 Hi and welcome to the open source calm weekly top five This is where I bring you five of the best articles from the past week It's a great way to catch up on the content that we've published this week And you'll notice that I'm bringing you this video from the great outdoors. It of North Carolina actually It's spring here and really beautiful. You'll probably hear a few birds singing and You might even get to see a squirrel or two. They really love this back fence All right, so let's get started with the top five video this week I'm gonna talk about the future of password alternatives open-source tools for research and the The Internet of things and a few more So let's hop in at number five We have students compete for a chance to have their Raspberry Pi code run in space Ben Nuttle does development and outreach for the Raspberry Pi Foundation and in this new column He begins by telling us about a trip to the International Space Station for six months by British ESA astronaut Tim Peake. What's super special about his trip is that he is going to be taking two Raspberry Pies with him You can read more about his what his plans for the Raspberry Pies in space are in this article At number four networking in the cloud is changing Regular writer Matt Messine interviews Valentina Alaria head of product and solutions marketing for Plumgrid a cloud networking provider as Part of the OpenStack live conference next week in Santa Clara, California She'll be delivering a three-hour tutorial on OpenStack networking architecture and concepts along with her colleague Fawn Desward At number three a better Internet of Things through open-source culture Gordon Hough writes about the parallels between open-source culture and the growing community around the Internet of Things Principles like those of the open-source way, but especially breaking down silos are part of this parallel Read more about how this is vital to the growth of IOT At number two for new tools for scholarly research Joshua Holm knows about the digital humanities and in this article that is part of his series on the subject He brings us four open-source tools. We should know for doing academic research today And finally at number one this week has the time come to kill the password in this interview Scott Nesbitt talks to Jonathan LeBlanc of PayPal about how to replace the dreaded password with something more secure and Hopefully easier for us humans to use Thanks so much for joining me this week everyone and I will see you next time