 Hey what's up folks, welcome back to another 3D Hangouts. My name is Noah Averwes. I'm a designer here at Adafruit and join me every week as well as the Pedro. Good morning everybody. I'm Pedro. I was creative tech here at Adafruit and every week we're here to share 3D printed projects featuring electronics from Adafruit. That's right. This is where we combine 3D printing and DIY electronics making inspirational projects for all of you folks. Hello everybody. We're hanging out in the Discord chat room. We want to give out some chats to everybody joining us during the live show. If you would like to join us during the live show, you can do so by heading over to discord.gg slash Adafruit and we're in the live broadcast channel. Give it a shout out to Mr. Certainly Bruce is hanging out. Hello. I hope you are doing well as well as everybody. I hope they're all doing well. Yes, we got everybody hanging out in the Discord, YouTube, Twitch, LinkedIn and Periscope Additional shout outs to Patrick Ranskin, Quentin, Xbox Gamer, Unicorn, Donut. Mmm, that's delicious. I want everybody hanging out in all of the chat rooms. Unicorn flavor is the best flavor. All right. Well, as you folks join in, we'll say hello to you. I'm going to try to go a little quick here. So let's jump right into what we're doing. We got freebies. So head on over to Adafruit.com slash free to find out all the details. If you scroll down, you can see all the different things. We're still got 100 days of masking going on, a few days remaining in this kind of campaign. So any orders you get from Adafruit, you get that black surgical mask. Very, very nice. And some other goodies that I will omit from now because we got a lot to cover. Yeah. And my audio stuff. All right. So I have that. Circuit Python meetings happen every Monday at 2pm Eastern time. So folks want to check in with the community and the core devs on Circuit Python. You can tune in on the Discord server every Monday at 2pm. It gets posted as an archive on YouTube and a lot of different podcast players as well. So you can check those out in your podcast choice player of choice. Adafruit has a jobs board. Check out jobs.adafruit.com as employers are posting up things and makers are posting up their profiles. It's free to do so. And you can go to jobs.adafruit.com to get started. We have newsletters that are going on once a week. It's focused on products as new products get added to the store. This newsletter goes to your inbox. So if you want to subscribe to that, head on over to adafruit.com slash newsletter. And if once a week isn't enough, you can get a daily dose of Adafruit posts, stories, what have you, go to adafruitdaily.com and check out all the categories that might interest you such as Circuit Python, that's Python on hardware, IoT Monthly, or is it weekly, I think it's IoT Monthly, 3D printing, biohacking, and more. So check out adafruitdaily.com, cool, it feels like a real show with all the intros though. All right. I'm going to go back over here to the Discord and shout out to Bruce for posting all those lovely links to all the things that I just chatted about. Good morning, Liz. Sweet. Additional shout out to our man VP, I am Jason H, DCD, Minnesota, and Tatt, Susan. I think you're all joining us today. It was a little rough morning, but we're in, you might hear some hammers and things, but it's fine as we have a little bit of a kitchen demo downstairs. All right. Let's go ahead and jump into this week's project, which is sort of a redo-blocking. Yeah. This week's project is already in the back. It's integrated into our shelf here. So this is our 32 by 32 pixel display running Circuit Python. It's using the new Feather RP2040, and this week we just want to talk about the Learn Guide. The Learn Guide came out on Friday, and let's go ahead and kind of jump into not that, but this one. This week's project. This week's last week's? That's funny. It's like nothing. No, it's here. It's the Learn Guide for that 32 by 32 matrix display, which is in stock right now. We're really nice. The Feathers are not in stock, so if you want this RP2040 Feather, please sign up. You can pop your email in here and you'll get notified when they're back in stock. If you really want to build this, you can use any Feather. The code in the Matrix Library for Circuit Python will run with any of the Feathers, notably the M4, the M0, and the NR52840. But be careful with the NR52840 as you need a special NR52840 Matrix Feather Wing. That one was the specific design for those pens. But with that out of the way, you got your Feather, you got your RGB Matrix Feather Wing, and your Doubler, and that's what makes the brains for this project. Black Lady Acrylic is another kind of secret sauce that makes this thing look really good. Yeah, so all that's kind of linked here. We have some more reading. If you want to dive deeper into the Feather RP2040, there's a Learn Guide that's dedicated for that. And there's also