 And granddaughter, what a fun project. Yeah. All right, circuit Python time. It's Python on hardware time, Lydia. There's a lot going on. Oh, boy. We're just talking about this. There is a ginormous amount of projects with circuit Python and MicroPython. So we try to cover it all. One thing, we also put in Linuxy stuff because Python runs on that. We also have Blinka. Blinka and MicroPython and generic Python stuff and Python language stuff. And sometimes other scripting languages, too. But it's anything that I think the circuit Python team would like I put in there. Yeah. I sent to Ann. So we have the Raspberry Pi OS64 bit. It's out of beta. Do check that out. We hit our 33,000 members on Discord. That's where we do a lot of development of Circuit Python live. And we have our weekly meetings every single week, Mondays at 2 PM Eastern, where you can tune into exactly what's getting built and made. And you can participate in it with Circuit Python. We have a pull request to add split screen capabilities. Check that out if you wanted to have that on your Pi portal. You can play around with that now, or we'll see. It might be added. We have our 2022 wrap up. We get community feedback every single year. Scott put this together. And we have a bunch. As I mentioned before, Scott has a deep dive this week. The Circuit Python show is starting soon. We did add this to the newsletter because we think this is good news. Basically, Intel is like, hey, we're going to do RISC-5 stuff. So it's interesting. It's interesting. Generally speaking, everyone agrees that we kind of make chips probably locally here in the US. So maybe this is the first step for RISC-5. We won't get tired of the hacker joke about risk is cool. I mean, there's a lot of times now we're seeing cores that they'll have a coprocessor that's RISC-5 for low power or low cost or sensor management. So having an Intel core that is doing a lot but then has RISC-5, one of the things we're talking about, sorry, I was thinking about the Google phone that has the wake up, the voice wake up. Yeah, the wake word, yeah. And it's. They have a little chip that just does that. They have a little chip that just does wake word stuff. So it's like, I'm thinking if Intel is going to get into AI stuff, you might have the beginning of the sensor stuff or the AI stuff being handled by the RISC-5. And then if it thinks that there's some data that needs more processing, it can wake up the main core. It actually makes a lot of sense to me to have your BIOS not necessarily being part of the main processor. So we'll say, as always, we're interested in having full USB support so we can do sort of Python stuff. We've done coprocessor stuff where we have a SAMD and then we have an ESP32. So it'd be nice to have something for makers and for people building stuff. They could learn a lot from Raspberry Pi Foundation who did the RP2040. That's right, Sloan Core. Eh-ho. I mean, it's on base. So you put that in there. This is Project of the Week. We talked about this on the show and tell. So you can check that out in the live demo of Wordle on a clue. And you can get clues on the clue for your Wordle on the clue. Upgrade your circuit Python version on the Raspberry Pi Pico without access to the boot cell button. And this was kind of a neat Daft Punk project. And this is the word clock that plays the words of the time over on NYC Resistor. And a whole bunch of stuff. The newsletter is Gigantic. Please sign up, Adafruit Daily. I have one video that I want to show. This is the Pi Leap video. And then I'm going to show one last thing. So Pi Leap is our new app. You can check it out in the App Store. This is a video that Trevor made. And then I have one thing. And then we'll move on to the next segment. Hey, this is Trevor. And I'm here to show you our new Pi Leap update. We are currently in the process of adding the Adafruit clue in our f52a40 to our Pi Leap app. So right here I have two products ready to go. I have a NeoPixel rainbow animation. And I have a blink animation. So let's try them out really quickly. So right here we have our project card. And we'll send over our project bundle. All right, and just like that, we have rainbows. And let's try out the blink animation. There you have it. It's blinking purple and pink. All right, and also we made it so that you can check out the learn guide for that specific demo within the app. All right, well, we'll have more updates coming soon. Thank you, see you soon. Okay, and then if you go to circuitpython.org slash downloads, you will see we have 277 boards. There's so many boards that have been added that I didn't get a chance to show this cool graphic that we made because we're like, hey, we just passed 256, so... That's cool, because it's like more than LXFF. The problem is that we like blew past it. Yeah, so that's good news. And then last up, we have a special section on Adafruit that's kind of in this, it's not well known yet, but it will be soon, we think. And you can go to it and see some socks. So these are nice, frickin' techie socks. We're poking fun at NFTs a little bit because... But we also like socks. So yeah, so we added these. So these are Digikey socks. These are Floppy socks. These are Red Hat from the podcast Command Line Heroes, Haxter socks, Python socks with VS Code, Gamer socks with a little bit of cursing, sorry. Red Hat socks, and then BiteMe Floppy socks. And another set of Floppy socks. Yeah, and I'll show some of these socks later on in the show, but if we're gonna get accused of doing NFTs, we don't. We're at least gonna have a gallery of fun things with socks. Nice Floppy socks. Yeah, we're gonna do that. And if you want, you can get the newsletter. Just go to AderfordDaily.com, sign up. We don't spam you or do anything like that. And that is Python on hardware news this week. Thank you, Blinka.