 No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. All right, first up, good news. Well, not for long though. We have Grand Central's back in stock, but I think people are buying up really fast because we didn't have them in stock because of global parks shortage. So anyways, get them while you can and you can actually even get 10% off right now. We have the ones with headers. I think the ones without headers we're still waiting to get them. There's not a popular, but I know people are waiting for these. We ordered the SAMD51 P20s a year ago and they finally came in. So we're starting to, you'll see a couple things that have been out of stock for like a year come in because everything had 52-week lead time and we're like, okay, we'll order now. And that was a year ago and it's been 52 weeks. Here we go. You've got this Grove Pigtail cable. So this is a cable that you can use to plug into devices with Grove connectors. I even have one. Can you go to the overhead real fast and I'll show it just because it's an interesting connector. Just shut off. So this is your handy dandy, this is like a Grove Feather particle adapter. So you might have seen these connectors. These are Grove connectors from SEED and they're used for digital analog and I squared C. And a lot of people are like, oh, I want to make my own custom cables or extend them or adapt whatever. So this is the cable that plugs in and it's even got the little latchy bit. So this is kind of the nice thing. I know you can sometimes shove JSTPHs in there, but this Pigtail just has bare wires on the end. So it's great if you want to make your own custom cable. We also have an adapter cable from Grove to Stemma, QT or Qwik if you happen to need that particular cable. If you just want to make your own, this will also do the job. Okay. Next up. Next up, another Pigtail cable. This is a Molex, you know, there's a part number to this, but it's just called like a Molex IDE or floppy drive cable. So we're using this stuff because we're trying to do floppy things and we need sometimes 12 and five volt power. A lot of people have power supplies or you can get a floppy power supply or a disk drive power supply. And this will just break it out for you. You get two grounds, the red wire is five volts and the yellow wire is 12 volts. Also really handy for making your own wire harnesses to connect to those high power power supplies. Okay. And then it's finally here. Keep, keep. That's right. Yeah. So we have all these characters for, you know, a lot of our stuff and people assume we're doing NFTs. We're not. It's just a fun character for this board. The KB2040. Yeah. Yeah, it's funny as we came up with that character before NFTs. Yeah. But now that's the style. Everyone's like, oh, you made a character. I know, I know. It's not. It's just a happy character. You can right click and save it. You always could, always will be. Please do. He's a very friendly keyboard. Yeah. So this is the KB2040 board, which we've had for a while, but now it's in pink. I talked to our board house, we gave them a Pantone shade and we're gonna try to get all of our RP2040 boards to come in a beautiful pink color with black highlighting, which is kind of Adafruit shade. And it's extra good for this one because if it's gonna be like a keyboard, it's piggy, pink is a piggy color. So this is a great board for if you have keyboards that you are using like a pro micro with, but you want something more powerful. You can run circuit Python on this. You can run micro Python on it. Hey, I just subscribed. There's a QMK pull request to add RP2040 support to QMK, which is going to be massive because QMK is what like, that's like 13,000 pull requests. Everyone uses QMK for their keyboards. So having the RP2040, this is a chip that's available right now during the shortage. It's a powerful chip. It's a fast chip. It's gonna really make these keyboards fly. And in addition to all the pro micro pins you know and love, it's got USB-C, it's got STEMIQT, so you get extra two pins. So you can do a 10 by 10 keyboard array if you'd like. It comes with headers, it's got cast-related pads. You can short the USB if you want more power, if you wanna skip the fuse. And then they bring out the two USB data pins. Could be handy if you're doing a really funky wiring setup and you really want to have the USB port totally separate from the board. Yeah, and you get to keep this graphic for fun. And you can right click on that graphic and download it and give it to friends and funge it all you want. Yeah, okay. Funge away. All right, and then the start of this show tonight besides you lady at our community, our staff, our customers, all the folks that help keep this thing going is the Vemmel, Vemmel 7700. This is a STEMIQTification, but with a twist. So this sensor actually comes in two part numbers. One is like the vertical type and one is the horizontal type. And this is the right angle, this horizontal version. So if you see the sensor, so that little pink, purpleish square in the middle there, the sensor points out, most of our light sensors point up off of the board. And this one sort of points parallel to the board. This could be very helpful if you're doing like some sensing through a slit or if you have to mount it in a certain way or you're like, you're trying to measure something passing by. Not sure what, but I thought it would be kind of handy. And while we're at it, we STEMIQTified the whole thing. So you can plug and play it with all of our I squared C boards like the KB2040, which has a STEMIQT port on hand. Also, cool thing. Catney Edition. It's the Catney Edition. Catney worked on this board and she also has been doing so much work on the STEMIQTification. She gets to have her signature on the back of this. It's another thing that I think is kind of cool is electronics and have the people that make it. People made electronics. That's right. Catney made this. Now you know. So check this out. This is a great low cost luck sensor. And we're probably gonna add it to our giveaway or freebie giveaway, because it's such a handy one. And that's new products.