a dedicated Learn Guide for making projects in Circuit Python for RGB matrices. And that's a guide by Jeff Epler, who is one of the co-authors of the libraries, the ProtoMatter libraries. So check this one out if you are making some custom projects with the Circuit Python and RGB Matrix stuff. Wonderful. All right, so those are the parts. Most of them are in stock, which I'm happy about. And now let's go to the next page. Now normally with these Learn Guides and Project, we have a Circuit Diagram. There's no Circuit Diagram for this because it's all Feathers. You literally just plug them in. So that's cool. But let's take a look at the CAD files. So the CAD files page shows you all the CAD files. There's only five of them, right? There's some feet. There's a frame, a grid, and a cover. They all snapped it together. This one requires a minimum build volume of at least 210 by 210. That's going to be your kind of, I don't want to call it average, but your tip is not even common. A Prusa i3 has a build volume of, I believe, 210 by 210 by some X. It doesn't matter on the X, the Z rather, because it's not that tall of an enclosure. But anyway, you do need a fairly large build volume to print these parts. So the STLs are available. The CAD source file is available as a step file. So if you're using something other than Fusion 360, you can import the step file and get all the original sketches and models. But if you do have Fusion 360 and you want to tweak some things like the tolerances or the pitch spacing for the pixels, you can modify it using user parameters. You can quickly adjust some of the parameters. So that's what's in the Fusion file. And then what helped me cut out a very accurate piece of acrylic is this PDF template. Just a note about the PDF template. Make sure when you print your PDF template that your scale is set to 100% because I made the mistake before of printing my template with an auto scale where it scales to fail. It shows you how to install CircuitPython on your board. You want to have the latest version of CircuitPython, so that's why we always have this up to date. And it's a reoccurring page that gets updated when things get updated. But the same song and dance, you hold down the bootloader button as you plug it into USB. It shows up as a boot drive. You drag and drop that UF2 file and it automatically reflashes as a CircuitPy drive. And the RP2040 has 8 megabytes of spy flash. You can toss in all the libraries. But this is something different. So let's go over to the code page. This is the first project where we're reworking these pages so that they are guiding folks to get the project bundle. So before we'd have another page that was standalone that talks about installing libraries. And that's like this huge kind of ordeal. But now it's all in this project bundle. So as you click and download the project bundle, it's going to grab all of the libraries and dependencies dynamically, which is awesome. Huge shout out to the team for making this work. This is going to solve lots of issues, we hope. So this is the first guide from us that has the project bundle. So it's like, download the bundle and then drop all your files in. No third step, which is great. So here's what it looks like with all the libraries that it grabs. And it even comes with the bitmaps. Now these bitmaps were designed for a 64 by 32 RGB matrix back when the matrix portal was happening. So this is using that same code, same assets. But because the display is 64 by 32 and not a 32 by 32, there is a small piece of code that you have to update. And if you scroll down, you can see what it is. It's just when you're setting up the display, all you need to do is specify your width. So the width of your display gets specified here in this block. And that's pretty much it. There's also some built-in button support, particularly for this kind of slideshow player, I guess I could call it. There are two buttons to advance, but we're not really using them. If you'd like to use them, these are the pins that I've specified. And these pins will need to be changed depending on the feather you are using. These pins will work okay for the feather RP2040, which is kind of like the main thing for this project. But yeah, it's pretty straightforward. Project Bundles is hopefully going to be a thing that everybody uses going forward. So I hope that makes things a lot simpler. So you don't have to chase down and do this manual dragging-dropping of the individual libraries that are needed for this. Just down on the Project Bundle, you got all your stuff. What do you think? It's good. Incredible. Very good. Let me catch my breath. Okay, cool. All right, let's go to the next page, Sprite Sheets. So you do get these bitmaps when you download the Project Bundle, but those are bitmaps specified for 64 by 32. They will play on here, but they won't be like, you know, cropped properly. They won't be cropped properly. So I have provided you some Sprite