 For the CircuitPython Parsec today, I wanted to show another really helpful tool to use when you're developing in CircuitPython, and this is called DiscoTool by our community member Naradoc. Now DiscoTool, we can use from a shell, or in this case I'm using it inside of Adam's shell. What it does is it allows me to see what devices I have connected by name. When I usually want to get to a REPL, I'll use Screen. Well, the problem is right now I have two devices connected. I don't know which one is which, I just see these unfriendly names. So I don't want to use Screen here, instead I'm going to use DiscoTool. If I run DiscoTool, there we go, DiscoTool will show me all of the nice names of the devices connected. In fact, there's even one connected that doesn't have a drive and a REPL showing up. That's the trinket over there for my camera switcher. Here you can see I've got this circuit playground blue fruit and this QDPy M0, and they're showing up by nice names. Now, I don't even need to look at the ugly USB modem name there, instead I can simply say DiscoTool-N for name, and then a part of that nice name. So how about QT? That's now going to connect me up to this QDPy here, which is just printing something every time it runs through its loop, which is great. What I'm going to do now is control T and Q, which quits. Now I can run DiscoTool, but this time say Blue Fruit, or just a part of that, and this is connecting to, I'm going to reset this, this is connecting to a program that's running to tell the phone notifications to show up on my little circuit playground blue fruit. Another thing you'll see that I did there, which is really cool, is I reset the device, it auto reconnects, which is not the case with screens. This is super helpful even just for your normal development process. That is your circuit Python Parsec.