 No, no, no, no, no, no, no. I'm off this week. Okay, so you're gonna see us revise a lot of our GPS products. The GPS module, the ultimate GPS module we've been carrying for like a decade, no longer being manufactured, but we found a drop in replacement that is a little bit taller, it's four millimeters tall instead of like two or three millimeters tall. However, it's pin compatible and so we were able to drop it onto our devices. The only thing that's a little different is it's a GPS plus Golognas. It's like it uses, it can also receive the Russian GPS system. So that might be good. You have a lot more options for satellites to get data from. That's still very fast, very low power, up to 10 hertz update rate. A couple of the commands that you use to detect the antenna change slightly, but it's all in the data sheet and this is a great drop in replacement. So thankfully we're having all those GPS units, all those GPS products that we're getting out of stock they'll be coming back into stock with this new version. Next up. You have a Trinki, but you want to use it with your latest MacBook, where we've got a USB-C to type A converter. It's great for anything that uses type A USB, you want to type USB-C. Like a light up Adafruit key. But it's great for Trinki, so you can just slip on the end, plug it in and you're good to go. Next up. Okay, we also have a couple of new key packs. So this is a pack of 12 Kale red linear keys. This goes with the macro pad kit. So we got them in a pack of 12, so it's very easy. You don't have to worry about like two packs of 10 or whatever. You get a full 12, so you're good to go. We also have singles of Kale black linear and Kale blue clicky. So... I think I put both of these together. No, it's okay, because the linears, these are black linear, they're a little stiffer than red. And then the blues are clickies, but they are sold in singles. We're gonna try to have 10 pack in singles so that way you can get just the number you want. Or if you have a Neo key, you don't want, a whole 10 pack, you just want one. So we'll also get singles of the reds and the whites eventually. Then we have these. We also have, these are the clear translucent DSA key caps. We stocked these in packs of 10, but now we also have them packs of 12. Why to go with the Neo key, sorry, the macro pad kit that's a 12 key macro pad. So you can still get these in packs of 10, but if you're like, I need 12 and I don't want two packs of 10, this 12 pack is ready to go. Nice symmetric, translucent, clear DSE key caps. Feel great and snap onto any Cherry MX compatible switch. And stars of the show tonight besides you, Lady Eda, our customers, our community, our staff, is the macro pad, first up, the bare bones one. Bare bones, why are we stocking the bare bones kit? Well, there's a lot of people who are in the keyboard community and they just want the bare PCB because they want to add their own key switches. They want their own rotary encoder knobs. They want their own enclosures. No problem, we got you, we got you. This is just the bare bones macro pad PCB. It's fully assembled and there's no soldering required. It's got, it's a macro pad. So it's got 12 mechanical keys that you can plug into those slots. They're Kale sockets or compatibles. Each one has a Neo pixel that goes underneath. You can blow through the key. On the back, you've got the RP2040 from Raspberry Pi. It's a great little chip which we can run Arduino or circuit Python on. Eight megabytes of flash that go with it. Each key is connected to an individual GPIO so you don't have to do any matrix driving. It's just like one key per. We also have a 128 by 64 monochrome OLED which I think is just super fun if you want to display what you're typing or have some feedback or overlay details. There's also a rotary encoder that we solder in. It's a detenti rotary encoder. It's just like 20 detents per revolution and there's a push button, push button in. There's also on the back a little speaker. So the speaker is eight millimeters. It's not like a high resolution speaker but it's good for like little beeps or sound effects or tones or audio feedback. So you want to know when you type something it'll maybe say what you typed or give you a sound effect. I will mention that at the time of this video QMK does not support the RP2040 chip itself. And so if you're like, I need to use QMK. You can't at this time. One day QMK will probably support the RP2040. What it does, we'll provide some firmware definition for it but right now this is for Arduino and circuit Python use only. Okay, next up we have a kit that comes with a little bit more. This is the add-on pack. So you've got the basics, right? And so you've got the, you could also get the 12 pack of keys that we talked about. You can get the 12 pack of translucent key caps but maybe you want like a little enclosure type thing. So this is two PCBs and a little bit of hardware that you can add on to your macro pad to kind of make it more fully ready to go. So there's like, this is what we call the enclosure or the mechanical part. So there's two PCBs. One of them is a mechanical key plate. That's the part that has all the holes cut out. So that, it doesn't have any mounting holes but what it does is when you snap in the keys they kind of all hold each other in place and it keeps them really nice and solid. It works very well. It's a stableizer plate for just 12 keys. And then you've also got this really beautiful bottom plate that's designed by Phil B with like a cool like NASA space theme, like Vera Rubin quote. Got some sort of like Voyager probe type thing going on there, space planet. We're going with space theme for the macro pad. You can reverse it either way whether you're like the black and white monochrome or you want like the golden probe display type whichever you bolt onto the back. It also comes with four bumpers. So to protect your desk, the four screws to attach the bottom plate and then a rotary encoder knob. So this is the add on mechanical kit. Okay, and here it is. Okay, but let's say you're like I too complicated. I don't want to get separate keys and key switches and key caps and whatever. I want the whole thing, we get the starter kit. Chances are you want the starter kit too unless you're like a mechanical keyboard person and you know that you're like no I want to mix and match. So you get the whole thing. You can make your very own three by four OLED and rotary encoder macro pad. We looked at a lot of macro pads. They're all really awesome, they're great. We just wanted something that was kind of like a little bit of everything. You've got a smidgen of rotary encoder. You've got a smattering of keys. You've got an OLED display, USB-C RP2040 chip controlled. So it's got kind of a little bit of everything but it's really easy to reprogram in Arduino or CircuitPython which is what we're supporting with this. And I think it'll be neat, you can use this. CircuitPython has great MIDI support. It's got keyboard support, it's got mouse support. You can use our new faster key scanning core in CircuitPython 7 to make your own macro pad. And of course the OLED display. You can use that as feedback to display what the keys are, what they do or if you have an overlay or functionality or you just want to have BongoCat going, go to town. So this is our first like macro pad keyboard thing. We've been doing keyboard projects using individual keys but now we've got something all in one that's no solder that's ready to go. So I'm very psyched about this macro pad. Maybe I'll show it on the overhead real fast to wrap up the show. Okay, so this is really close. So this is the 128 by 64 monochrome OLED. And you can see here, I've got the rotary encoder. You can detect when it's pressed as well. And then over here, each key has a north-facing neopixel. There's a lot of debate. Should we do north or south-facing? Well, north-facing one, hold on. And then each key here can be detected individually. You can press as many or as little as you want. It's very fast. The OLED is SPI, so it updates very quickly. Each key is individually connected to a GPIO. So you don't have to do any scanning. You can just quickly check if it's held down. And then rotary encoder add-on. And then altogether, it's a very beautiful silk screen on the back, thanks to Phil B. And this was your quote for Ruben. You suggested it? Yeah, and someone said in the chat the Ruben Observatory is starting to open and do some works in, so it's very on time. Yeah, and you got this really cool, like, cool, because this is just decorative. The bottom plate is a mechanical, but we didn't want to go with acrylic. We wanted something a little more sturdy, so we did FR4, and this shows you how it's put together. So there's the bottom plate, the standoff that's built into the macro pad, and then this is the mechanical support plate that keeps all the keys nice and sturdy. So there you go. We've got our very own keyb. Let's get right into it.