 And this week, the big news, the only news, well we'll do a little bit of other news, is happy birthday, Microbithon, you're nine years old. Yay. Happy birthday, you're nine years old. Yay, look at that happy snake. So I'll talk about some of the things we're doing with Microbithon and for Microbithon. But first up, some highlights. April 29th, nine years ago was the first line of Microbithon written. And they're up to newsletter number 12, do check out microbithon.org and sign up for it. And you'll get details and cool stats like this. This was from the latest newsletter. More commits, more contributors. In the last one year, 1,210 commits, that's up 817 from the previous year. There is about 13,000 commits altogether, 147 contributors from 93 from the previous year. They released V1.1617, 118. They gained new features, you can go through all of these. And then GitHub Sponsors has grown. So they managed to get up to $4,150 last year it was per month. Last year it was $1,250. Last year, GitHub Sponsors didn't allow organizations to sponsor. So I think I did a personal one on the monthly and then Adafruit donated $8,000 because it was their eighth birthday. And that's the way we did it. We did it one time there, but you know, you don't get listed on it and we don't do this stuff to get listed. But like there are some people are like, oh, why is an Adafruit contributing? It's like, well, we do, they just didn't list it. So we're really pleased to say two things. One, there's a new version of MicroFi that I'm having, 1.19. And we're synced up with our releases with Circuit Python in the community synced up. But I didn't want to mention what we're doing. So for MicroPython, now that organizations can sponsor, you can check out github.com. Oh, look. slash MicroPython. And you can see we are now a sponsor. We're in the first spot right now. I don't know how they arrange it. Maybe it's the latest or maybe it's the most because we just dropped some coin. And we're the 85th sponsor that's listed on there now. And they were at 84% to their goal. And now they are at 93%. So you can get it even closer. If just a few folks do it in this chat right now, github.com, forward slash MicroPython, you can do it. And our credit card got pinged. And now it's a monthly thing. We're doing at least $500 a month to get this started. We want to get the word out. And we'll be following up on our blog post. We'll be following up on socials. And what we're going to try to do is just keep parity with how much can we donate to MicroPython. But also make this so it doesn't end up just being a couple of companies. It's a community effort. So we all have a reason to keep this thing going. We buy hardware for MicroPython. We donate to MicroPython. But we also want to make sure it doesn't turn into just three or four companies doing this. And CircuitPython is kind of on its own doing its own thing in its own community. And long term, I expect just like the direction now, there's more non-Circuit Python boards than Adafruit boards. So we're all going to have to figure out ways to continue to help open source. But this is a direct for sure way. So go to MicroPython's GitHub and do a sponsor. You can do it. Heck, by the end of the show, we can get to 100%. It's only 3% now. You can do it. It's going to make some noise. For CircuitPython news, I wanted to say check out CircuitPythonShow.com. Melissa's on there. Yay. Yay. So the latest one, this is episode 8. Melissa is on there being interviewed. And more congrats, Paul, who's been doing a fantastic job on this. And there was two projects in the CircuitPython world celebrating May 4th. Todd Bodd is one. He's in chat. And then there's another one, R2. So I was going to play both of these. What's this? It's the world's smallest targeting computer. I better not turn it off. And that's Python on hardware. Thank you, Blinka.