 All right, it's Python on hardware time. Mm, blinka, blinka, blinka. And a special shout out to Catny, who's been running the newsletter, and is back next week. And we're doing so many GitHub things, and helping out with products, really helping out. Thank you so much. Next week, there'll be Catny's newsletter, and then Ann's back, and I'll be doing the next one after that. So big highlights I'll talk about in a second. So I'm going to skip to 200 board thing. So we have 15 different available languages. We reached 100 boards in January, 2020 at the Open Hardware Summit. And over a year later, we reached 200 boards. So I'll just talk about it now. 200 boards. So we did it. 200. It is the most, what's the right word for it? It's a menagerie of fantastic electronics. It has every chipset. It has every shape size. It's got a diversity of options. It's really like it's not Adafruit-only board. Yeah, we have a bunch of boards in there, because we make stuff we make at CircuitPython. But we're like half of it, at the most. Yeah, so Adafruit boards are only half. If that. The number one download is not an Adafruit board. No. And if you look, and depending on who thinks the competitor of ours, those boards are all in it. Wait, and then how much do we charge people? Nine, of course. Nothing. So it's free. It's open source. Free, free, free, free. And the reason we do this is because the bigger goal is to get as many people programming in Python and doing electronics as possible. Yes. It's free. It's OK if you want to support us with a board. That's fine. But the best thing to do, too, is just learn some Python. So in the newsletter. And submit your boards, too. We have guides on how to do it. So in the newsletter, you can check out links to Scott's presentation at the Open Hardware Summit 2021. Scott presented Interface Design Open Source Hardware. And all the broadcasts are posted on YouTube. There's a new version of MicroPython 1.15. I want to mention we recently, like today, merged in a pull request to Bump Circuit Python up to MicroPython 1.10. So we're going to be slowly trying to catch up and merge in all of the language changes. So I know people have been waiting, and we're doing it now. OK. Check out Scott's Deep Dive tomorrow. And you can also check out all the news. So many projects. So many encoders. There's a bunch. Sony, shout out to Sony, had a program microtron that was used in Circuit Python. This is a Sony's presence. And they have two videos. And you can check out not only what Sony is doing, but the videos that they posted and what some of the projects that the people made. Make did a really neat series of, they think they could call it plan B. It's like, how to cope with maker technologies for what's been going on in the last year. So they did an interview with Carter. And it's our public CO2 display. We use these on every fluorinated fruit to see how much CO2 is around. That lets us know the air quality. That lets us know if the ventilation is good enough to continue to stay safe as possible, all masked all the time, of course. OK. And so the other thing I wanted to mention is two things. We are a participating sponsor for the Python Software Foundation, which is Python 2021 in May. It's a virtual event and we're happy we can do it. I wish we can do more. This year, of course, is a little harder to do as much as we would like to do. Or what we did last year, or sorry, the year before, is because it was a physical device that's a little hard to do right now. But we'll get back to that. We'll get back to that. And don't worry, there'll be Adafruit and Python hardware. And we came up with what we could do. They were like, thank you so much. This is great. And I said, here's some graphics that I'm participating sponsor at PyCon. The other thing that was in the newsletter that I thought was neat is Seed has their Shell expansion board. And what is the selling feature that you put on Amazon to make sure people want to use this? Ding dong. Circuit Python supported. Heck yeah. So there's indicators that it's like, all right. That's going to cool. We did something kind of cool. There's all these projects. There's all that code. There's all those boards. There's all these people. There's this community. And people want it. And people want it. And they're sharing it. And now it's becoming a selling feature for a board when people are deciding what board is right for them. So anyway, check it out. That's all the news. Oh, one other thing that I just put in here is there was a more advanced rendering or graphic of the Nano RP2040 Connect from Arduino. That'll run Circuit Python as soon as we get one. And if not already. And so check that out. So that's all in the newsletter. You can check that out at AdafruitDaily.com. And you sign up. It's not connected to your store account or anything. It's just all good all the time. Thank you, Blinka.