 Okay, Python on hardware time. By the hardware time, oh my gosh, oh my gosh, oh my gosh. By the hardware time. Okay, we're gonna do this in two parts. Lady Aida, first you're gonna talk about what's latest and greatest with Pico W and then I'm gonna talk about an upcoming event. Okay everybody, it's that time. You've been waiting, you've been bugging us and now it's time for you to step up and try out the latest builds for Circuit Python. We have a couple builds that are after version eight beta one and I know beta two is being worked on and probably will be released in the next couple of days. We now have TLS support as well as private certificates and sorry, self-signing and private like client side certificate loading support for the Pico W so the only thing that doesn't work is making a HTTPS server but that also doesn't work on the MicroPython so we're not too worried about it but if you want to connect to services with TLS which you should, if you want to use MQTT, if you want to use NTP, if you want to use requests, if you want to do anything on the internet with the Pico W and Circuit Python now is your time, Adafruit IO works, we got a demo of that tested, Liz checked it out and we're working on getting the Azure demo working there's some typo or something and we're gonna add some documentation but if you have used the ESP32 series that same code is gonna work on the Pico W and you get all like 320 drivers, you get all the example code, people should be able to take our projects and- It just works and now it's online. It's, yeah, now it's online. All right. So please try it and if you have issues, please open, if you have bug reports, open an issue on the Circuit Python repo because we are now in like advanced user bug reporting mode. Like we want people who really know this stuff to try it out and let us know what doesn't work with example code that we can replicate and then we can fix it but Jephler's done an amazing job. He's between the keyboards and this, he's doing the kind of alternating. Take one of your past Circuit Python sensor projects, make it Wi-Fi and send the data to Adafruit IO. Yeah. Play around with it. All that stuff now can be online. So gigantic newsletter. Anne was on a video cast, there's a talking Mac with Circuit Python, tons of new shows. There's just a tip below or project. Yeah. There is a bunch going on. RG matrices. If it blinks, if it charges, if it lights up, if it's a sensor, if it talks. If it's a skull. It's powered by Python. So there's also a bunch of events coming up but this week, the event that I'm going to talk about is the one that you're going to be doing, Lady Edda. So expressive DevCon 22. I got to do that. You got to do it. It's online and it's October 19th to 20th from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. CEST time and they have a bunch of stuff going on. You'll be able to ask questions. You'll be able to hear speakers. It's the first official DevConference made by four developers. It's a two-day online conference that brings you all the stuff from the expressive. You can look at the website and of course, the reason we're talking about it. Well, we talk about it anyways. Yeah, we talk about. What's going on? I'll be talking about CircuitPython 8. A big part of it is adding support for ESP32, the Wi-Fi workflow, which I'll be demoing. We have a guide for it and also just showing off all the different hardware we have. Why we are using CircuitPython, some of the benefits of using that for your IoT projects, et cetera, et cetera. And then I'll just toss in one note here. The person who, thank you, who said the following, someone nice. Getting CircuitPython 8 on PicoW is 30 seconds and awesome. The hardest part is this is dragging the UF2 over. This is so cool. I know because you're holding the big bottom. In 30 seconds you're doing internet. And it's like we want to make it so whether, whatever, you know, using ESP32, S2 or C3, whatever. This is our live stream, by the way. This is going to be all live. Expressive, all works. You're going to be able to read all and see all this stuff. So anyways, this is delivered. This newsletter to your inbox every single week go to AdafruitDaily.com where you sign up. It's completely not related to your Adafruit.com account. Separate website because we don't like spam either. We don't give out any of the email addresses. We don't do anything like that. That's why we have a separate site. Okay.