Sheets. They're a little bit of a gray area when it comes to copyright stuff, artwork for these memes. Please don't sue me, but I will take these down if you tell me to. The person who has made Night Long Cat and Pirate Parrot. I'll take them down and just tell me. But I have kind of handcrafted these so that they fit a 32 by 32. So you can download these bitmaps. Don't sue me. Those are the only two I offer, because obviously I don't have the rights to these Sprite Sheets in the back there. That's Mario. Well, maybe somebody made that one. I don't know, but I'm not going to give that one out. But you can kind of create your own. All right. Hey, what's up, folks? No. Let me fix this real quick. Our audio has been up and down, but we got it back up. Let me go ahead and fix this Safari Sprite Sheets. We're really going to Sprite Sheets. And here we are. All right. So back over to the Sprite Sheets. Really great guide by John Park with some extra bitmaps if you want to get these. This is a good like walking animation if you want to get that going. And definitely check out that A Sprite app. Really, really good. I recommend it. That's how I created all of my Sprite Sheets. It's a great way to kind of, you can pull some artwork down from the Internet. It's a GIF. And then you can use this to kind of make it into that exploded film strip in the bitmap that you need, in the format that you need. So very, very cool. It has a little video of like showing the conversion process. It's a great job. Good resource. This whole guide is a great resource too on the Matrix Court Library and the artwork, pixel artwork. All right. But back over here into our Project Learn Guide. You can get those two lovely Sprite Sheets. And the rest of it's going to walk you through sort of the assembly. So setting up the headers for your feathers is very particular to this setup. So I'm doing it where I feel like this is the most mechanically stable approach to these feathers, headers set up. So we're using male headers here for the Matrix feather wing and the RP2040 feather. And I'm showing here that I'm using a breadboard to help me keep the headers on straight while you solder. That's sort of my trick whenever I'm soldering strips of headers to a PCB. I tend to use my breadboard because it keeps those things in place nice and flat. Cool. So I walk through installing the extra little header bits for the RGB feather wing. It's very kind of particular in this order where the IDC box headers fit it on top as opposed to the bottom. But yeah, that walks you through that. And then it walks you through setting up the feather, doubler. So you're setting these up with these female socket style header pins. And there's no circuit diagram because like I said, you just plug them in. You can't plug it in the wrong way. You can just, it's keyed that way. That's why there's a 12 and a 16 pin. Good job. Good job. Good job. That's the best. You might already go down again. There you go. All right. And then, so that's setting up the headers. And the last bit is just kind of using these standoffs and screws to attach the doubler to the 3D printed frame. That's that purple thing here. So that gets secured there with these standoffs and screws. And then these feet, a bit of an optional thing. It should stand up okay, but it tends to tip over if you like look at it too long. So you got these two feet with some hex nuts and some M3 screws. You can attach them to the bottom of the frame. The bottom of the frame has these recessed spots dedicated for these M3 hex nuts. And that will kind of capture and keep your feet secured. You could also glue them. And then this walks you through installing the acrylic sheet into the cover. And then the grid fits on top of your RGB matrix. And then the RGB matrix PCB gets fitted into the frame. And then we can connect all of the other power cables to the matrix feather wing with the little screwdriver because it has screw block terminals. And the other end just connects directly into the power port on the back of the 32x32. And the IDC cable plugs into the top IDC header of the RGB matrix feather wing and plugs into that hub 75 connector for the input of the display. And then you can plug in the power. Super cool. Definitely check out the YouTube video as well. It really walks through cutting the acrylic and something else that I... Oh yeah, taking apart the themed artwork throughout the seasonal change-out of these little bitmaps. I'd love to see the new Neo characters on here. Maybe we can work with Bruce or something. Yeah, all the new trinkets. That'd be sweet. So you're just going through some of the comments here. Shout out Tyler and Lauren. They're crushing it right now on these new super secret stuff. I can't tell you about it. I don't know if Lamarfield has shown it off yet. Or maybe Brent has shown off the dynamic components. It's too new, man. It's going to be so cool. Only one other soul knows about it. Ah, the whole dev team