 Okay, so if you haven't already, please, please, please go to circuit python.org go to the download section and you what you want to do is get the latest build. Yes, because we're like seconds away and we're doing so much. Yeah, we're even kind of starting on 61 ESP 32 as two supports coming in there. We've added, you know, we're doing more ink work for sure, including supporting grayscale. We, you know, lots and lots of bug fixes as well. I think a lot of the RGB matrix display work that was in six can bus. We added can bus support ESP 32 s to STM 32 f four or five and Sammy 54 now have native can bus support and circuit python. Really exciting stuff. Check out the latest version. We've got to release candidates were submit bugs. You got them. Let us know we're going to fix these bugs and we're going to do our final release real soon. Yeah. So let's talk about what's in the newsletter this week and what's going on. So Blinka now supports 60 single board computers. That's right. Now, Blinka is the library. So this is single board computers that support circuit python libraries. That's right. So like 99% of our libraries from, you know, display to some parts of play to sensors to motors to PWM. They can run on a single board computer like a Raspberry Pi or Jetson nano or like an onion banana, whatever the all these different like weird single board Linux computers, even that latest pi 400 is supported. And that means what you can do is you can write code and see Python that takes advantage of Linux underpinnings, but then can do PWM to control servo or light up neopixels or connect to a barometric pressure sensor. So you kind of get the best of both worlds. I love it because we have one set of examples and one set of libraries and one, you know, you install an MPY file on the disk drive and on CPython you just type in pip install and you're ready to go with the exact same code. So it's wonderful. 60 single board computers are now supported. I don't know of any other hardware API layer that seamlessly works on so many boards. Okay. And I've had people tell me, not going to mention who it is on the R&B inform about what a stupid idea was this was. This is a great idea. Yeah, one of my best ideas and more to come. If you have a single board computer and it's not supported, we even have guides on how you can add platform detection, which is actually kind of the hardest part and then adding support for all the pins and all the peripherals capabilities like analog digital converters and PWM and all that good stuff. And then boom, you know, it'll just work. It'll be sweet to add support for more devices. Yeah. I'll just tell you a little side note on the electronics world and the engineering world as someone who works with it and works closely with LaMoure. So sometimes LaMoure will come up with something or do something and because another engineer usually on like, you know, engineering forums and like Twitter and stuff like that because they can't personally imagine doing that and committing to that level of work and skill and bringing a bunch of people together like teams and paying them and having a company just because they can't imagine it. They don't think it's possible. So they try to shut you down. They say, that's not possible. You'll never be able to do it. Well, here we are 280 plus circuit python libraries on single board computers and eventually we'll have circuit python running bare metal on single board computers too. But just because you can't personally imagine it doesn't mean it's not possible. I think that's one of the things that maybe we can all agree. Just check yourself before you say not possible, maybe not for you, but maybe someone else can and maybe you can help them because none of this happens in isolation anymore. Like everything takes a bunch of people. And I think that's one of the problems is a lot of engineers work by themselves and they don't work well with others. So they can never imagine what it would take to have a team of people build something together. So that's what circuit python is code plus community can't do it alone. And that's why it's such an ambitious thing because no one has gotten enough people that like each other enough to work on something for a sustained period of time. That's a very deep insight. Okay, more. Speaking of circuit python in space update, this is from our community. The spacecraft that they wanted to get up and get python out in space is going to be launching next month. All the hardware, all the software will be public as soon as they get NASA's blessing. This is a Stanford project. And we're going to have circuit python in space. Look at this Blanka. She's in space. So there's at least four spacecraft running circuit python 531 launching in December by NASA. So cool. We have to make like a little circuit python board that like it has a countdown for like when we have a space. All right, there is a swag badge for the Linux conference in Australia runs micro python. You can check out deep dive. It's got if you're interested in ink and more it's got doing a lot of that. And of course the ESP 32 s to spend a bunch of time on that check out geek mom projects. There is a bunch of neopixel projects and more. They are beautiful. You can see marks eight of box 16, Rocky heart pixel show and the hollowing eye to make it really beautiful display music. Check out JP show with the tricolor thing. We showed that earlier. And since everyone got their eight of boxes, they are using the matrix display to do a countdown. People love the countdown. Could I see a lot of people like modifying it? Somebody was like how many days till you know, they're their grandmother visits. It's fun to make a lot of countdowns. If you're interested in data science, we have a link to the top 10 Python projects on GitHub image processing in Python. And as you can tell, we're super Python fans. So if you're just interested in Python news only, you'll be able to get that in addition to all the events and more. We have over 280 libraries. We'll do a little thing when we get to 300. Yeah, we'll do all sorts of and all the latest updates. And then yeah, here's your conferences. Here's the events. Yep. And then check out Codecademy courses and more. And that is Python on Herbal News this week.