 So, Miu, the first one is coming soon. Coming soon, you asked for it. You probably saw me showing this off on a couple of Desk Lady 8s and it's not out yet. The QT Pie 2040, I put one together and it all kind of worked, which is weird, but that sometimes does happen. So it's coming soon. It won't be green, it will be like this, black and white, it might look a little bit different. It's got a Stemic-QT connector, it's got 13 GPIO, RP 2040, I think it's probably going to have four megabytes of flash, but if people really want, I can make another version with a 16. It's got Neopixel, Stemic-QT connector, buttons for reset and boot, you know, nice strong power supply, big capacitors, so it should be really good and stable. It's got cast-related pads, you could theoretically mount this onto a PCB, but you'd have to have a cutout in the center. Maybe we'll design an eagle-cut object with the right size cutouts so you can, you know, mount this USB-C and all that good stuff. So it's, you know, a great upgrade for the QT Pi if you want something even more powerful. This is going to be like a super powerhouse. Okay, next up, this book is back. It's back. So this was a voluntary recall. There were a couple typos in this book, but luckily they're very easy to fix. We got new versions of the book from the Raspberry Pi Foundation. If you have a Pico and you want to use MicroPython and you want to be entertained and educated at the same time, this book is really wonderful. And I think we're sold out, but we're getting more. There's also a PDF you can download if you just want to read it on your computer screen, but it's a really cute book and a great way to learn electronics, programming, and MicroPython all at once. Next up. Next up. Okay, so you've got this really adorable little fingerprint sensor. Very, very slim. It's not as cheap as others, but it's like definitely the slimmest one we've got. It's got a little Molex connector that plugs in the back. It's got a plastic piece that lets you panel mount it pretty easily. And it's basically like the thickness of like a nickel. So why don't you go to the overhead and I can show this off and also demo it. So this is the thickness of it. So this is this plastic piece can come off, but you can see it's a little panel mount assistant. This is the actual sensor itself. And I've got it wired up here to my feather with an OLED plug in and I can do a quick demo. There are blue LEDs on the bottom. You can see that they sort of shine through. The only reason this is flashing is because I do a timeout. You don't have to have it flash. You can have it just be solid on whenever it's waiting for a fingerprint. Put the fingerprint on and I pre-programmed it with my fingerprints so it knows about three different fingers. There you go. It can detect fingers pretty well. This is definitely the slimmest one we've got. So if you're looking for something really compact, we have ones that are less expensive but they're chunkier. But this one is a very svelte. Cute fingerprint sensor. Okay. Next up. Okay. Next up, we have updated the e-ink gizmo. You love the e-ink gizmo. You're wondering, oh, now I got discontinued. What happened? What happened is the tricolor 1.5-inch displays we were using were discontinued. The display itself. I couldn't buy any more. So we upgraded it. The new display has more pixels. It's 200 by 200 pixels, tricolor. It does use a different driver. So if you have existing code, you'll just have to change the one line of code where it picks what driver it uses to use the SSD 1681. And otherwise, it's pretty much the same. It does look a little different when it updates. It flashes in a different way, but it still takes about 15 seconds. It still uses the same overall library code. So if you're familiar with CircuitPython or Arduino, we have code for both. So I thought maybe we showed on the overhead. Just one thing to watch for with these e-inks, you see, they take a while to update. This is normal. This is a little flickery, flashy thing. That's it slowly bringing the red in and then adding black as well. But you can see it's a really beautiful 200 by 200 pixels that it's got a great high density resolution. And of course, when I pull the power, it's still on. And I really like that the red is nice and vivid. The black is very dark, high contrast, and the resolution is very good. So as e-paper goes, the quality is improving and improving. And as new panels come out, we'll keep updating our products to use the latest technology. All right, next step. We've updated the BMP388 like many other sensors. This got a STEMIQTification. Same chip, great temperature and pressure sensor from Bosch, very high precision. Now with STEMIQT connectors for plug and play. The size, the code and schematic are the same. All right. Let's start the show tonight. So do you lead a community of customers and everybody out there on the Eat-A-Four team is? This is, okay, I got to get the part number right, it's the TPS62827, I put the X on there because the part number we could release a version that has different chip. This is our new product for the week, it's kind of a little basic breakout. If you need up to three amp peak of three volt power from five volts, which I do for a couple of products that are coming out, this breakout will get it for you. So you have a couple alkalines or lithium polymer battery or maybe of USB power and you just need a lot of power at three volts. This is our most powerful buck converter. It's not the widest range, we have some couple that do wider range, but none of them are going to be able to give you up to three amps peak. This one will do two amps continuous, no problem. There you can probably do three amps as well, but it does start to overheat a little bit. Also you have to make sure that your cables are nice and thick. This is a two ounce copper PCB, so that should help a little bit with the current transfer. It uses this really nice TI buck converter that we found and has even a little power good LED that lights up as long as the input voltage is in the right range. So if you're like me and you need a lot of three volt power, check out this buck converter. All right. Let's go for it.