knows. Oh, you mean outside of that? Outside of the dev team. Is audio out again? Someone is asking. No, no, no, no. It should be fine. Hello? No, you're good. Yeah. All right. Well, are we ready for the lemon? Yes. Everybody is wanting lemons. I want to read the comment from, was it Quinton who asked earlier that he's here for the lemon life again? Yeah, sure. All right. So this week we're prototyping a lemon because life just keeps giving us them. So yeah, I was talking about the, yeah, I was talking about the kale switches. Oh no, it's stuck now, dude. There we go. So yeah, we have the kale switches now in the Aether Food Shop. And these are the white ones. These caps can be switched out and stuff. Trying to get my train of thought back here. But yeah, there's, this just kind of... Assemble it and then we show the whole thing again. My caps are all coming off. Yeah, I still work it on it, right? All right. So QDPie, RP2040, really nice board. This is a jewel with seven neopixels on it. And they all snap fits. It's all 3D printed. Let's plug it in. Not a good idea to plug it in, but I'll do it anyway. Just to kind of see this thing glow because it does have that LED animation. And it's not working. That's fine. I may have broken something or... There it goes. Cool. So it looks great with the, you know, translucent white material. So I'm going to use it as a media controller. So, value, mu to play, pause, forward, that sort of stuff. I don't want to press it because it will actually do that. But yeah, it's using CircuitPython, HAD library, which now has consumer controls, which is mu to play all those media controls. But you can make it do whatever you'd like. It just kind of fits like that on your desk. It's yay big. And fruity flavors, right? Yeah. So Lamar had the suggestion to do a hamburger one. It was a pizza. Pizza. With arcade buttons. This came out a couple of years ago. And I've been meaning to do some sort of fun keypad. This is probably my second custom keypad. The first one I did was a Cherry MX PCB that I milled. And it was like a feather wing. This one's no custom PCB all 3D printed. And in my opinion, it's a little bit more practical and a little bit more flavorful. So that's the LEMON project. Our audience is still going. Wonderful. Yeah. Best Ape is saying that the LEMON looks like their buddy's Artifone or Ba. Or Ba. Yeah. I've not seen that. Yeah, that's Artifone. It's a little, it's like a little synthesizer. Yeah, you can make this a MIDI controller, I suppose. With the Stem EQT connector, you can plug in an accelerometer really easy. Or any sensor really. A display if you wanted to. You can do so much stuff with the Stem EQT. This board is amazing. The RP2040. The Dolcor M0. Circuit Pi like eight megabytes of flash all. Take a look at this chip, man. This thing's bananas. So I kind of come up with this 3D model of the of the new QT Pi board. And man, it is dense. Look at the back there. There are these small resistors that, you know, you've got to consider them when you're designing a case where this is going to snap fit. You can totally break these pieces. So that's why I had to come up with the model of it. Because I kind of did break one. Don't tell anyone I broke one. Especially my boss should get mad. Quinton's asking for the files. Once they're finalized, they'll be released next week. Yeah, next week. This is going to be the next week's project. Hopefully. Maybe not, actually. Let me link where all of these are actually posted before. Yeah. It's the GitHub for the learning guys. Yeah, you can get the 3D model of the QT Pi board. I kind of had to pull the side of the private repo, but it's all good. It's Catney Rambois working on the learning guide for this one. So the learning guide is in the works. The fritzing object as well is in the works. This lemon kind of forced me to do the 3D model first. Normally I waited a week or two after the things released. And yesterday on John's show, we sold like 70 of them in like two minutes for a ridiculous price of like $4 or something crazy. So if you got one of those, save it for the lemon. That'd be great. Make some tasty lemon there. Yeah, man. Or an orange. Or some lime or something. But yeah, the RP2040 sign up for that when it gets back in stock. And for a buddy who got one, check out circuitpilot.org and download and install the latest version of CircuitPython. It doesn't ship with CircuitPython, but it does ship with the boot loader. So you just hold down the boots to the like button and plug it in. Yeah, USB-C. You need to get more USB-C cables. Liz is requesting a watermelon. The watermelon would be a separate project. The watermelon gun, yeah. But yeah, maybe we do watermelon too. Oh, then Alvaro is saying that if you could rotate the top, that would be awesome to double as a rotary encoder. I think some of the wires would get twisted. Yeah, there's some things that we could do. Like if we were to mount these guys to this plate, then