 Look at them, you have to rush to get to this massive. Yeah, so we have a ton of top secret to kick it off with some RTK, show a bunch of videos, and then show some of the designs that Lidia just posted. That's true. Then we'll do questions right after this. So start putting up the Discord. So we've got these RTK chips in. Really excited about this. So they're Neo M8 and M10 modules from Ublox. Basically, Ublox stuff is back in stock and you can get it. So we've got some samples to pick it off with some behind the scenes stuff and more that's coming out soon. Fairly data. What is this? This is better than ice cream. It's me getting back to a 2020 design and wrapping it up. This is the Zed F9R Rev3 firmware from Ublox. This is a real time kinematics board. So it does high precision GPS, like we're talking about centimeters here, much better than the couple of feet or couple meters of standard GPS. It's a little bit more expensive though. The cool module check out that huge ground plane underneath. I actually started this about September 2020 and that shield design. And it was actually pretty much ready to go where I ordered PCBs and then, boom, I couldn't get parts. But now, look, I have a whole wheel of 10 or cut tape of 10. This is like 200 bucks a piece. So this is like a $2,000 of components, which is a pretty big deal. I also got these cool GPS modules, the M8Q and M10Q from Ublox. So they're going to be a Ublox party up in here. Fairly data. What is this? This is a prototype of a DIY USB hub. And I sort of had her onto it because I want to test it out. It's a four port hub. So when you plug in USB on this side, this gives you four ports. You can see plus data power, data plus, data minus ground, four times the four, one, two, three, four. And this is a duplicate of the USB host port case. You don't want to use a connector. And then on the other side, I've got one of these. These are like no, you know, there's nothing intelligent about them USB breakout cables. So this is just from a port to a header. There's no USB chip inside or anything. And then I've got like a trinket in here just to test it out. And then when I double click this, that's green. It means you're enumerated. And then on my computer, it shows up as a disk drive. So to start all four ports. So this is going to go in the shop soon. It's a, I think SL 2.1A. So it's a USB to four port hub. Early dude, what is this? This is America. Yeah. Happy Fourth of July. I'm testing out a prototype. This is an iSpy screen. So all of our TFT displays, we basically converted them to use this iSpy connector, which is an 18 pin FPC, which means on the other side of this, I can have something like this board for Raspberry Pi. It's kind of hard to see because it's green on green, but this is what the PCB looks like. It's got the two by 20 connector. So it works with all the Raspberry Pis. And then, Phil, you helped me design this. You were like, let's put two buttons. So two tactile switches. And then there's a slide switch for like different mode selections you can get if you want. And then an iSpy connector and a STEMI QT. And then on the opposite side, well, there would be a two by 20 header, but I haven't soldered it on. But it plugs into your Raspberry Pi here and makes it really, really easy to like make an animated GIF player with different animated GIFs. So happy 4th of July, board coming soon to the Adafur shop. Really, dude, what's this? This is a RP2040 Metro board. Kind of what it says it is. It's a Arduino classic shaped board with all the header pins and all that. But it has an RP2040 and all the GPIO and a microSD card that's also hooked up for SDIO if you want high speed reading. There's a new pixel I have to solder in and debug port, SWD, you know, all the ports and everything. And the last thing I do whenever I make a Metro is I check it out with our capacitive touch screen because it does SPI and I squared C. So, okay, it works. Love that for us. This is the shield plugged in onto the board. So now I know all the GPIO work could have tested it. SPI works, I squared C works. The debug port works, I plugged it into my J-Link. So all I have to do now, and the SD card too, all I'll do now is do that final silk screen and order PCBs. Bam! Let's start doing that. Early day noises. This is me testing out my prototype for the audio BFF board. BFF boards are these little microcontroller add-on boards that plug into a QDPI or a shell breakout microcontroller to add more capability. So we've already made one with a micro SD card and we also made one with an ITUS amplifier. And I've got one that mixes them both together. So we've got micro SD and amplifier, which means it's perfect playing audio through this Pico blade to up to a three watt speaker. So I plug it in. I've got a little bit of circuit Python code running on this that'll play all the WAV files that are on the micro SD card and order. And then some Taylor Swift going. Got some white stripes going on. And then finally, the happy song by Imogen Heap. So very good for making audio playing projects, very, very tiny. It's all in one. And it's coming to the Adafruit shop real soon. Bam! Early day noises. This is LED sand. Oh, a fun demo. This is our kind of all in one demo for the Matrix Portal. And this is my latest Matrix Portal board. So this is the Matrix Portal S3 demo. So originally, we had the Matrix Portal M4, which had a SAMD51 and an ESP32 co-processor. And then I actually designed an unreleased version of the Matrix Portal with an S2. But then the S3 came out. And the S3 actually has a really cool built-in peripheral that makes driving RGB LED matrices really, really fast. This is my prototype, not quite silkscreen-ready. But it's got all the same hardware and same pinout, Stem-AQT and reset button, a couple GPIOs, Neopixels, and of course, accelerometer, which makes