 It's time for Python on hardware. It's a fucking good time. I think these are cute. They are cute. Yeah, this is a series of... It's an article, but it's also a GitHub thing. It's github.com slash Adafruit slash awesome-micropythons. So through the... Not awesome-micropythons, awesome-micropythons. Plural. So micropython has a lot of different flavors and different ports and a lot of different forks. Correct. An example is micropythons and a lot of calculators. Right. Micropython, there's a flavor of it for XP. There's a micropython for ESP32s. Yeah. And so the thing that was the challenge was there wasn't one spot that listed all these. Yeah. So what we did is we made a list of all the awesome micropythons, including the forks like CircuitPython is a derivative. It's a fork of micropython. For beginners, lots of hardware support. Yeah. There's a fork of micropython that's just for the ESP32. There's one that got started for the NXP series. Yeah. So we put all these together and then there was a helpful community member that there's this chart-generating thing so you can see all the different forks. Yeah. It's approximate. The times are... Yeah. We're basing off some GitHub data, which is not always 100%. Yeah. A lot of people don't know this, but the most distributed version of micropython is the one that's on the microbit. That's right. Millions. That's a completely separate fork. An early fork too. An early fork. Yeah. And they're not... They don't take any updates. It's frozen in time. That's it. Yeah. And so it's a good start of a community list of all these things. When it was made, if it's being maintained, all that stuff. So check that out. Also, this was from CircuitPython Day for last year, but it just got posted. This is the video from the CircuitPython Celebration Day in Beirut. One of the things that we set out to do is have something that had international appeal for anyone on planet Earth. If you want to do educational programming. So this was neat because we didn't plan this at all. Just people said, oh, by the way, we did one in Beirut. So watch the video and you can see the folks that put on the event and their stories on the YouTube video as well. This is kind of neat. This is our update that we did for our app. Blue fruit can control this little puppet. I mean, they're sparky. So it's a digital puppet that as you move it around. So we'll be doing this with Clue as well. Speaking of Clue, Clue has been hitting the news. So a lot of people got there as they've been writing reviews and more. So check out those articles. Yeah. So Alpha, but we'll be in release soon. Very exciting. Open hardware summit is coming up pretty soon. The badge there is CircuitPython powered. And so I believe this was Alex who showed the testers. This is a testing jig. Yeah. This is an intense testing jig. Yeah. Look at this. This test each badge. Yeah. It's Raspberry Pi powered. There's a display. There's a little magnetic colder. Yeah, it's cool. Very exciting. So everyone who goes gets a CircuitPython watch badge. This is Liz, also known as BlitzCity, who showed this project on show and tell tonight, but we had this in our Python on hardware newsletter because it is a CircuitPython based musical instrument. Melissa got her Clue. And the first thing she did was let's make sure this works with a little bot accessory. One of the bits of feedback that we had already was, you know what I really like about Clue? I can finally use all these accessories that I wanted to do a bunch of stuff with after. And take them further. Yeah, take them further and all the stuff I wanted to do. So that's neat to know. We also posted up how we named and came up with the Clue. So every single time that we do a project or a platform, you and I usually hang out and we do sketches and we write all these things and I scan them in. So this was neat. How do we arrive at the Clue as a product? So you can see that. It's kind of neat. Special thanks to Andrew and Discord, who made this handy dandy Clue pinout. You can download it off of our site or you can check it out on Discord. Here is a Ultimaker Mini, and it uses the Clue to light up the insides of it. It's kind of nice. Fun, easy project. Allie, who is teaching classes with kids, introduced 106 kids to the Circuit Playground Express, and this is what that looks like. Here's all of them learning. Coding. Make coding. Look at all these LEDs blinking. Some are doing make codes, some are using moves, some are doing Python, but this is 106 kids and Digikey helped make this happen. And very cool. Allie, good work. Here's another example of someone. They have this, I think it's called the cube bit, and you plug a micro bit into it. You can control a cube, but you can also plug in Clue, and you can use our app, I believe for Kinect, and you can use that to control the cube. Nice. Kind of cool. Other folks getting their clues. This was View, I believe, who was on our show until last week, and this is an environmental sensor Clue that will make the LED change color based on, I believe, what it's sensing. This was kind of neat. This was a Circuit Python meetup, and this was in Prune, India, and this was a really neat workshop to see folks do. So we have more information about that. So this is contagious in a good way, that you hear that in the newsroom. Allie designed Circuit Playback Express and Circuit Python, and we like make code for workshops because you can actually get something done in 45 minutes, whereas Arduino is very powerful. I really like Arduino. I use it every day. It's really hard to do a workshop in 45 minutes because there's so much setup people have to do. It was Valentine's Day last week, so of course people made Valentine's Day projects. I shared this. There's this thing called Psychic Paper in the Doctor Who universe, and this is a Circuit Python-powered e-ink display that has this e-ink flash very quickly. Is it like a... Psychic Paper? Yeah, it's unique. And then this was from the newsletter that I like to read. James Bowman, I believe, from X Camera. Yeah. He got Circuit Python going on a 1280 by 720 screen. Yeah. Getting closer to HDMI out for Circuit Python. We're totally going to have Circuit Python PCs. Yeah. This is Kevin's projects. These are the Circuit Brains. I believe these are going to be live soon. Tindy, yeah? Tindy or it might be Crowd Supply. Yes, it's Crowd Supply. Okay. So you'll see this soon. They were just submitted. Nice. And they're also in CircuitPython.org slash downloads. David is working on this thermal camera project, but of course got clue on it using the screen. It's still working on the Sock Robot project. You can see the video number two. This person just got their new Teensie 4, and they got Circuit Python running on it out of the box. So this person is Teensie fan, and now you can do even more things with your Teensie like run Circuit Python. It's like a dream getting it. It's like a dream. So easy. Group Gets has, this is the preview of the new Orange Crab feather format. I believe this is another one that will be live shortly. Yeah, it's FPGA. I mean, it's going to be, you know, a fair price for a powerful board. The monster. You want this beast, this Orange Crab, which looks cute, but it's a beast. You get a lot. Feather e-ink badge. I love it. This is so cute. Yeah. This was for, I think, the JoJo... JoJo Cruise. JoJo Cruise badge. Yeah. And it's e-ink, and on the back, what's this? Oh, it's a feather. Oh, that's cute. We did an article series. We found everything that is micro-bit shaped. And said, here's everything. Because you were wondering, like, you know, how many are there? Micro-bit shaped. And here's the thing. I thought that I knew every micro-bit shaped board. I didn't even know half of them. There's a menagerie of them. There were so many more than I thought. Like, I never even heard of this. This is like the new bit. Yeah. That's incredible. And then last up, this, everyone has seen this on the internet. This is the rotary cell phone. Yeah, this made the rounds. This made the rounds. It's an e-ink display. It's a rotary cell phone. Now, the thing that a lot of people may or may not know, is how much site you looked at it on. If you looked at it on a site, and they know anything about electronics, or they Google around, or they just quote the maker of this, this has a phone inside of it. Yay. And our e-ink breakouts. And our e-ink breakout. And so we're very proud to continue to be the only US cell phone manufacturer. For our cell phones. We are. We're a US cell phone manufacturer. You're actually like, it's this side. It has, like, those, like, modem LEDs. Yeah, this is the future we all wanted. This is a nice project. And that is Python and Harvard News this week. Okay.