 Circuit Python is code plus community, and to me that means the Python on microcontrollers newsletter. So here is, if you head to AdafruitDaily.com, you can subscribe to our Python on microcontrollers newsletter and get all the latest info, all the latest news each week. It's delivered for free into your mailbox, very low effort, you can cancel it anytime, we promise not to spam you, all you need to do is head to AdafruitDaily.com, put in your email address and sign up. And the newsletter is also accessible just as a web page here at AdafruitDaily.com, you can click on a link that gives you the latest of the Python on microcontrollers newsletter. And I wanted to talk about a few of the items that caught my eye this week. One is the Circuit Python 8.0.0 beta-6 has been released, and some of the interesting things that come with this release are mentioned in here, including some switches over to the .toml, settings.toml file from the .env, so you can check that and head out to the blog or the GitHub from these links to find out more. Another interesting one, this is actually sort of the road to this being in Python. TinyUSB has added BitBang USB host support for RP2040, and while this is running just in Arduino right now, the hope is that this will find its way onto Python soon. This will include hopefully, right now I think there's serial and mass storage host capabilities, but hopefully this will also move into some of the other things like USB HID, MIDI, and other things like that, so that's just a glimpse on the timeline to adding some of this USB host support to RP2040, which is really cool. There aren't too many microcontrollers out there that allow you to do both a USB side and a USB host side, a client and host side, TNC 3.6 and TNC 4.0 are the only two I've done it with before, and those are really hard to find now, so I'd love to have something else that you could plug in a MIDI keyboard or a mouse or whatever you want and still be able to output on the other side, so it could be really cool. There's also a link here to head to the InterFruit blog to check out a post from Scott on the upcoming 2023 plans for Circuit Python, and we'll be doing more posts about that, about our plans and looking for people's, both annual wrap up and for people's predictions and hopes for the coming year. There was also a story in here about Raspberry Pi foundations saying there probably won't be a Raspberry Pi 5 coming in 2023, they're going to be doing some catch-up on manufacturing and getting some devices out there of existing Pi boards before they move into the Pi 5, so you can click on that link to go to the Tom's Hardware article. There's also an interview here with Eben Upton that you can go and check out from the blog or over on YouTube. There's a story here about ESP32 GitHub updates are available over the air with MicroPython and MicroGit, so this is something that would allow you to keep an ESP32 device in sync, excuse me, I'm about to sneeze, wow, that was a good one, pardon me, it's right into the microphone too, so I probably could have covered that, sorry about that, man that was some sneeze, so this will allow you to keep your ESP32 devices in sync with the GitHub repository over the air, which is pretty interesting, it allows you to clone an entire MicroPython repo onto a MicroPython microcontroller. Then there were some projects here that caught my eye, there was a really neat looking sort of telepresence remote articulated robot hand project here, this was programmed in MicroPython and uses some of the Adafruit Flex sensors, if you look at the GIF there, I don't know if that'll play, probably, oops, now I've done it, let me go back, I don't want to go there, probably is playing at it sort of a limited frame rate, but you can see there there are three or four flex sensors on a finger mounted controller and then there's a robotic hand in the background that's moving to keep pace with the flexing of the fingers, which is pretty cool, and that's using ESP32 as the microcontroller on there. Some other items that I thought were cool, there was a 3D printed hot air balloon from GeekMom I think, right, yeah, and this uses a little neopixel ring, a JOW ESP32 C3, it has a web workflow using the web IDE, and it also has some really cool looking light pipes on there that illuminate, you can follow the link there to mast it on to find out more. And then there was also a little section in here on some new boards that are out that support CircuitPython, and you scroll through all these cool projects here, other Python projects, some new products that are CircuitPython capable. Here's the link, or the list and then a bunch of links to, looks like about a dozen new boards that support CircuitPython, so you can go check that out. And that is the Python on Microcontrollers newsletter, so go check that out at AdafruitDaily.com.