 while the questions go over to Discord. So first up, Lady Aida, you were working on this. What is this? This is a magnetometer that you can buy. I cannot get any magnetometers. I ordered some a year ago and they still haven't come in. We covered this on the great search a few weeks ago is like, what can I get that would be a good magnetometer for an IMU? This chip that MMC5603 came up, gonna make a little breakout for it, get into the store because it's a magnetometer and I can buy it. Here's a little quick video that we made. This is the ESP32S2 that we're doing. All right, Lady Aida, what is this? Hey, I am working today on an ESP32S3 feather. If you've been one watching my little videos, you might be like, hey, wait, you made an ESP32 feather a while ago. Why are you working on it again? Well, the S3 mini is the same pinout as the S2 mini and I recently just did a revision for the ESP32S2 feather to fix the power supply and deep sleep mode with another LDO. So when we did the last run of the S2, I just swapped out one board with an S3 module and what's cool is since then, Arduino has added support for the S3 in a branch and so I've got the NeoPixel going and I've got the board definition going. So so far, so good. So I'm gonna order these PCBs this weekend because I got all the pins working, I squared C, SPI, UART, it's all good. So this S3 is ready to order and get in the shop. And you'll see some cool projects ahead. We're doing these 3D printed covers for graphic novels. These are so cool. This is a prototype that Pedro are working on. We're gonna have a bunch of different ones that you can print out and not only protect your graphic novels but display them really nicely. Phil B is working on this really cool thing. This is modeled after a very famous looking computer. I'll let the chat guess which one that is. And then we're doing some updates to PyLeap. We'll be able to load in a JSON file that'll display whatever latest guide that we have and you'll instantly with no code be able to send off whatever project that you can see on your phone to a Bluetooth enabled circuit Python device. And magically, but it's not magic, it's code that you can learn or not. You don't even need to use a code and get all these projects on your device instantaneously. Yeah, we're definitely seeing a future where students and kids do not have computers. They have phones and they want to write code. They want to explore engineering. Or most people. But they don't have a computer. I mean, a lot of schools, they have locked down tablets or locked down laptops. It isn't like when we were kids, when it was like, hey everybody, you can do like basically do whatever you want with the Apple twos in the computer lab or the PCs. So if you only have a phone, how can you get people interested in coding and electronics? So PyLeap is our view of that. It's a totally wireless, totally cross platform, no hardware, drivers required way of programming. My controller boards. Okay.