 Hey what's up folks welcome back to another 3D Hangout. My name is Noah Ruiz, I'm a designer here at Adafruit and joining me every week is member of the Pedro. Good morning everybody, I'm Pedro's creative tech here at Adafruit and every week we're here to share a 3D print to projects featuring electronics from Adafruit. That's right, this is where we combine 3D printing and DIY electronics to make inspirational projects. Hello everybody, hanging out in the Discord chat room. If you'd like to join us during the show you can shout us out, ask questions, start up some banter on the live broadcast chat room channel inside of our Discord. If you'd like a invite to that, the URL for that is discord.gg slash Adafruit. Take a moment to welcome everybody to the show. Thank you so much for joining us. Good morning, good evening, good afternoon, wherever you may be. Thanks for tuning in. We've got some fun things to share today. Some new things. Shout out to everybody hanging out. We've got rolls on the YouTube chats. We've got Juan, we've got De Wester, Mr. Certainly Bruce. We've got Andy Calloway, Stuart Riggs, and more Terabyte, Tigerbyte. Thank you all for joining. Yeah, sorry, I had to hit the record. We're recording the thing. All right, I'm going to start with the housekeeping staff, so let's get started with freebies. Bear with us as the image loads. It may or may not load. It's probably going to be being updated. It looks like there's an update to some of the free stuff. Come back later tonight or this evening to see the different updated tiers. From last week, we didn't have an update for orders that are $99 or more. You'll get a half-sized perma-proto. That's that lovely half-sized breadboard. For orders that are $149 or more, you'll get the breadboard plus a randomly selected STEMIQT board. If you have an account with Adafruit, we'll make sure you don't get the same one twice. For orders of $200 or more, you get the STEMIQT board, the free perma-proto, and free ground shipping in the continental US only. That's the update to the freebies. They get automatically added to your shopping cart as you check out, so don't worry about adding codes or anything like that. There we go. All right, newsletter happens once a week. This is focused on products. If you'd like a newsletter focused on products, go to Adafruit.com slash newsletter and subscribe. Nobody gets automatically subscribed because we don't really spam folks that way. If you want that, you have to work for it. We have daily newsletters as well for the different various categories, such as Python on hardware. You can check that out at AdafruitDaily.com. It's not tied to your account or anything, so you have to opt in to be subscribed. If you're looking to share your Circuit Python or Python related projects, you can tag anyone of us on the Discord server or on Twitter and socials. You can add Circuit Python or at Amborella, whatever social media you like to mess with, to get your stuff featured in the newsletter. I need a better banner for that because it's nice that there's over 9,000 people subscribed to its newsletter, and it's a great platform to kind of share either your project or products that are Circuit Python or Python related. There we go. JobsBoard is available at Jobs.Adafruit.com, so if you are in the market for a new gig or a new employer or someone to help you with your projects, you can post them up on the Jobs form, so check those out. There are some good ones out there. On the contest front, the Halloween Hackfest, sponsored by Digikey and Adafruit, powered by Hackaday IO. You can check those out. Let's see. I have a link over here. You can check the link in the description of the video. There's still plenty of time to get your projects submitted to the contest to win some Digikey credits. The end date for this one is October 11th, 2021, and that's a Monday, so you can check them out. There's some new submissions going on, so if you don't want to participate but you'd still like to get inspired by some Halloween-esque projects, you can check out the submissions and check it out. Visayha is saying that their project is featured in this week's newsletter. Excellent. That's so great to see. I'm so glad you got it featured out there. Yeah. Very cool. That's the Halloween Hackfest sponsored by Digikey and Adafruit. I think that's almost everything. They also worked on one of the end-canny eye pendants, the project that's featured in there. Super cool. Definitely the good time of the year theme. Excellent. I think that's it for the host keeping, so thanks everybody. You can check out all the links in all of the chats. Yes, someone was asking, Walden was asking about the Snapchat glasses. Yeah, they're just on Amazon and get the version too. They're like GoPros. You can go swimming with them. Are they still $130? Yeah. Yeah, that's a good price for a camera that you can wear on your head. Yep. You can get the prescription glasses with the translation lenses and the water resistance. So there's the hydroscopic. That's right. You can go in the water with them. That's very fun. Get some underwater shots. A good way to get shots of your kids. Yeah, or your kids or your family's kids. All right, well, that's very fun. Let's go ahead and jump into this week's project. Super cool, exciting launch of Whippersnapper, which is an Adafruit I.O. Sort of like... It's a layer on top of Adafruit I.O. Yes. It's a nice interface that allows you to just click around to get some IoT Wi-Fi enabled boards with some kind of basic projects. So door alarms or just any sort of sensor that can do email triggers or other various triggers. So huge shout out to the whole I.O. team for a very smooth release. It was in beta for a little bit. I think it might... Maybe it still is in beta, but y'all can check it out because the learn guide, the quick start guide is out and published. So you can check that out to get your hardware, you know, just playing around. Yeah. Played out some of the words. So check it out. It's very, very fun. We have a demo here. And so check out the learn guide. Pedro will put a link in the description and all the chats. But again, it's an interface on top of Adafruit I.O. It is free. If you have an Adafruit I.O. account, you can click on those links and install the firmware on your