 All right, so I want to do a thing right before we show this, yeah, so special thanks to the folks from RISC, because this is our first RISC board, which we're going to show in a second, put this on the other end. They sent us RISC socks, so check this out. Where does it say? These are RISC 5 socks. Wait, hold on, hold on. Wait, here, I'll do it right here, look at this. These are RISC 5 socks. It says RISC 5 on it. They do. They sent me, and we have a section on our website for nice, freaking, technical socks. Yeah, and thank you, RISC, for sending us out RISC socks with our first board. From RISC. From RISC, right. So, Lady, what is the star of the show this week, and the only product we're showing this week? Okay, it's one, but it's a good one. We have a new cutie pie, and this time it's featuring the ESP32C3, and this is the first RISC 5 chip that we, again, we've developed with, so it's pretty exciting. It's from Espressif. It's an ultra-low-cost Wi-Fi Bluetooth chip with a built-in USB serial converter. Note, it doesn't do native USB. It's only USB to serial, plus, like, a JTAG debug mode. And it's at chip in the middle there, and it's kind of designed as a replacement for the ESP8266. It's, you know, got, I think, 400K of RAM, and it's got 4 megabytes of flash. I don't remember the speed of the RISC processor, but of course it's, you know, a 32-bit processor. And we put it in the cutie pie, and it's actually kind of a perfect format because the ESP32C3 actually doesn't have a lot of pins, so this actually kind of uses, like, every pin that is available on the chip. You've got a QT, a STEMI QT connector for all those iSquared C devices. You've got USB-C. You've got the boot button to go to bootloader mode, the reset button crystal on the back, some passives, battery inputs, and that's it. It's very simple, and I've got a little demo here I wanted to show. This is actually uploading data to Adafruit IO, let me just lock the, focus lock, okay. So this is the board, and so what I really like about this is that, you know, you can do no solder wireless projects. You know, this is the cutie pie, and the QT, and the QT pie is the STEMI QT connector. Here I've got the OLED connected to the BME 280, and then I've got it sending data up to Adafruit IO. I will say that the ESP32C3, it's stable and expressive, but it's still a little early. It is a totally new chip set, and so, you know, while a lot of stuff worked, you know, we have to be, for example, for Wi-Fi to work with the native USB to serial converter, I had to be on the master branch, you can't, you know, the latest commit, you can't use the release, the release has a bug in it. So it's a little bit like, this is kind of people who want to experiment, I wouldn't necessarily get this as your first microcontroller or even first wireless board, because I think you'll go a little nutty if you're like there's a bug and you don't realize it. That said, you know, it's got BLE5, it's got Wi-Fi, it's got enough RAM to do TLS quite nicely, it's got all these pads, it's got a NeoPixel, you know, four, it's actually got five analog inputs, a 12-bit piece, it's got I2C, a hardware UART that's also used for debug, and SPI as well as some power pins. So a very cute little board. I think, you know, again, the C3 is at least as of this viewing, it's an early board, but I think, you know, if you want to experiment with WISC-5 or you want to try out this new chipset, it's cool, check it out. All right, and that is new products this week.