 So, yeah, what is MicroPython all about? It's a re-implementation of Python 3, so it's aimed to be efficient to run on a microcontroller and in constrained systems, so it's not Python as you know it from the desktop computer, it's Python as its re-implementation of it. There are a lot of different development platforms out there already that ship with MicroPython pre-installed. So you have the official MicroPython pieboards and some cameras that run MicroPython as the optical camera recognition. OtherFoot has a circuit Python port of MicroPython and they are doing a lot of hardware and supporting the community in quite some big effort. Then there's BBC MicroPython, there's a company named Pycom, so it's already quite a lot out there if you want to try it out. You can also try it out online on our home page in a simulator. MicroPython had started about five years ago with a Kickstarter campaign, Damian George is the creator of it, he is an Australian physicist who was working at Cambridge at the time, he had the idea of putting Python on a microcontroller, so he ran this Kickstarter and turned out to be quite successful, so there was a lot of interest in having a high level scripting language running to control low level hardware. This was about five years ago and since then a lot has happened, some of you may know the BBC Microbit for example, which was given in the year 2016 to about a million children in the UK so that they learn Python in school with MicroPython on the BBC Microbit so they get interaction from hardware and software and the people think that might be quite some fun. Then there's been the first O'Reilly book from Niclas Toller, a programming with MicroPython, MicroPython is an open source project which is hosted on Github and it's about 7500 stars, so it's quite popular and it's growing. Also MicroPython has been into space. What MicroPython aims to be is on the one side you want to have low power applications, it wants to be small in size, in terms of code, it doesn't like to have a lot of storage space to run in and of course the most pressure time, it wants to be fast, so all this combined together it's kind of more sufficient. Well I'm going to speed this up a little bit, I want to do a little live demo today with the new Python D, which is the second generation of the official MicroPython PyBot, so I have one here connected to my PC which runs as an access point because I made up my own little Wi-Fi to make sure that it's going to be working, hopefully. So I have someone that supports me in the audience, very good, and I'm going to log in through a web repel which you can see here, so I'm going to disconnect it again and connect, can you all see that, it's going to ask me about the password and I'll actually connect it into the device that the gentleman in front has. I'm going to run a little code that I have prepared, first I'm going to read some sensors, so now you should see a blinking LED maybe, not from over and some noise, some people might hear it and you can see it's reading sensors so it's sending it back to my machine and we're going to do some more fun stuff. So now you should see some code running on the LED tile on the... So what I'm trying to say is it's really easy to set it up, I have a little access point you made myself with just a few lines of code and talking to a device over there in the audience, so the first thing how easy and convenient is to use MicroPython and yeah that's basically what I wanted to say, so are there any questions? Thank you very much, Christine. You're welcome. If you guys... So the next speaker, yes, we are waiting for the next speaker, so who is next to speak, please come. Christine, there's something for you, thank you. Here's some water if you need. Okay, now we are unmuted. Wait, wait. Hello internet, hello internet. We'll check the time. Power management solutions, let me check, I'm not sure. So we have a green, we have a microphone. We only have to wait a few minutes. It's a great pleasure that you are here. Thank you very much. I was here. Looks like I have no idea.