you could dolly twist it. That's a cool idea. That's a good concept. I thought about that too. Like I wish I could do more or like a turn it or something. Another output. Yeah, so I would leave that for folks. I really wanted to keep it simple. This is even too much for me. The original idea was Lamar wanted a whole PCB mill out. And we didn't want that to be yet another barrier for people being able to build this. This is way more easier. I originally had the Feather RP2040 in here. And with the Feather, you have a built-in NeoPixel. So you didn't have to wire any NeoPixels. It was already built in, but this is what you got. You got a jewel. It's got more LEDs. So it's good. And it's USB-C. It's a QDPI. The Feather was a bit overkill, you guys. It has built-in LiPo charging and all these extra pins that I'm not using. So the QDPI is just the winner for this one. It really works well. I really like this cut out here. It looks so good. A little cut out there. It kind of sliced a little bit of the lemon out. But yeah. And then Alvaro is pointing to these slip rings with the flange that we have in store. They allow you to twist the wires. So maybe. Good for posting to Alvaro. There you go. You got some options here. But cool. No supports. They all print with no supports. Pick whatever color you like. That's fun. Then Yanni is a great GIF here of using a lemon to recharge your phone. Oh, that's funny. It turns color. It's great. Yeah, it should print it all in white. It kind of changes color. Fruit color. Fitting on your mood or something. So that's this prototype. So you can do that next week. Nice little segue on to last week we showed the update to the RP2040 QD Pi. We had to update the little Lego holder because of the bottom here is now flat compared to the other, the non-RP2040, the standard one. Just because of the bottom there when you have the SPI chip soldered on which you kind of need to have if you want to have all of the peripherals attached to it. It'll quickly run out of memory if you don't. We had to see these little studs in there to make room for that. All of that is built into the RP2040 chip in there. So it is nice and flush. So just some updates to that and makes it a little bit more slimmer if you want to make a nice little Lego compatible little prep board for your projects. Just snap it like that. And we also made them for the RP2040 itsy bitsy too. This guy just slides in. I think this is the first one where we utilized something where it just slides in. And same deal here. Just the 2x3 little stud setup. And we also have the ones that have the 2's if you want to have that attached to the back. Nice way to instead of if you don't want to go with the bread board you can go with the Lego baseplate. It's got some weighted stuff. Temporarily cold stuff together. So this will be next week. Yeah, hopefully. We'll try. Yeah, we'll try. Yeah, I love the clickiness. You have the, what are the switch types? It's the clear. These are Cali box white. Which are the clickiest. The other ones don't make any click. So I didn't even bother with it. There's grounds that has a little bit of a bump but they're not audible. Do we have blue ones? Yes we do. There's a product link that shows all of them. Oh man, it looks like the audio is going up and down. It's back right now. It's just up and down. What's up and down? Just the audio. No, you're good at it. I know, it's good now I'm looking at the levels. So, yeah, so this page will show you all of the colors that we have. Lars has somehow Yeah, Lars has made it over here to Florida. He's like, what's going on here folks? I hear you have you have some stuff down here in Florida. I think at Lars You back there. We need a GIF. I know, I need a Lars GIF. The Matrix. All right, well, those are the Cali switches. Pedro has a link there. We're going to try to go to the next segment here. Yeah, Shop Talk. Some of the other Shop Talk stuff that we were looking at Ninja Tech. We love all of their Ninja Flex stuff. There were a lot of the builds. They released a new Chinchilla Ninja Flex. It's a 75A which is super soft. It's supposed to be for wearables and medical devices for sports and fashion. The difference is that it's just a lot softer than the 85A material that they have. So, I thought I'd test it out on this. Some of the buttons here that we have on the Pi badge. Of course, we'll go ahead and play some Super Mario. I forgot you could do that. So, a couple years ago we made this nice little case that encloses the battery on the back. It lets you add the speaker and a slide switch so you can have the audio go low and high. It's a Pi badge. So, you have a nice little hook if you want to use it as a lanyard. Of course, you want to use it as an NES emulator here. So, as you're pressing the buttons you can immediately feel that they are way softer than any of the Ninja Flex materials from before. It just feels really nice in terms of when you press down on it, you can just