 Okay. First step before we even jump into the newsletter, we want to say happy trails and more to Katni. It's not goodbye. I was saying in our meeting, it's like I'll see you on the other server instances. Katni is the one who came up with CodePlus Community, has been in the Circa Python community, doing a ton of stuff with Adafruit, getting us. In the Discord. Yeah. On GitHub. On the Learn Guide. So Katni's not going to be doing stuff with Adafruit, but still in the community, still doing stuff in the world. I'm sure you'll see all those things that Katni's up to. But we wanted to say thank you so much for everything. We've done Katni. We're rooting for you and all the things. And I'm glad Adafruit was a stop along and awesome journey. Thank you so much. Well, yeah. And everyone in the Discord, I think Katni's in here. Send your shout out. Please send your shout outs. And we call them hug reports and more. A lot of folks got their introduction to Adafruit via Katni. That's right. And they're doing stuff. So that's what it is to be a community. Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you. So let's do some newsletter stuff. I'm going to ask Lady A to some questions in a moment. But first, the Circa Python 826 release. It's basically just like search for good stuff. Yeah. But you can check that out if you're interested. Lady A did an interview on PICAST. And this was a prerecord because it was really hard to find time. So they did a prerecord. And Lamar steps through the library creation using chat to BT4. Yes. So far it's interesting. It seems like we've, I think someone had to go first and say like, here's how we use these tools. And here's how we're going to show our work. So we post the full prompt logs as Lady A to interact with it. And we put that as part of the readme in the GitHub repository for open source libraries. And we also disclose all of the stuff if and when we use any type of AI tool. These things are here to say. So we thought, well, what's the best possible way to show that we're doing this? If we use things like even co-pilot, we'll say it. But we think that's the best way to do it. Yeah. I posted my log with OpenAI. And other people said that they actually enjoyed that because they could learn how I, you know, like, people, you know, one of the questions in the pie chat they asked was like, how did you know this is the prompt to use? And I was like, well, I didn't. Like, it took a couple tries, guys. Like, it was like night number three where I was like, wait, I finally got the right prompt to get it to write the code from the data sheets. And so, you know, chat about that and licensing. Yeah. How do you feel about it being able to imitate you? And I'm like, I think that's great for me. We're in a unique situation. And I get that's why I think folks were scared because there's like a big gap between, like, it's the worst thing or it's the best thing. And there's nobody really in the middle talking about, well, like all bits of technology, you can use it for bad stuff. And there's crediting and there's sourcing. But in our particular case, the code that Lamor is using is Lamor's code. She's just interacting with it with this large language model, which is kind of an interesting use case. There's probably not a lot of people doing it. The best analogy I can think of, only because this is probably gonna be in the news, is like, so an author who has their stuff somehow in these large language models, having it be like a writing partner in some way or like an assistant in some way. So human plus AI, Howard, thanks. So we'll see how it goes, but you can watch the whole thing, it's on now. But the thing I was gonna ask you is IEEE, they do their top programming languages each year. And Python continues to pop to the top and it's usually because of data sciences. Now it is because, or at least in part, people are using it for microcontrollers or things like Raspberry Pi. But what's the, I'll do five. What's the five programming languages you use on a regular basis if there is five? And what do you use them for? Because I feel like you're the poster child for engineering and programming in a lot of ways. So what do you use it in and what do you use it for? Yeah, it's funny that I'm looking at these little arrows and they're like SQL, I'm like, why don't SQL? I do use it almost every day, but I don't know the language. But I guess it's NP complete or add an NP complete, it's turn complete. So for electronics and the kind of work I do, I use Python a lot, I use it on desktop and I use it on microcontrollers. I use Arduino to see C++. We do use assembly once in a while, not as much anymore, but I do use it. And JavaScript, we have also JavaScript for microcontrollers and then TypeScript, the device script that recently came out. The bulk of it is Python and C, C++ and then maybe a little smattering of assembly. That's what you're doing right now. That's the most of it, yeah. And then for some of these things that you're gluing data together for, for like web stuff, is that also Python? Python, a lot of it. Like data base or data source manipulation? Yeah, like ironically, I do SQL every day because I'm kind of like doing some data analysis stuff on the data fruit, manufacturing, production management side. And I could run queries in SQL to do it, but honestly, I just have the Python iterate through it. And instead of trying to like left join and get that right, and I've been using chatGBT to try to write better queries, but honestly, I just, I use Python to like iteratively determine stuff. And then we were doing the open source hardware. Yeah, that was helpful for me. Yeah, that was helpful for me because I was gonna try to go another way. And instead I used OpenAI's chatGBT's code tool, and I explored a JSON file, kind of asking natural language things. I looked at the Python that it was generating to make sure it was like what I wanted. But you know, what's interesting is it, I wanted to know when it thought we would get to a certain amount of open hardware certifications, but because it doesn't really know other than the dates of the certification, which are actually when they're approved, it's hard to like, oh, linear regression. Well, this is a way to do it. But we were beating its estimate just because the more it's doing a lot of hardware revision. So that was kind of cool. Okay, so thanks for entertaining my question. I figured I would ask an engineer, what languages are you actually using right now as, right now, well, as of right now, the number one certified open source hardware company in the world, we have 695 certifications. We're not gonna always be, maybe we'll always be the top certified company doing releasing designs. But right now we are, 695, we're very close to 700. So I thought this would be a good tie-in. Like, okay, this is what you're producing. What are the programming languages you're actually using? And it looks like a lot of Python and a lot of C. Oh, you know, I write scripts for Eagle CAD and that's also in C, just kind of funny. C like, yeah. Okay. All right, so we're getting close. If you want, you can sign up, get delivered to your inbox every single week on nativeforddaily.com. Let's...