 Okay, get into the vault. No, get out of the vault. Yeah. You wanna show some more videos? Yeah, I have one little video and then we have some still images. Some of these, we just released the products. It's not exactly top secret, but kind of it was working for our guys at the time. Whatever. So here is- Behind the scenes. Here is us testing our Feather 2040s with the teensy. Okay, Lamar, what is this? This is my RP2040 tester for the RP2040 Feather. We finished this up and I wanna show how the testing procedure works. I use a teensy and the USB host and this is really cool. I actually load the UF2 over mass storage onto here. This is my test jig. So I test all the pin connections. We just milled this on our other mill. If I crank it down here and then press this button, it loads the UF2 file, does a serial test and it finishes testing two and a half seconds. Which is awesome. Over here we've got the Eagle CAD file for the testing jig. You can see I test alternate pins that are not next to each other. And then this is the Pico SDK code that I load onto the Feather to do the GPIO test. This is in raw C, so it's really, really fast. So two and a half seconds is awesome. Yes, go test. One weird thing, so I put this up on YouTube as well. And because I guess Gmail does this feature and then also YouTube does this now, when you're logged in and it's your account for YouTube, it looks at the comments and it has suggestions on what to automatically reply with. And some folks had said, hey, I wanna see the code. And all of the things already filled, if I click one button it says, look in the description. Look in the description, look in the description. Yeah, because I guess it analyzes the notes. That's such a common thing. And then so it had no, I don't know, look in the description. So anyways, if you want to cut for that, it's in the description of the YouTube video or you can look on the blog post for that. Okay, other things we have. Cutie Pie that we were. Oh, the Cutie Pie RP2040. So I actually finished these up and just doing some testing and making sure everything was working. These are ordered, very exciting. TCA4307, this is an older breakout but we're gonna finish that up real soon. And it's a cool I squared T bus buffer. It's a DVI breakout, it's not HDMI, it's DVI. I was gonna use this with the RP2040 stuff to get DVI video out to displays that have DVI in. And sadly the STMPE811 is no longer being manufactured but we're looking at other SPI or I squared C. We just have touch controllers, check out our great search for a couple of weeks ago. I think this is the TSC20407. I don't know, I don't know the number. And then more experiments in NeoPixel keys. So what if we took four of those like Neo keys, put them side by side and then we have like a seesaw to connect them to I squared C so we can make like I squared C plug and play stuff. I don't know, cool. And then Rotary Trinkie, next door neighbor to Neo Trinkie. They're best friends, they used to play together as kids and now Rotary Trinkie is coming to life. Get back to the ball. That's in the ball. Okay.