hardware. So let's take a look at the device page for free Adafruit I.O. accounts. You have up to two boards right now. We have support for all of these boards here. I'm just clicking here. So all of these boards here, the ESP32, the ESP32S2, the MagTag, the Pi portals, and any of the SAMD51 boards with an airlift or the FunHouse, they are all supported out of the box, which is really, really fun. 82.66 support coming soon. Yeah. The 82.66 is a pretty popular ESP board. And that is still in development. But these are the main heroes of the, what can I say? Count me out with words better. One of the top ones that was super easy to use, especially because of having the Stemma cables on there. So it makes it solderless if you want to go that route. You can, of course, pick one like the Hazel. And solder on any pins that you want to. For sure. All right. So once you have the firmware downloaded and installed, which is literally a drag and drop to install that. Super easy to do. Okay. If you follow the Learn Guide, it will walk you installing with Per snapper on the various hardware. It's for the ESP32S2. It's done over web serial, which is really, really fun. It's done over the Chrome browser. There's a little gift to show you installing it on the Pi port. You just drag and drop the UF2 file. If you're familiar with installing CircuitPython, that's pretty much the same type of deal. It's a drag and drop thingy, which is really cool. And this walks you through setting up your credentials, your little secrets file, so that it can connect to your Wi-Fi network. And then from there, you're going to do a little bit of extra setup. It doesn't look, hopefully it doesn't look intimidating to you because it is one time deal. Once you've set it up, you're ready to go and you're ready to start with your projects. So once you have installed the firmware on your hardware, it'll show up automatically in your little dashboard. So this is my Wiper snapper boards device page. I'm going to click on, I'd rather the device list because you can have multiple devices. We have our mag tag setup already. It even tells us that we need to update our firmware. So this can keep track of your hardware's firmware, which is super excellent. So I need to update that after the show. So let me click on that. We have two components. A component is something that you can just click on and assign it. Let's say I want to assign this relay. I can click on the relay. I can give it a nice name. And then because it knows what the hardware is, it tells me the pins that are available on my device. In this case, it's the mag tag. So I have a few buttons and I have some D-pins that I'm already using, which is why they're grayed out. So let me cancel on that and show you the power strip. So I have a power strip that's literally behind us and if I click on, it turns it on. It's amazing. No code was needed to set this up. It was all done through this interface. So if you've ever done an I-O project, you know you have to set that stuff up in your code. There's no code here because that's what Wipersnapper is. On top of that, you can create a dashboard. So you can tie this into the dashboard. So if you have a really nice graphical one, you can have a giant switch like this and just use that. You can see how instantaneous it is. It is so fast. Even between different devices, you can see it update so fast. Which is great. So Pedro, on his laptop or on his mobile device, he can access it anywhere, which is really cool. And you can do more than one. As you can see in the dashboard, we have a read switch also hooked up so we can have some detection of like when a door opens, say you don't want your child going into one of the rooms. Yeah, keep your eye right here. Open, closed, open, closed. And you can add that to a dashboard by following the, you know, clicking on the dashboard and picking one. I have a few of them. So that's why I don't have one set up. But yeah, you can see it right here. So each of these components will show up in your device page, which is our little mag tag here. And you have some nice links like documentation or the learn guide for the mag tag. But again, click on the component. We're adding more components throughout the, I don't know month, but there are more components. ITC coming up. Yeah, I squared C is being worked on. So all the sensors that you know, all the stem and QT sensors will be supported at some point. And I'd love to have new pixel support. But for now, these are your kind of basic components for getting, excuse me, for getting started. Yeah, these are a lot of fun. That water sensor is going to be a really, really well used one. Yeah. But yeah, that is the demo for Whippersnaver. Yeah, especially since the costs are setting one of these up. It's literally just the board sensor. So it's about 20 bucks for having an internet connected alert when you have like a leak in your basement or something like that. And not only can it detect that, you can hook it up with nice soon, like say a BME or something to detect other, you know, variables in the environment. Can we make it so that this is sort of a random thing. Can we make it so that when the door switch is open, it turns the light on. I did give him a suggestion to add some CSS type things for viewing. Oh, you meant like have a trigger. Right. Can we do that? Triggered by something else. I don't know. That's funny. It's a nice suggestion. New trigger. It's a reactive trigger if the door switch is, I think, one or I think zero or one. And this is how you set up the trigger for having, a message is pushed through email. Yeah. Or you can have it custom off the script here. I don't know if that's possible, but that's a good idea. I'll relay that to Brent and see if that's a, that would be a, anyway. Forget I said that. One of the funny comments from Bruce is that Edward Ayoga is like an onion and has many layers. Yeah. It makes you cry too sometimes. Fun's about onions. You get too close, you start crying. All right. Well, sorry about that weird idea. That's super fast way to hook up. Especially when you have the project in mind, you want to get that, you know, set up. You don't want to sit there and spend time coding and debugging things. Because obviously there is guides on how to set this up without whippersnapper. And