feel the smoothness from it. It's a comparison between this guy and what we used before which was the 95A. The standard Ninja Flex TPU works on, like, Bodens, a large variety of printers. You're definitely going to need a let me shut this off. You're definitely going to need a direct drive if you want to print with this material. Some of the things we noticed when just, like, feeling it feels like it leaves behind some sort of filmy texture. It should be okay on their website. It says it's been certified for medical... So, like, when you put on gloves and you pair of latex gloves, it has that powdery thing. I can't physically see anything that rubs off on it. But it's, like, super soft. Let's keep going. You got a unicorn. A unicorn that we printed with that as well. It, again, just feels very nice. Like, when you're using this for wearables, if you have something that's, like, up against your arm or whatever, it'll definitely feel a lot more like it's pressed up against skin. That's actually one of the use cases they were saying for, like, the open... What is it? Yeah, let's look at the site. It'll tell you what it's good for. So, they worked hard to get their certification for skin-safe. So, tested to be skin-safe using Epiduram skin model. I'm not sure what that is. We'll look at it. There's a data sheet and stuff, but it is supposed to be, like, certified skin-safe. So, they're really pushing for something that has skin contact. So, remember those Apple Watch bands that I designed a little bit ago? You can do that. Remember, Pager's Apple Watch anything? That's Chinchilla. This feels really nice. Yep, no, that's basically it. It's just a very nice, softer feel. Chinchilla. It's new. It came out yesterday. 75A is the heart shore hardness. That's the measurement for how hard or soft it is. Regular Ninja Flex 85A, right? 95 or 95. 95A is called Armadillo Cheetah. Yeah, that's actually... They call that one 75D. But that's not A. It's more rigid. It's rigid. Come on, I gotta speed this up. My audio's gonna die. They only have a couple collars. Get the 0.5 kilogram if you really are serious about Ninja Flex. If you're not serious about Ninja Flex, this is just news. It's probably... I don't think it's worth while if you're not already 100 bucks for a full kilogram. So we went with the half a kilogram. We still have a whole thing of it. Yeah, the shore hardness that I recommend for playing around would probably be the 95A. Yeah, they have some of this. This normally isn't... This is just a baseline for us. 240C is normally what we print at. And the sprint speed's gotta be pretty slow. So... Yeah, it just feels really nice. Especially when you're gaming for long periods of hour. We're gonna play more with it. There was this weird thing that Pedro pulled on the filament and it did not go back. It stayed pulled. You can watch the videos on how it's manufactured look like. They're using a bunch of videos. Like the FOMI type stuff. Well, their website Ninja Tech, I think it was their YouTube. Okay. Here's their homepage. Kind of has a little banner about it. Chinchilla 75A. They have this cute little Chinchilla mascot. Who doesn't like a Chinchilla? Yeah, the video shows they made like shoes out of it. Like... Well, it ain't on the product page. Oh my goodness. They should at least link their YouTube video. We're one of your resellers. Tell us you're doing things. Sorry. Moving on. Chinchilla and chill. Alright. We're gonna do community makes now. Are my audience still working? Alright. The first one is a multi-pass. This one is so cool. It's a really cool themed way to show off your vaccine card. So, tell us about it. This is inspired by Fifth Element, which we recently re-watched. It holds up so good. Yeah, man. It's a good movie. So, this is a remix from... Alright, so we got the... Alright, so this week's community makes is this awesome vaccination card holder. This is inspired by Fifth Element. Somebody re-mixed this from a conference badge. You have this nice little lanyard thing you can attach to. You got your holes there. And this is size for the 4x3 size cards. This is not the actual one. I just printed this out so I could blur out all my information. And, yeah, this is a nice way to store your card. You're definitely gonna need for traveling around. So, when we go on a cruise or something, I will be bringing this and showing it off like that. Of course, you can add more details and colors to match what it actually looked like on Fifth Element. I think it's supposed to be grey, but we printed these in orange for Lamar and Phil's request. So, awesome. Yeah, Lamar and Phil will be showing theirs off. Yeah, really look at the design of this. They have this little hole on there and this little thing that snaps right on there. Like that, so it'll hold it in place. And, yeah, pretty much it. Three pieces. You do have to glue this top part onto the base just so you can not use support materials. Oh, great technique. Splitting