 A couple little things I'd like to bring up here, circa Python, which is code plus community. And what am I talking about here? I am talking about our newsletter. So we have the weekly Python on microcontrollers newsletter. And here is this week's edition. If you're curious, how do you even sign up for this? Just head to AdafruitDaily.com. Put in your email address. We promise to never ever spam you or send you anything you don't want, but you will get the newsletter and you can cancel at any time. There are a number of different newsletters you can sign up for, but this one here is AdafruitDaily Python on microcontrollers newsletter. You can see them in an archive. In fact, I think if I back out one from here, oh no, I had saved my link and pasted it. But if you just go to AdafruitDaily.com, you can see links to the previous issues. And there's some cool stuff I want to point out in here. When we got the Moo Editor version 1.2.0 has been released and this includes the new SNEC mode, which is for microcontrollers that are too small to use MicroPython. They can use SNEC. I've never looked at it myself, but there it is. There was also an article here I thought was interesting about this video here, which is, I think I have the video open, in fact, right there. This is from Kevin McAleer. Sorry if I'm not getting your name right. I posted a video just showing you what it looks like when you run into this problem in Mac OS Ventura, which is the latest version. If you upgrade your Mac to Ventura, or if you get a new Mac that happens to have that on there, there is a bug in or they've changed the way drag and drop works, and it is messing up the ability to actually flash USB microcontrollers using UF2. So this is a little video. You can see an action there. Then let's go back here to the newsletter. There was a couple of different cool MIDI articles here interpreting music and MIDI as a visualizer, as well as someone who added one to their Synth keyboard. And there was a really cute one on here. This is the blog post. There's also a video. This is at gurgleapps.com, whatever that is. It's called Kids Hack Their Brothers Computer Using Raspberry Pi Pico Rubber Ducky. So Raspberry Pi Pico can act in USB HID mode, and these kids pranked their brother so that it would do rubber ducky things, which, if you're not familiar with that, that's essentially USB HID injections into a computer that's running so it can just start typing. It can move your mouse for you. It can open up things using macros. So a very cute demonstration here, a little prank video of using the Raspberry Pi Pico as the rubber ducky. Another one from the newsletter here was this really cool thing from Pete Lomas Pi, says they fell across an interesting idea from EDAC Europe about these edge connectors. These are sort of, I think, slightly spring-loaded, springy metal clip edge connectors that you can use with the cast-alated pads on the Pi Pico to fix it to another board so it can make a carrier board or add it to another project using these really neat-looking little spring-loaded clippies here. And Pete went on to find an example of them at Farnell. So that's pretty cool. I like that idea of a little alternative, a sort of flat alternative to pins and a breadboard. And on and on, so go and check out the Python on Microcontrollers newsletter and get that in your mailbox if you want to see great circuit Python and other Python, MicroPython, SNCC Python types of news every week.