 Okay, Python on hardware this week in the newsletter, um, we are celebrating, um, micro Python, new release and, and, and, and I think, um, yeah, I think the browser is like, I completely filled like it's just like, I'm just not going to cooperate. So, um, there's a new version and then of course, um, happy birthday, we're going to talk about that in just a second. But this is the new version. We'll, you know, be doing our part to, uh, grab the things that are, um, added so we can keep up with all the changes. Um, and then I think the Raspberry Pi Pico W is now supported with Wi-Fi. That's kind of officially supported. And then there's a new lightweight, um, wireless manager. So like the Pico W is a great example where you can download, uh, library files that you need through the internet. Um, they don't have drag and drop file support. They don't do mass storage what we do. So it's extra useful for, um, what's great is you can pick depending on what you want to do. And, uh, that brings us to, um, so MicroPython, we're one of the financial supporters, we'd support it with code. This is where CircuitPython came from. Um, MicroPython is celebrating its 10th year, its birthday. So we'll get the noise out about that. We're a sponsor on, uh, GitHub. And so if you use MicroPython, check out the GitHub sponsors and toss them a buck or two. It keeps the development going. It definitely helps. It's what we build our core off of and as they celebrate their, uh, latest year, um, they have one of these cool, um, here's all the pull requests. Yeah, you can visualize it, um, which is, which is really neat. So you can see like kind of what's happened over the last decade, but this year they had a really neat poster and, uh, you can download it. We linked to it, but, um, let's just go through this here. They go from the early days, 2013, that's when we all ran into it. The Kickstarter. Yeah. Yeah. The Kickstarter, um, then they had MicroPython Pied Boards for everyone. They did two talks at Python, uh, UK in 2015, MicroPython went to space. So they had, uh, MicroPython on embedded systems that were in rockets, that were in, um, satellites. And then, um, other news, and this is where we come in, um, 2017. Yeah. That's where Python's starting. So, um, we've been, you know, keeping, keeping up with the changes and then also, uh, making MicroPython work for our hardware and lots of different hardware. And 2018, they announced the Pied Board D. Um, it, uh, I think at some type, MicroPython got some type of space qualification. Yeah, it's cool. They did a modular, uh, system with, um, their boards to make it easier. Yeah, you could plug in little, like, like there's LED add-ons and wireless add-ons. And then, um, we did, um, and then 2020, hybrics, 2021. That's when some of the RB2040 stuff came along. And then kind of big news, uh, for folks who, uh, play along. In 2023, apparently there's going to be another platform supported. Ambic. Yeah. Who does Bluetooth, very low-powered Bluetooth. Very interesting. They picked that platform. We've never done stuff with Ambic. You know, we use Nordic for Bluetooth and ESP32 and RB2040. But you know what? It's great to have more chips supported. Yeah. And then we'll see what we, uh, do and add to MicroPython with that. It's all part of Aderford Daily Newsletter. It's delivered to you every single week. AderfordDilly.com. We do not do anything with your email address when we don't spam. You have a completely separate site just to make sure. Correct. It's super clear. We don't like spam even more than you don't like spam.