it perfect for doing LED sand demos. It can drive, thanks to the 2 megabyte of PS RAM, kind of a massive number of panels. I think you probably drive 24 or 26 of these in a row as long as you can power them up. Bam! Early day noises. I'm getting to some really old prototypes now. This is a CSI-DSI adapter that goes from the 22-pin, 0.5 millimeter pitch to the 15-pin, 1 millimeter pitch that's used on the Pi Zero and the Raspberry Pi, classic style. So here I'm just testing out. I have this going to the Raspberry Pi on the camera port. And then this is like a wide-angle spy camera. And then if you go to the monitor, I'll run Raspberry Pi still, and you can see that this is working. And then you can even do some cool. Whoa, it's inside the camera. So yeah, so this is working with a nice long cable. And now that I know that all the pins are working out, so I can design a tester for this and order it and put it in the food shop. Bam! Bam! Massive. And that's just the stuff we had time to post and share here. So there's even more that we're going to try to get out throughout the week. So what's this for? This is a redesign of our resistive touch LCD shield, 2.8 TFT. The resistive touch originally used the STMP-811, which got discontinued over COVID and part shortages. And they kept promising we'd send this chip, but they didn't. So they changed it around to use a TSC 2007. And I just finally got around to like, I've gotten through 350 designs, redesigns. And now this one is up next. Unfortunately, I left the hardest ones for last, but that's kind of how it is, huh? And this one had kind of a fresh redesign, but I think it should be good with the TSC 2007. Use iSport C, not SPI. I think it should be OK, but we'll see. It also added a STEMI QT port. And this is coming soon. This is on off the press here. These are from, yeah. These are from RP-2040. The RTK stuff was from mid-2021. I designed an RP-2040 in an ESP32, S2, or S3. S3 didn't exist at the time, but I would definitely use the S3 now to get blue-truthful energy. And these are Clueboards. So this is like, the Clueboards will use the NRF-22840. We still have some of those in stock, but all the sensors got discontinued, or the price is tripled. So I have to do a bit of a redesign on these. We do have some list 3 MDLs, but I don't really want to use those anymore. And the LSM-60S33 got discontinued. We're going to use the LSM-60S3TR instead, which is pretty much code compatible. And the microphone also got discontinued, but we found a pin-compatible one. Anyways, it's just like a joy. And then this is a version. It's kind of interesting. We had to tuck the antenna underneath the STEMIQT port, because we can't move any of the stuff over there. It's fixed position. And I wanted the antenna to be out, but I think I couldn't rotate it. This was kind of my best way of handling that. OK, and then Top Secret's going to be two part, because we have a My Little Hacker segment that we're going to show the first glimpse of the project we've been working on for a while. My little hacker, my little hacker, building a queue is magical. My little hacker, my little hacker, it's time to build a show. OK, so before I show this, I just have to make it super clear. Shawshank Redemption is one of the best movies of all time. And the reason why it's one of the best movies of all time is it has a really good positive, because there's not a lot of fictional stories that have positive male role models. Is it pyrus, but like modified? Yeah, but it's such a good movie. People don't care about the font. But Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman characters, absolutely fantastic. One of the best stories, buddy stories ever. And you just don't see a lot of stories like that. You don't read a lot. You don't see a lot of those. So one of the projects I've wanted. Because Stephen King isn't doing cocaine anymore. Yeah, so one of the projects I've wanted to do for like 10 years is to have a Teddy Ruckspin. This is an animatronic bear that reads the kids. There was one in the 80s. Another one came out in 2017 with Morgan Freeman's voice reading Shawshank Redemption. Or at least some of the parts from the movie where there's just some beautiful speeches and how things happen. So if you can get the bear, this is going to be in two parts. So we got it working. We're going to be posting a code soon. You can get these on eBay for like 10 bucks. Yeah, you want like five. They used to be like 200 bucks. And I'm just going to play the first part. Then I'll play the video. So this is from the quote I missed my friend Andy. It's like this part of the speech. I don't want to run the movie. I haven't seen it, but it curses just a little bit. So that's not what I that's not the video that I'm going to put online. But you can you can hear a little bit this and if the noise cancelling for the microphones cancel it. Don't worry, I'm going to play a video in a second, but just to show you what it does. Which makes me like all the other side. All right. So we have a beta tester and I'm going to show I'm going to show you the video we shot today. Right after we got this working. Headed for the Pacific. Those of us who knew him best talked about him often. I swear the stuff he pulled. Sometimes it makes me sad, though. And to being gone. I have to remind myself that some birds aren't meant to be. Their feathers are just too bright. And when they fly away, the part of you that knows it was a sin to lock them up. God's rejoice. But still, the place you live in is that much more travel than it really is. I guess I just miss my friend. And that's Tom's secret. So we'll be posting that code shortly. Go to eBay and get a Teddy Ruckspin Bluetooth. Or they'll say Teddy Ruckspin, L-E-D-I-S. They're going to probably get all bought up off eBay soon because this will be a popular thing. OK.