 Okay, we'll do a couple top secrets. Folks can head over to Discord and ask your questions. I'll load up a few as we get going. Ask them to particle, ask them to our Lady Heta. First up, this is, I was working on this today, so I made this little thing and I'm like tweeted at Basecamp. I'm like, hey Basecamp, look I have this thing that now tells me when I have a Basecamp thing I have to do. And they said, that's really great, you're blowing our minds. However, change the logo please because they just did a new logo, so it's fine. And then they said, wow you did that really fast, like aha, that was kind of fun. The other thing I did was, as soon as I got all the pie portals, I put animated GIFs on them of Colombo eating sandwich, so I want to play that. I feel like I learned something, but I don't know why. That's right. And then last up we have a little STEMMA video that shows that you're talking about earlier in the show about getting Python on lots of different things and being able to do sensors. You know what is this? Hey everybody, it's STEMMA Sunday and I took the classic APDS9960 proximity color gesture sensor and I made a cute little STEMMA breakout board for it, that's so cute, so you can plug and play it, no soldering required. And also over the weekend, Carter and I finished up support for the MCP2221. This is like a $1.25 USB to I-squared C converter, so you can see this is connected to my computer, the USB-C cable, and I plugged in an accelerometer and a gesture sensor here. I'm testing and what's neat is it now works and move because it's just USB, so this is actually running on my computer connected through USB to those sensors and I can press play and then as I move my hand up and down over the gesture sensor, you see the data is plotting. So what's neat is there's no Arduino or microcontroller involved, it's just directly into my PC and I can try different sensors, so here's a demo with the accelerometer and again I move the accelerometer and data is coming into Python directly for plotting and analysis, so I think this is really powerful because you can write all your code and you don't have to deal with a separate microcontroller, especially if you want to do like powerful machine learning or data analysis where you need to have NumPy or something to do that analysis. I think this is pretty neat and this is a preview of the stuff we're working on. Stem of Sunday!