 Alright, it is Python on hardware. Yay, I'm wearing the shirt. Yeah. I'm ready. Alright, a few things. We'll play this full video later, but we got MP3s going on CircaPython devices. Correct. Very cool. So this just means you're going to be able to do a lot of cool projects. Yes, we had Wave playback, which is great, but waves are kind of big. So now we have support for compressed MP3 format because MP3 is out of patent, which means that we can now ship software or hardware with MP3 decoding on it. It will only work on the larger boards like the M4 or the NRF 52, like the more chunky boards, not the M0 series. And you can play up to two MP3s concurrently. Okay. FOMU. Want Python in your USB port? Of course you do. Try the beta of CircaPython for FOMU, full USB support, thanks to the new USB port and the awesome tiny USB library binaries and instructions are on GitHub. And you can also read some of the story about a profiler. This is an FPGA, I think, running WISC-5. It's basically a WISC-5 processor that's then loading CircaPython on it, I think. I mean, it's pretty amazing. And it fits in a USB port, like inside. Tiny USB now supports the NXP IMX RT Cortex-M7s, including the RT-1010, RT-1015, RT-1020, RT-1050, RT-1060, and RT-1064. There are over 300 stars and 70 forks of this. Tiny USB is helping everyone getting USB onto their hardware, and that's usually the first step to doing CircaPython. And you get all the stuff you get. Mass storage, CDC, HID, more stuff coming down the pipe. Beacon of. What's this? The Feather family takes flight with Feather and CircaPython on the NXP IMX RT. This is from Arturo, and this is something we're going to be working with Arturo on this. Two flavors. You can do USB-C. Yeah. You can do each type of RT and... Yeah, this is the 1010, and this is the 1062. So the 1010 is a lower cost one, but it's available in QFP, not in BGA. And then this is the BGA version, which is, of course, a ton more pain, but you see that extra mezzanine connector that has full TFT controller out. It has a megabyte of RAM. It's bonkers. Yeah. Whereas the 1010 is a little bit simpler. It doesn't have as many pins, but you stuck a ESP32 on the end there. So you can do wireless and Bluetooth. Yeah. So we mentioned this before. We're working on an NXP Arduino-shaped thing. We're working on an NXP Feather one. We're going to try to team up with Arturo. So this is good to see because this is where we think it's heading. People will do stuff with tiny USB. They'll use the Feather format and then they'll get CircuitPython going and they'll go fast. And that's the thing that's really important. You can do all this development really fast and speak it fast. These are some previews from Scott of the things that he showed last week, not only on the show and tell, but also on the tweets. This was showing live messages off an iPhone that goes over to a Bluetooth device using CircuitPython VLA. Brian Stacey is working on a lot of stuff. We put this in our newsletter every week. This is all his Oshpark orders. It's not actually, it's just looping. It's not an infinite score. No, it's actually infinite. It's actually one of these boards I put together. Lots of cool games that people are developing with CircuitPython. This one is Blink is Breakout. It's a CircuitPython implementation of the game that's similar to the classic Atari game chips challenge. This is by FOMIGuy. This connects up to look at the RSS feed on the Amazon AWS re-invent conference. And then it would keep track of the number of announcements. This is the Pi badge. So not only is it a conference badge. It shows your name. It can basically live stream in what's going on at the conference. This is some 3D printed cases at Hackaday Supercon. Thanks to Digikey and I guess us. We had a bunch of Pi badges, Edge badges at Supercon. And so people were able to instantly quickly do something cool with it. And now they're making cool accessories for their badges and more. This one I think is going to be a guide or is a guide. Coming soon. Yeah. This is a Pi portal smart switch that uses Adafruit IO. And if then this that turns on and off the light with voice command using Alexa or Google Assistant. This is always neat. So Cedar Grove is like constantly making these really cool. I can have these feathers. Yeah. This is a Stemma host feather wing. And then this is the Stemma wing backpack. And you can check these out on Hackaday IO. But the feather wing attaches to the feather wing board provides Stemma or semi-QT interface. And the other one is a backpack that has standalone semi-interface for a non microcontroller feather wing. Like a nice word, C, R2C and LED display. Whew. There are three circuit Python lectures. There's probably more by now. This is from Korea. They're showing all of... And if you speak Korean, listen Korean, you can understand it. That's good because that's the language they're in. And this is all about Python, Blinka, like it runs on Raspberry Pi. Tune into that. Here's another good example. This is what I was talking about before. Folks are quickly making badges and prototype hardware and they're tossing circuit Python on it. This is so cute looking. Yeah. This is a cute little badge. This is the CC Coven badge that runs circuit Python. And in our newsletter, we have a link if you want to buy one and help support the maker for that. This is the Feather Snow. It's an easy way to unlock your programming creativity with circuit Python. It's a snowflake and you just plug it in and you're doing Python and they can control snowflakes. Lots of new boards over on circuitpython.org slash downloads and slash Blinka. So we check all of those out. We also featured the book. We have this in the story. This is from Japan. This is circuit Python and Moo. But one of the things about the circuit Python book that I thought was neat is there's a page of why is it called Moo? And the author, Nicholas, is very thoughtful. And like he said, he has many layers of why he comes up with things. Moo sounds like Moo. Kids like saying that. The Greek Moo symbol is for micro. Moo is a micro editor for micro things. Modern pronunciation of Moo is me. So the website is code with me. And does the editor have a Buddha nature symbol? Yeah. Over on the Dropbox blog, you can read this cool article. It's about the creator of Python and how Python makes thinking in code easier. The Python Africa videos are posted. We posted all of those up in our newsletter. And if you're looking for a good gift this year, these are Python earrings. Cute. You can stop over at their Etsy store. And it's the, just search for Python programming language and you'll stay on Etsy. Look for the earrings, yeah. That's Python harmonies. Yay, blinker, blinker, blinker. All right.