 Python on hardware time, Lady Aida. I'm ready. All right. We have a bunch going on in the world of Python on hardware. First up, I guess big news is Moo. 111? 111, 111, 111. 111, I don't know the exact version, but it's out. It is out. There's a neat little making of Moo video. But if you go to the Moo site, and I also go here, you could check out all of the new features, updates, and more. Nicholas posted up a video. It's a little bit of a time-lapse. It has all of the contributions over years. Yeah. You could see all the people in the faces because software is made by people. But there's fixes, there's updates, there's more language translations in there. So if you're using this, check it out and onward to Moo 2.0. I know a lot of folks out there are using it. Moo is such a great beginner IDE. Yeah. It's our favorite one. Circuit Python 7.2.0 release, so far so good. We haven't had any bug reports or really anything, so we think this one's really solid. 7.2.0 is up. Door, please download it, try it out. We do have ESP32, S3, S2 support in there now. Yeah. S3 and C3 is coming. We're still fixing a lot of bugs, updates. Keep posting up your issues because we're squishing bugs whenever we add more capabilities. But Async is really well-supported now. So if you want to do concurrency processing code, please try out Async and let us know how it goes. Okay. That was often asked for. Then we celebrated 10 years of Raspberry Pi. Wow. 10 years. It's been a decade. I remember when we decided to stock the Raspberry Pi. I remember the first time. I knew where we were, when we were, when we decided, and 10 years goes by pretty fast. Also very slowly. Yeah. Check out the blog post on RaspberryPi.org, the interview with Evan. And I think one of the things that you've said about it is it is one of the things that really popularized Python because a Raspberry Pi, the Pi, doesn't just mean for Pi. I mean, Python for hardware, this is, you know, this was an essential part of the CircuitPython journey as well because we had been doing, before CircuitPython or MicroPython, we had been doing, we had ported our libraries over to the Raspberry Pi so that people could use the hardware that we'd originally written in Arduino. We would port it over to Python. And so starting the idea of having SPI and I2C bus support and how to like talk to registers in Python. And a lot of that stuff got turned into CircuitPython in the way that CircuitPython works for us. So it's all been one big story and trying to make everything break cohesive. All right. And then congratulations, Paul, for launching CircuitPython Show. Yay. So episode one is with Katny. I wanted to play the trailer and then I'll see you on the other side. The trailer is only 15 seconds. Welcome to the CircuitPython Show. I'm your host, Paul Cutler. Each episode I'll be in conversation with someone doing something with or near CircuitPython and its community. In this first episode, I'll be talking with Katny Ramor. Katny is a mentor, maker, open source community leader, technical writer, and embedded software developer. She's sponsored by Adapr to work on CircuitPython. And you can watch it on YouTube if you want to. You can download it with your favorite. People still call them pod catchers. I don't know if they call them, I did. And you can also subscribe to it on YouTube. You can watch it. You can listen to it. You can use Apple. You can use Spotify. You can use any of the pod catching tools you want. And then I think the upcoming one is Les, who writes the time. Les Pounder, yeah. So, Tim. And his magical collection of boards. Yep. And if you want, you can go to circuitpythonshow.com. Sign up for newsletter, get the episodes latest, learn about it, all that and more. If you wanna be a guest on the show, go there and you can even send your info in. Probably talk about some cool stuff you know on CircuitPython. And that is Python on our hardware newsletter, recap this week. Yay, blinka blinka.