 Okay. Like I said, this show is packed this week. Retro this week. So we have a backlog of retro hardware. So we have like a mini like Adafruit retro hardware museum. We have a big collection of Clackety keyboards. So this one, I've been meeting the post for a while. This is a Clackety Clackety keyboard from Bloomberg. And as far as I can tell, the only mechanical Clackety keyboard that's in a museum. And this one happens to be, and we have the same one coincidence. Didn't didn't know this until I did some fact-checking and some more research. But this one's in the Smithsonian. This is Bill Gross's Bloomberg keyboard. And who's Bill Gross? Well, he has a bunch of money and he donated to the museum. So I think that's what happened. Yeah. No, really. So no, he did. Bill Gross uses Bloomberg keyboard in his work at Pacific Investment Management during the 1990s and 2000. The Bloomberg keyboard is similar to other quarter keyboards in its layout, but replaces many of its generic functions with finance-specific keys. So you can see it here. There's like Gove button and Cancel button. And like it has like a microphone and headphones. I think it can mod this to turn it into like an MP3 player. There's some more things. Yeah. The speakers are definitely interesting. Yeah. And if you want to see more information, it was made by Maxi Switching, Tucson, Arizona. Maxi Sound keyboard. So I wonder if it was like, you know, they made the Maxi Sound and then Bloomberg was like, okay, I want you to make a custom version that like you slap our logo on and like some of the keys are green. Yeah. And so return. It's like, when you click hit that return, you're like, I'm buying an arm selling. There goes a mortgage, you know. Sorry, everybody. So it's in the Museum of Natural History Permanent Museum. You can check that out. So that is retro for the week this week.