 It's by Thelma Harbour Timely, Dan. Let's do it. Okay. Lots going on. In the last few weeks when we've been doing the Python on hardware segment, we would focus in on one big story, but I wanted to show the cornucopia of stories and more than Anne and Tina put together. So we covered Pi Day. We also had a note about the Raspberry Pi Foundation, which is different than the Raspberry Pi company. The Foundation supports kids, gets stuff out to everyone. If you're thinking about donating to a cause that gets computer science into the brains of youngins, this might be to think about. We also try to put things in like reminders. We did a rollout a long time ago with our team, but now the rest of the world is doing, we're all doing the same thing. So GitHub is going to start rolling out two-factor authentication. So if you're using GitHub, you will need to use it in some way. Yeah. That's good. More little ways for security is better. Make an interview, geek mom projects, use a lot of our stuff, using CircuitPython and neuroscience. And so if you just go through and see all the different projects, some and dialers, this is a really neat aquarium that you can use native fruit, MagTag, CircuitPython, Tharmin. But there is, well, there's two things. One is the... Yeah, this is a cute little guy. Yeah, this is a new RP20 Lego minifig and it runs CircuitPython and there's just like a ton of stuff. But there is one that I thought that was neat because we had to release this a while ago and this was a really good video. This is if you want to use your computer as like a hardware interface, right? Yeah. Is it the best one? Yeah, basically, if you have any computer, even like, you know, that runs Linux or actually works on Mac and Windows and you want to control GPIO like buttons and switches or drive NeoPixels or connect to SPI displays, you can use one of these FT232H breakout boards that we have and you connect it to your computer with USB and then in CPython, like on your desktop, you can use our library that talks through the FT232H to your hardware and like, I mean, it's not as fast ironically as a microcontroller because everything has to go over USB and so there's a little bit of delay. Before like buttons, you know, you want to add like arcade buttons or LEDs or NeoPixels or sensor data that you want to get. It can be easier than having to program a microcontroller that you then send data, right? You write the code once instantly and get data back and forth. So it's I try to tell people how amazingly cool and useful this is. And I don't know. So it's hard to comprehend. Yeah, it's like sometimes you don't need to use a microcontroller. You'd use a computer for stuff because then you get all the benefits of a computer without like, I have to optimize everything for a microcontroller. But the other thing that's kind of neat is if you learn Python once works, the same circuit path on library, what they require, which is the goal of circuit path. We kind of like that. All right. So that's this week's Python on hardware. Don't forget you get this you can get this delivered every week, kind of like a DJ Devin's mailbox. Maybe it'll go you've got mail you've got you've got a box full of wires. It for daily is where you sign up separate site. We don't spam you. We don't harvest email. We kept it completely separate from all the store stuff because we don't want your data. We don't want it. We don't want to we don't want to mess with you. We don't we don't like pop ups. We don't like spam. We don't like that either. So you've got to you've got to be the change.