 All right. So first up, coming soon, I'll take care of this one. CircuitPython7 is on its way. It's the great merge with MicroPython and CircuitPython. They're best friends. And keyboards. Lots of keyboards. HID and USB stuff is happening. That's it. This is a poster. Sign up. We'll be making a few. And you can always download it as well. Next up. All right. We've got some updates. So this is the three and five millimeter infrared brake beam sensors. You have one transmitter at the top and then the bottom is the receiver, a transistor receiver. These are great for brake beams. You want to see if somebody has like put their hand or something or some devices between the two LEDs. They work about like a foot or two away. Three millimeter and five minutes. So the update is they now come with these nice premium wire. And so you can you can solder them if you want, but they're great for breadboards now before they were bare wires. Now we spent a little bit more. Got them with premium wires. We had this in our Aida box, the last one we just shipped. And I love them so much. I was like, I want them for the store as well. So we've updated this product. And then there's the other one. This is the five millimeter. Same deal. More LED, more bright, premium. Okay. Next up. All right. Next up. We've got a whole plethora, like really a menagerie of 2.4, 2.4, 2.54 millimeter or 0.1 inch pitch jumper cables. So these are like kind of standard like Berg or Molex, whatever you want to call them, jumper cables that have two sockets on either end. And so I'll show, I'll show there. I start off with one and then it was like, oh no, we're just going to, we're just going to show all of them because there's too many to show one after the other after the other. So yeah, I'm going to show them all once. So, so basically we have, you know, and we have individual like jumper jerky, like the pullable ones, but these are in one piece. And there are a lot of times where I'm like, I really do want them to be in one solid piece so I can jumper two things together. You don't have to worry about like accidentally flipping one or coming loose. So we have them, you know, in like up to I think 20 in a row, we have like 8, 12, 16, 5, we've actually already carried six. One thing I'll note is there's no guarantee of the colors because they're just like jumpers that you'll, they'll definitely be like, you know, symmetric so yellow like pin one is pin one and then pin five has been five right. They're going to be in order, but the colors may vary, although I noticed that once you get to the longer ones, you know, they tend to start with with black and then white and then back to brown. That said, you now have, you know, these about eight inches long in all sorts of lengths, they're just really handy. And they make for very clean wiring and because they're point one inch, they work with just about anything like everything you that would normally use a breadboard or headers. You can now easily jump for them. And of course we also have the individual jumpers. But what I like about these is that you don't have to worry about these coming apart or coming loose. They're just like one solid strip. So I think they're very handy. Okay, next up. Okay, luxury key puller. This is like the wire whisk style. This is the nice kind of wire key puller. So if you're doing keyboard stuff and you have to pull key caps off. This is actually kind of the tool to use like really is the only thing that works really well like with your fingernails, you're just going to break them. This has like these two strong metal prong kind of whiskey looking things and they slide over the key cap as you saw in the image. And then they can just pull it right off. They work really great. They're not as cheap as the plastic fingering ones, but those don't work very well. These can get in, even if it's like in the middle of the keyboard, you can pull out individual keys anywhere on the keyboard, which makes them, I think, a wonderful. Next up, this is an update. Also an update, but leading into another product for this magnetic read sensor that's built in as a door sensor, a window sensor. You all see these in security systems. These also now have premium wire ends on them. So they're easier to use with a breadboard or perf board or plugging them into cables or whatever. I just love these. And we did it for the eight of box and now they're in the store. Speaking of, if you missed out on this last eight of box because we sold out, we basically have a starter kit that has everything that was in the box except for the year subscription to eight of foot IO, which was of course only for subscribers. But this pack has all the sensors that you need to follow along with all the eight of box projects. So you can do the mail slot detector as shown here using break beam. We've got this is a door alert sensor that sends you an email when a door has been opened using, as you can see, the magnetic door sensor. We've got the parking detector. Melissa did a bunch of home assistant projects. There was that water cat bulls to see if your cat needs more water. So you've got the water sensor, the window or door magnetic sensor, the ultrasonic sensor, the PIR sensor so you can detect a person. The break beam sensor cables, the back plate and the yellow brick mounting stand. Next up. All right. Next up, you got these skinny neopixel strips that are RGBW. We have RGBW LED strips, but they're kind of chunky. These are very slim. And so I thought these could be handy for some people and they're beautiful. So inside each neopixel, it's not just RGB. You can see kind of it's split in half. It has RGB and then the bottom half has yellow and it's separated. So if you want to have like true white color phosphor LED light, you're going to get that with the sensor. Whereas normally if you try to mix RGB, it never quite comes out white. It's like, white's kind of funky. You really want like this full spectrum color. So we've got these in two versions. One is the warm white as shown here. And then this one, which has the same RGB. And then when it goes to the white, it's a cool white. So two versions, warm white and cool white. We just kind of skip neutral. And then I can show real fast on the overhead as well. So as normal, each one comes with JST, SM connector, three pins with data, power and ground. And then you can see it does the rainbow. It's very good at the rainbow, red, green, blue, and then a warm white. And it's a really nice white color. So for architectural or accenting lighting where you want it to be a true like incandescent white or daylight white. This is going to look much, much, much better than trying to color mix the RGB segments. Just remember you need to have a new pixel library that has RGBW support. Almost all of them do, but just make sure you follow that step because it has four LEDs in it, not three. Otherwise your data will come up, all funky. And then we have the stars show tonight besides you, Lady Aida, our community and our team here at Aida Fruit. It's the RP2040. They come in one in ten. That's right. Coming soon, we also don't have any spare for it now as seen on. Yeah, because we're using them for these things. On the feather, RP2040 on the QT pie, on the itsy-bitsy, on the QT 2040 I'm designing. This chip I've been using it, it's been great. I love it. And the Raspberry Pi Foundation, as of Monday, is sort of letting people sell them individually. So right now sign up and we'll have them in singles or packs of ten. As of right now, the price is, again, a dollar a piece. It's a great price. And then, of course, user open source design to kickstart your design. And then make your own. Make your own whatever you want. It's a great price for a chip so powerful. Dual Cortex M0 with tons of RAM. Runs Micro-Python. Runs Circuit-Python. Runs Arduino. Runs Embed. You know, anything that needs a lot of RAM needs fast bit-bing I-O support using the PIO clusters that are into this chip. I love it for Circuit-Python because there's so much RAM and Circuit-Python requires a lot of RAM. But I've just been having fun with it using Tina USB to make mechanical keyboards that are reprogrammable. Yeah. The RP2040, of course, does an excellent, excellent job at it. So check out the RP2040. It's going to be in the shop soon. You can sign up. And then, don't forget, you'll also need SPI flash with it, which we also stock. Yep. So proud of you.