 Python on hardware time. Okay. So much has happened. Python on hardware time, we do a yearly post and this year, I'm gonna do the same thing I did last year is Lady Aida, after you've read the post, it's on Adafritz blog and on the socials and probably other places. What do you wanna see in Circuit Python 2023? What do you wanna see in Circuit Python 2023? You're asking me now? Yeah, okay. No pressure. No pressure. So a lot of such can happen. First off, we're gonna finish releasing 8.00 because we've done so much stuff with Wi-Fi, adding PicoW support, which is really great. And PicoW is also gonna be adding Bluetooth support soon. So we're gonna do some Bluetooth work. We'd like to add BLE for ESP32 series chips and the PicoW, we're gonna see how they're doing it and so maybe we can have some of that work overlap. The chip shortage is not completely, completely over but it's like way less unover than it was before, if that makes sense. So one of the things I wanna revisit is the IMX chip set. I basically, we were like about to release a bunch of boards with it and then could not get those chips at all. Now they're all available again. So it's a Cortex-M7, it's a really nice chip and it's not too expensive. It's used, that family chip is used in the teensy for those who are familiar with it. I also have some fun project hacks I wanna do. We're gonna add some camera support, maybe some more graphics support. You know, I think those are the core things. So basically BLE, IMX chip set, USB host, which we added to the RP2040. In Arduino, we're going to try to port that over and maybe to circuit Python, have that be like a fun hack. You need to give up a core and all the PIOs but like it's really neat to have USB host as a secondary interface on the RP2040. I think that could make for some very cool projects. Okay. For mine, mine is more project-based but it's, would it be possible to start someone? First you make the most simplest thing with circuit Python. Yeah. And then you build up to, oh, I wanna have like, you know, we have the ruler project. Yeah. It's a PCB ruler. And then the next thing maybe you would make is a calculator. Yeah. Maybe you would make a computer mouse, maybe you make a keyboard and then maybe you would make your full computer running Python. Yeah. So there's a lot of things that would go into that, you know, pure Python computer. But I like the idea of like getting all the way there without having to really know the, how to code but then as you learn more, it's like an onion, you know, there's multiple layers to it. So someone can just get started with electronics and programming and cobble together their own device. Like, I wanna make my own mouse and keyboard and then after they can just continue building that and as they do that, they eventually work their way up to like, oh, now I have a full computer that I just built. Yeah, it'd be cool. Like, you know, you build like a computer built with RP2040 chips but like every peripheral device, like your display is RP2040 and like your main processor is RP2040 and the mouse and the keyboard, like, yeah, and everything. Yeah. That'd be cool. That'd be funny. Okay. OpenStore is hard.