 Okay. Let's kick this off. The very first thing is we have a shirt. It's part of Adafrit's policy to only stock women's sizes first. So as you may know, we don't do NFTs. We don't collect NFTs unless you're talking about nice F and T shirts. This is the front. This is the back. There's nothing on the back. I'll talk about my custom version that I'm doing. Here's Lady Aida wearing it outside of a NFT gallery here in New York City. We're doing something special. When you buy this shirt right now, again, it's only women's size. We'll have other sizes later, but this is how we start and we wish other tech companies would do the same. You get a party pack with a bunch of cool things. When I fill out the form before I go live on YouTube, it says, is this for children? And I say no. So there is some adult humor in some of this stuff. So I'll let you check out some of the other things that it comes with. One could say there's a little bit of cursing here and there, but it is a wholesome memes and more and we wanted to make it clear that we don't do NFTs unless you're talking about nice F and T shirts. If you want to check out our amazing gallery of shirts that the Adafrit team has, you can check out our statement and then we all got together and we decided like let's show our shirts because we all seem to collect amazing shirts here at Adafrit. People at Adafrit have great taste. Yeah and there's lots of amazing shirts every day. We have a stand-up meeting here and I'm like, hey, who has a cool shirt today? The history behind some of these, who bought them for who, dead inside but caffeinated. There's retro ones. This is a shirt that was given to someone's dad here. Amazing. There's so many neat things that people use to express themselves like T shirts. This is kind of neat. Improvising electronic devices is not a crime. So anyways. Oh, that was sent in. Thanks. Yeah, well, we have that one. So anyways, that's it. Do you want to show, do you want to hold it up here? Yes, I just had it. Sorry, there's a lot going on. Yes. Yeah, it's beautiful. It's soft. This is from the share zone and this has helped us out too because we have stalkers and harassers who keep saying we do NFTs, we don't. We don't. Unless you mean. Unless you mean nice adventurers. Okay. So anyhow, that's the shirt. If you're not a woman's size, that's okay. We'll have some later. We'll get some later. And you get the party pack with it next up, Lady Aida. Okay, so the show, maybe the feather is, we have a new STEMAQT board. This is an arcade, LED arcade STEMAQT breakout, which lets you connect up to four arcade buttons with LEDs built in. And here, thank you. It was a wonderful video of Jelly showing off our 23 millimeter arcade buttons. And they have LEDs in them. And we had some people who were doing projects and they're like, I want to make you MIDI fighters or I want to make an arcade interface. But before you know it, you're using a lot of PWMs. You have a lot of inputs. Could you make a version that makes it easy to control these? And in addition, our red and yellow LED arcades and other LED arcade buttons often need five volts for the LED. They're not designed for three volt logic and power. And so there's a little mini boost converter on there that'll convert whatever voltage that's coming in to five volts. So even if you're running this off of a Raspberry Pi or, you know, an RP2040 that's a 3.3 volt logic and power board, the LED will be lit and PWM'd with five volts. So it's I squared C to four button inputs and four PWM LED outputs with five volts max current drive. There is a resistor in series, so if the LED doesn't have a resistor, you know, don't worry, you're not going to blow out your LEDs. It's it's like super safe no matter what. Okay, and you want to show it off? Yeah, I thought I'd show it off. So this is the same, you know, I think it's one inch by three inches that our other, you know, the NEO key and the NEO slider. So it's kind of a, you know, DIY interface using all the same size PCBs. Here I have it plugged and played into a STEMA QT port on a QT Pi. And there's a little mic controller with four address jumpers and it's just connected over I squared C and it's reading the button press and you can see it's pulsing the LED PWM and 8-bit PWM number from 0 to 255 and you can see how responsive it is. Like even though it's over I squared C, the button is red and the LED is written is is happening pretty much instantaneously. Do you sell those wires? Yes, these are arcade quick connects. They're great for connecting to arcade buttons and micro switches very easily. No soldering is required which is why I particularly like this for if you want to add arcade buttons you just, you know, you just plug the JST XH connector in and it's polarized and then on the other side these, I mean they're they're a tight fit on purpose. I kind of don't want to break this. Yeah, okay. Okay, I don't want to break it but if you use pliers, you know, they pop right off but if you're using your hand I don't want to, you're not supposed to yank by the cable. Don't do what I just did. The demo gods are treating us nice tonight. Let's not tempt it. So yeah, you don't have to use these small LED buttons. We also have ginormous ones but you'll just make, want to make sure you have the right arcade quick connects for whatever size button you've got and LED socket. All right, and then the star of the show tonight is the D-Lady, our community, our customers. The Adafruit team is the free pink feather. They're back. They're back. So, you know, that was a new product but the only way to get the pink feather is just to load up your cart and then you get a free one after you spend $99 or more and, you know, look at the chart, learn some things, use the code and more. It's pink, guys. And that is this week's new product. You say no to pink? Nonsense.