 Okay, this week, we have some retro tech. This was a little different because it's not exactly old, but it works with things that are old. So here it is. A long time ago, back in the 70s, this was a, I guess one of the first versions of crowdsourcing ideas from Sony. It's a little truck that you put on a record and it spins around the record, record stays still, truck drives around and it plays what's on the record. And this is the statement on the website from the folks who make it modern one now. And it says, instead of a stationary needle, the needle moves around the surface of a stationary record. Record player, we're the built-in speakers. It's developed for promotional use only and it was first displayed as part of the Exhibited Internal Sony Idea Contest established to encourage all employees to adapt unconventional thinking. Came complete with both motor, enabling the car to run around the surface and the record and a cartridge and it's undercarriage to ensure the needle remain within the group. So there's a company in Japan that makes the record runner and you can get this. And it's officially licensed. This is really officially licensed from VW. They did all the right things. And it looks like a car, looks like a little van, but then the secret's underneath. That's the needle and you put the batteries in. Yeah. And we have our own record here at Adafruit. So we decided, well, let's make sure it works. You tried it out. And we tried it out. And that's retro. And of course a warning, probably only use it on records that you don't care about. If your work you cared about, you would put it flat on table anyways. Yeah, we'll put a car on it. All right.