 Speaking of, it's Python on Hardware Time. Brr, brr, brr, brr. What's the song? Okay, two weeks' worth. Yeah, well, two weeks' sort of. I mean, you can get our newsletter. We have, I think, the most popular, whatever, if there's a way to do that. I want to say it's the most popular song. Yeah, so there's thousands and thousands of people who subscribe to Zeta for daily. Python on Hardware newsletter, we don't track, we don't do metrics, we don't do anything. You can subscribe, unsubscribe at any time. It's on a separate website, datafordaily.com, because we don't even want it to be associated with your shopping experience at all. Is that a substack? Because we all know what happens when you go to a website and you buy something, they spam you forever. We don't, but we do want to do newsletters and more. So we've made a separate website called Data For Daily. And that's where we have multitudes of newsletters, including this one. So first up, we have some stories, some news in the world. This is kind of good news for everybody who's been paying attention to this. The Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4s are coming back into the retail channels if you've been waiting, they're happening. It's slowly but surely, just like all of this. Pi 4s are all completely in stock. Yeah, by the way. You can get one right now. Yeah, we changed the limit too, so you can get more than just one Pi 4 right now. So we do have those. You can check out the benchmarks for the Raspberry Pi 5, talking to an oscilloscope with Python. This is interesting, you know, while we were on break for one week, OpenAI collapsed and then came back and Lamor had done an article, interview with IEEE Spectrum. And it was kind of interesting because there's a lot of stuff going on right now with OpenAI and how these models are trained and everything. But just to summarize, in chat GPT style, chat GPT appears that was trained on Lamor's code so much that it's a very good coding companion for her. So when she's writing Arduino libraries or certain bits of code, the code that's outputting for that type of stuff looks like her code because it was probably trained on her code. And we're actually fine with that. When we use chat GPT, we'll put it in either the readme, we'll put it in reword that we say, hey, we use this and then we put the link to the actual chat GPT session so you can see that. No one else is doing that, that's fine. We think that's good because this is changing. Every day people are using these tools for more. We think this is a good use because it's Lamor's code and then it's popping out more of her code companion. And if you're wondering, hey, what do we think about you doing this? Yeah, do it. Because LadyAid is not gonna be able to be a one-on-one code coach for you. But with this, maybe she can in some way. So anyways, there's an interview with her and you can see, they're very nice graphic too. Yeah, they did a good job. I tripled you, that's the deal. And so anyways, and that being said, I wanted to go to Playgrounds and have you talk about this project. So Playground is our new... Oh, you scroll down. Oh, yeah. It's in the newsletter we highlighted. We highlight projects in newsletters by the way. So if you want your newsletter highlighted, Playground is a great way to do it. One last thing I should mention, Hackspace Magazine is out. There's a bunch of Python projects, Python hardware projects, obviously. And then if you want, you can go to playground.atorford.com and check out or just go to learnsystemlearn.atorford.com and check out Playground. Because on Playground, there's all these guides that you and the community can do and then we put in our newsletter. So it's a full circle of things. Yes. It's an ecology. Yeah, so you want to talk about this one? Yeah, DJ Delty did a project. He showed it off on Show and Tell a couple of weeks ago and I was like, that's a cool idea. So there's a lot of people who play like truck simulators and you want to use a microphone. Well, so they use a headset but they're like playing with other people to like pretend like they're on a CB radio. But he's like, wouldn't it be cool if actually you could use a CB radio? And so this is a project showing how to turn a CB radio into like a, you know, you click it to mute and unmute and then you can use the microphone inside as a mic. And so it's a bit of a build but I guess he really likes playing this game. And so this is a really neat hack showing how to take existing hardware. Like, I don't even know. I mean, I'm assuming it must be very easy to get CB radios are probably not super popular anymore since everyone's got, you know, telegram and WhatsApp and phones but you can make cool props for your video games. So I just thought this was neat and a great use of Circuit Python because it's really easy and it's accessible and you know, shove some wires into the CB radio thing and you put it in a nice case and it works great. And there's been a lot of Circuit Python projects published on Playground. So check out the featured projects. You have this Wi-Fi matrix. No, wait, can you go back to Playground? Yeah, lots of lots of lots of lots of projects. So check it out. Lots of Circuit Python in particular. It's a good place to post up your... Yeah. And you know, in the past, one of the things that we were asked is, hey, I have a cool Circuit Python project. Can I publish it on Learn? And now we have Playground which is exactly that is the same authoring tool and you can put it there. Then we see it, we feature it on the blog, we feature it on the newsletter. More people contribute to your project and we're keeping this ad free, tracking free. It's just for you to use and no strings attached. It's just to help you document your project somewhere. There's lots of places you can do it online but you need accounts to view like the whole thing. Sites kind of hide the content behind a signup. I get that that's our model. We don't have the model, we just, we make hardware, open source hardware and then we do this as a community service for everyone. So do check it out and put a guide up. Okay. So you can do this every single week. It's delivered to your inbox. It is AdafruitDaily.com.