 Y'all can load up questions over in the Discord chat because that's where we do the questions and answers. So first up I'm going to do a couple of things. Yes. So this is the logo for the floppy project we're doing right now. It's called Adafruit Floppy. We'll see something, but the logo, if you look close, this is the back of a floppy. Floppy's don't have two hubs and spin around, but a rabbit does. And then these are ears. I like logos that look like something else, like the FedEx logo. There's an arrow in it. And then you could see there's just like a couple of variations and stuff like that. And for those who know me, a little bit of a secret history. Well, not only that, but the Hackaday logo was almost a floppy that was going to be like a rabbit or with like skull stuff. And so it was going to be like a rabbit skull with like wrenches or something like that. So that's the Hackaday logo I did. And you could see there's like, you know, have a style of a thing. And then this is Bruce, our designer, worked with me on this and it was, it turned out good. It definitely looks like the bunny and the skull are best friends. They're friends. They hang out, make coffee together. And so then you were showing off these things. This is the Superduper Floppy Flopper. Yes. This is a little breakout board to a standard floppy 34-pin connector and also a 26-pin. Service Mount connector for laptop floppy drives. Okay. And then you had another thing. This is just a little feather friend. This is something that was going to make it easier for me to do projects with floppy disks because I can plug in a feather without having to do all the wiring. Do you copy that floppy? This is important that when you make a package for a floppy disk drive, that the schematic symbol must look like a floppy disk. It's the rule. And like I actually spent a few minutes. Also made a breakout on request for the DRV 2605. Revisited in its eBitC ESP32 and finished routing an RP2040 metro airlift. All right. And that's top secret.