parts, yeah. My favorite things to do for re-assembling through-print parts. Some folks say you can use the ironing feature in their Prusa Slicer to make this more kind of flat. I don't think Pura has that, so that's why we didn't do that, but that's one of the things they saw in the comments. Yeah, they're asking if that is ironed. It is not. Yeah, good test for that. Yeah, so on Thingiverse, the person who made this level 2 3, level 3 2, can you verify that? Yes, it is. That's the remix. Yes, I am still, here we go. Yeah, so she tweeted this out and Phil saw this and was like, you'll send me 3, please. Yes, yes, level 2, 3. Yeah, so shout out to you for coming up with this one. And you can go down the rabbit hole of all of the remixes. There's different sizes, as we were saying before. Triple remix, this is a multi-pass badge holder for your conference badge, which was a remix of this one. So there's three levels of remixes here, level 2, 3. Now, so Immurman came up with this one and it's sized for something different, but it looks like it was created in TiggerCAD, but a little bit more color here, so that's cool. Is there audio cut again? No. So you can download this one for free, search for multi-pass and you'll find the triage of remixes. But very cool. And shout out to level 2, 3 for remixes in that one. Well timed. Okay, let's look at the next stuff for community makes. That's really cool, makes from around the globe a lot of... Real quick, I want to show level 3's original tweet, has good photos and stuff, so you can check out level 3's kind of thing here. And some other folks are chiming in, like, hey, you can paint it to look really, really cool. These are like some silver things that I suppose it's one way to paint them, it's a good way to paint them. Very cool. And of course everybody is posting the multi-pass, gifts in the chat. Yeah, good movie, recommend it. Cool. Okay, everybody's cards. I feel kind of guilty looking at everybody's cards. Alright, well let's move on to... I like how they put the masks on them. Moving on to some really cool makes from around the globe. The first one is this really cool, Guardian Sword from Breath of the Wild. This was posted on the Facebook group for 3D printing. Highly recommend that one. Lots of cool posts on a lot of makes there. This one was for The Beatles. Oh wow, awesome. And there's a video to go along with that if you want. To search for that. And that one's by Bran, thanks Bran. That's really good. Next one is a Keyblade, same group, or different group, the creator cruelty group on Facebook. Almost done, that looks done to me. Maybe the chain. Fantastic. And this is from Daniel. Awesome, excellent. And then the last one here is from Favio, who posted up their make of the Pico Mini Fighter. That's great, like the color. He has a flicker link as well that has his build. Really good choice of colors. Excellent. Well that's going to do it before our audio cuts out. We want to thank everybody for joining us and we'll be show and telling tonight I think. But let's say hello and goodbye to everybody on Discord. We wish you guys tuning in with us live and dealing with our audio issues. Thanks Warcast. Thanks Warcast. I got an update and I just don't want to. Let's go to the housekeeping. Okay, later tonight. Show and Tell 730, hosting PT and Lamar will be hosting. And then after that at 8pm is asking engineer we got some new stuff, new products, top secrets, Python hardware All the news around the world, everything going on with all the cool electronics you guys know and love. So definitely stay tuned for that. And then tomorrow is John Park's workshop. Yeah. Showing off a ton of really cool projects that he's working on, gearing up for the next 8 o'clock. So definitely tune in every week for that. And then on Fridays, Deep Dive with Scott 2pm last week was the one year anniversary. We're out into one year and a week. Excellent. Lamar's live stream start on Sundays from the desk of Lady Aida. Featuring the great search with the cheeky every Sunday at Random Hacker Times. From 9 to 10. 9 to 10. It's pretty consistent. Yeah. And then repost it on all the socials and everything so you can catch up on that. Yes, yes. And then Tuesday, that was yesterday. JP had a massive one yesterday with the RP2040 QTi. Tune in every week for all those awesome deals. Get like half the percent off on whatever product is being reviewed. Definitely tune in every week for that. Let me know if I should start doing like crazy reactions. I got the eyes for it. So let me know. Alright, that's going to do it for us. Thank you for joining us. Thank you for joining us and dealing with our little issues here, but hey freaking lemon. Wire cast. It's like a flavorful lemon. Here you go, wire cast. I was like quit. That'd be a great camera switcher. Alright folks, we'll see you later tonight, but until then, remember to make a great day. Make a lemony day. Bye folks. Oh, this one. Later.