered to join us here or accepted my offer to join us. So, Kevin, what's going on with the hardware? I'm curious. So I've been working on the hardware, putting all the last pieces together. I think everything is ready to go to ship to our PCBAs. I know Michael is just looking over the last bits of it. I'm bringing out some extra GPIO. Josh, I added your rotary encoder bits. I have, we're really using a lot of almost every GPIO on the Raspberry Pi anyway. So there's a couple GPIO on the XMOS chip that I'm pulling out just as solder-on pins, but they should work pretty well. What else? I think it's ready. Whoops. So great. I'll take one more final look over that with you after this. Who are we going to go with for the PCBA? Well, that's the next step, I think. We still need to send out our codes. So we're at RFQ. OK, great. Thanks, Kevin. Let's go on to Chris Vair then and see how that's going. Excuse me. Hey, so yesterday, aren't you day? Hello. Was that me? Oh, shit. I don't know how to respond to that. OK, sorry, Siri decided to pipe up on me. That was kind of strange. Siri? Siri, what the hell is Siri doing in there? Siri's on my laptop. It comes in all the Macs, man. And Siri doesn't know what to do with, oh, shit. Yeah, I don't know why. And now my dogs decided to park at the front door. So let's start over. Today, I made a change to the code that selects wakeboard samples based on a discussion I had with Michael yesterday. What I'm trying to do, and I didn't support, was the ability to select a higher priority tag when a lower priority tag already existed, which is something that we're going to need when we have all of these files in the precise database that are already tagged as wakeboards or not, but not tagged as human speech yet. So I made that change. I'm testing it. And then as soon as that's tested, I also spent some time working on the load of all the precise data into the database. And that caused a couple problems. That code was not up to date. It's a Python notebook. It wasn't up to date with some of the changes I had made to some of my code since the last time I wrote that. So I had to make some changes there, too. So by the end of today, I should have mine changes tested and some data for Ken to play with tomorrow. So tomorrow will be then preparing for. Sorry, folks. It looks like my internet connection has frozen. Hopefully it'll come back here in just a minute. Up on a database as well. So I can use that as validation for the selects and for the queries and stuff. OK. And then if you find anything that sorts it could be a problem with my conversion routine. So but I just have to. Yeah, but once you're ready, once you're all ready, then I'll be able to validate it against the existing data set. So that's good. OK. Let me know when you have that ready. All right. So I'm sorry, Chris. I missed the last thing that you said before Ken started talking because my internet dropped out again. I'm not sure what's going on. I'm not on Wi-Fi network. Well, that's to solve my Wi-Fi problems, which are all over the place. But I'm on a weird connection here. So I don't know what's going on. I have your tracking numbers in your email. It says December 17th. Thanks. So yeah, so tomorrow I'm going to work. I think I don't know what you missed, but I think probably just tomorrow I'm working on preparing for the production and eventually by the afternoon and installing everything I have to production so we can start doing some tagging. And then I'll do patch releases if I have to if Ken finds anything in his testing. Gotcha. All right. Thank you. Appreciate it. All right, let's go to Gets. Yeah, so you get some testing of the tag yesterday and tagging so we can get that. Everything we just talked about. Also, building new packages from the Microsoft GUI repos and Microsoft GUI Mod 2 so that the screen should default to the current correct orientation, but then we might flip it again is what I hear. But anyway, it was also just making sure I had that build process down pat. And I did a PR to add a bunch of that feedback configuration directly into the CMake list file so that we hopefully be consistent with the packaging rather than each person that chooses their own configuration variables. And that moves us towards CI CD process for those packages. So that's good. Had some good discussions with the lingua franca. What will be the official maintainers of the lingua franca from the community side being Chance, Jarvis, and OK at the moment? So that is able to have right permission to do stuff. Obviously, it's a lot of other contributors, but just trying to put a tiny bit of structure there so that the permissions are explicit and we can update the team list and stuff. And that people understand our merge policies and all that sort of thing. Well, yeah, they're the main teams, I think. OK, great. So this is a little bit of an aside. A little bit. Nope, my. I think Michael might have dropped out again because he's looking very still. Yeah. If you move to Australia, your internet seems like mine. I don't know what's going on. Maybe there's some kind of thing happening in LA. Yeah. I do have my choice of one cable provider, so. Hi. You need to look at your neighborhood. Well, fortunately, we have monopoly laws to. Right. From that sort of thing. So it's really hard to build a competitor in that market, it turns out. Yeah, yeah, I was supporting a local broadband company for a year or so. They had a tower on the top of my house to retransmit their wireless network. But yeah, they had to fold after about a year. So anyway. And our tax dollars paid for the wires that they're running their cable on. Well, yeah. Anyway, you guys do a free market broadband, too, right? Yeah, yeah, totally, totally free market when we were taxed to help them lay the infrastructure. Once the infrastructure was laid, they became very territorial. Yeah, yeah. So, guys, on the lingua franca stuff, I know we're going to talk that up in an upcoming newsletter. I just wanted to ask you to add a couple sentences at the beginning of that just to explain what it is in general, because there's a lot of details like, hey, this and this and this is happening. But just like a couple sentences saying, hey, this is our system for translating between languages. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And that sort of thing. OK, that would be great. Were you anything from our friends at PanaCora? I think they're recent to the hardware today. What are you? I missed the last bit, but I haven't looked at the messages from them yet. But they got better like the last night. They got the road four. And they were interested in the fact that we were going to have to slash every single Raspberry Fire we need firmware. I have to go. I have to go. Don't the new pie is to have the new firmware? You know, at the moment, things like everything you want to come. Well, sorry, folks. I normally have a very good internet connection, but today I don't. Bugs and I can update it. Yeah, yeah, that's true. All right, sorry, guys. My network dropped out again. I'm sure you noticed. So what was this issue about the updating the pie firmware? I guess I'm not really back. All right, well, we're going to call it here for today. Thanks, everybody. We'll figure this out and be back tomorrow.