 Okay, so this week, not only do we have a piece of hardware from back in the day, but we have the commercial that came with it. So here it is. We knew they were coming. Futuristic computer minds, advanced intelligence, and electronic language of lights and sounds. But there's one thing we didn't know. How much fun they are! Touch me. Three different games in one where your family challenges each other and an unpredictable computer. Touch me. Funland action for the whole family, or just for one. Touch me. The pocket-sized computer game from Atari. What will they think of next? Yeah, not a great name. But look at this design. So this was a physical representation of an Atari game for arcades. And you know, Simon came along and I think they wanted to have, you know, some type of handheld game as well. Notice that they didn't have any, they only had red LEDs, otherwise they would have had yellow, green, and blue, but blue LEDs didn't exist yet. I think they did have yellow and green, but they didn't have blue. Yeah. They didn't have the in-gain. Very Simon-like. And like Lady Ada said, when you don't have different color LEDs, you have to just put the LED on a colored square. But look at how they have the Atari switches. You know, those are the, you remember from the Atari 2600, those mode switches. They are extremely satisfying and good-looking. Yeah. And here's some of the packaging. You can see. Touch me. Yeah. Touch me. Three whole games in one. Three whole games in one. What are you going to, what are you going to do about it? So it's like Pong, where they're like, we have tennis and hockey and it's like- We have three entire games. Yeah. It's 1978, the times are simpler. And you know, he's getting in the manual and we have all this stuff. So we're trying to do our best to preserve some of the computing history. This is a very weird device that not a lot of people heard about and not a lot of people saw. I never heard of this. Yeah. And that is this week's Richard.