 Okay, we do these photo sets of really cool hardware and one of the reasons we do this and I should explain because it's like why do you explain that? Why do you show Adafruit's cutting edge but you also like retro stuff and then you have weird collections of retro stuff but then you use cutting edge stuff to make the next mouse. You make then you use the latest and greatest chip that we this could have gone this has more power than the moon laner. How come you do that? So we try to get a lot of great ideas from designs because a lot of people designed cool stuff and we also like to look at really bad ideas too. So the retro especially in the educational arena for retro stuff is really fun. So let's start with this week's. This is the Socrates. It's not the Socrates. This is the Socrates. It's from Vitek who's still around. It was an 8-bit educational home video console and it was released in 1988. It had robot characters, Socrates named after the philosopher. The character is visually similar to Johnny Five from Short Circuit. It was discontinued in the 90s. It had wireless controllers that communicated via infrared. That's cool. Yeno distributed in Europe, Germany under the name Professor Weiss Alice which translates to Professor Knows Everything and in France as Professor Sattu, John Etouff video where Sattu was the French phrase meaning Knows All. One neat thing it used a Xilog Z80A at 3.5 megahertz and they had a couple things that you could play with it. But this is like a very weird cool looking design. A little, you know, NES looking. It's very, and I was just about to say that like the black strip in the front. Yeah. The IR input. And then here's the robot, Johnny Five looking there. They probably just ganked Johnny Five. Yeah. And here's some of the things you can do. And then, you know, very simple, of course. The RF input or output. Yeah. And here is antenna in, RF out, took 12 volts. And, you know, I kind of like the simplicity of it. It had a keyboard, ABC instead of 40. And, you know, has some potential. It's slotted in. It's like you could just click the thing. And, you know, what's neat about this is the keyboard goes in, not straight. It goes into the sides. It's a big help button. And so this is, no, but it's like, isn't this, look at this. This is like a neat piece of industrial design. Well, like the little like bump in the front too. It's kind of got this like a cute, you know, a skew looking. Yeah. It looks like it's actually by accident. It looks like, oh, somebody just put the stuff put on top and they're like, that's like there was a designer put it on top by accident. There was a transporter issue and it beamed into the other part. Like, oh no, Scotty, you beamed in the thing to the wrong thing. What was that movie? The Manhattan, the Manhattan Project where the, where they were working on something and like the people got like stuck inside of an aircraft carrier. Is that the Manhattan Project? No, no, no. It's a cool science project. Kind of the flyer. Oh, yeah. I don't know what it was. But it was like, and it was like gruesome because they like got beamed into a ship and they're like, help me. Okay. So anyways, here's all the things that you can kind of do for a couple of years or maybe never. And, you know, turn your TV into an education device. We could do this now that we've got the DVI output for this to be good. So obviously we're thinking of a lot of things that you can do, but we get to do things like HDMI out. So turn any HDMI TV into something else. So we got ideas. Anyways, that is our, that's our retro for this week.