you can see it's, you know, a couple of pages long on setting up your IO credentials, your SSDI, like setting all that stuff up. This makes it super easy. All of that info in the circuit files, you literally just type that in and it sends all of that over to your 8-foot IO account. So for the, for the, for the Feather Hazah ESP32, we have it set up. So it uses that same door switch, right? It says it's open. But we actually have a working trigger, and that trigger is whenever the door switch is greater than zero, meaning it's open, it will give us an email. So that is a good look at, hey, the triggers are set up, but you're gonna get a very limited amount of triggers right now. So it's, right now it's just for emails. This will be something added as the devs work on it. I could have said that better, sorry. But anyway, you can see here, this is the trigger that we have set up for our ESP32. Hazah. And emails us whenever it senses the door trigger has been opened. So there you go. And how many times does it run? 13 times. And I can edit the trigger, disable it, or enable it, or what have you. All right, now it's disabled. Yeah, the UI is subject to change. So don't be, what do you call it? Don't get accustomed to the UI. I think this could be done a little bit better. But yeah, let us know what you folks think. You can drop us a note in the, I think the help IO, help with IO or Adafruit IO right here, this channel, you can go there and let us know what you think. Sweet. Thank you for all the folks who have been beta testing it. That means a lot. All right, any more IO stuff we can talk about? I think that's pretty much it. It's super easy to set up. As the name implies, it snaps together all of your components to make it easy to make your device internet connected. Yeah, it's pretty similar installation for all the various hardware, but we made sure that it's all documented. Yeah, the only different one is going to be, I think the 8266. There is an ESP tool that Melissa worked on that makes it very easy to flash the firmware that is required on there. Are you talking about the 32 or the 82? Oh, maybe it's the 32. Yeah, because the 82 is not supported yet. Yeah, I think it is the 32 then. Yeah, the 32 tells you how to install the web serial plugin for Chrome that walks you through that so that it can do it over your USB connection. So there you go, it walks you through all that. Set up your IO credentials your Wi-Fi password and all that. Yeah, lovely gifts to get you to make sure that you're seeing all the motion. But yeah, that's installing the various hardware. Then the overview will just walk you through kind of what we did but more thorough. So your device list, your device page, the components and a little bit of FAQ here. Lincoln LED is always a good one to start with. Since you have that on board, you can start playing around with all the sensors that are on board the hardware like the FunHouse. Chris Henning is asking for the Pi Portal. Is there going to be screen support and button support? Yeah, no ETA on that. No ETA, they're still getting all of the base level support in there. The next thing I suppose will be the stem of QT boards. But yeah, the display would be super cool. But that's going to be a lot of work. So give us a lot of time. Thank you. Yeah, so that's very cool. And then troubleshooting, I guess there's a page dedicated for some FAQ style stuff. Some of the status LEDs on the boards. You get a nice flowchart. And then you can always create and post up a topic in the Whippersap reform. And that's where the support team will be looking for support for things to support. Cool. And you have some extra details like how many data points can you have per minute, that sort of stuff with your free account. So you got a feed limit because it costs money to maintain a server, but you do have enough data points and at least two boards that you can play with. So that's pretty cool. And it just doesn't support ETA fruit hardware. It'll support community hardware as well. Yes. Yeah. So that is a quick look at the Whippersnapper. Go through the notes here. Make sure you got the links in. All right. Cool. Yeah. Check it out. I'm sure you have one of the supported boards probably laying around, just waiting. All right. Let's go ahead and move on over to what are we prototyping? Okay. What are you prototyping? So this week we have a couple of fun projects. All audio reactive. So this is a project that we'll have for next week. It's a collab project with Liz Clark. She put together the code for this one. IS31FL3741 LED driver matrix. So, oh no, we've broken our camera. What happened? Peter, please stall while I fix the camera. Oh yeah. So this is a super cool visualizer. I think one of the coolest places we've seen it is in that mask that has the waveform on the air. I think it was Lady Gaga who was using it. Super cool. It inspired us to get that little visualization demo running. And this looks super cool. I'm so sorry, folks. We can't get it to work. Check it out. So as we talk, hello. Yeah. So this is using the microlab library and the IS31FL3741. Or there you go. So it's using the feather sense, the PDM microphone input. It's taking that data and translating it into some lovely LED... LEDs? LED animation based on the... Based on the levels. Levels of the sound sensitivity. Yeah, so really sweet little matrix. And it's got, you know, the feather has built-in PDM, has an accelerometer and some, I believe, a temperature sensor. But yeah, we're using the PDM microphone that's on board the feather. Like a little mounting for the boards on the back. Super cool. Yeah, we got this little mounting plate and just four wired connections because you can connect to it via I2C, I2C. Now you have access to your reset button here with the built-in little button in there. Awesome. You have a little hole there for the PDM mic so you can hear it. Super cool. Oh boy. I'm really bummed about the overhead. It just stopped working out of nowhere. But yeah. Yep. Yeah, shout out. Liz, another awesome project. Great, good comic breeze. All right. So that's what we're working on. It'll be a project for next week. So we'll be on the lookout for that. It's a nice kind of easy project. Just a couple of, you know, wires to solder up. But for the most part, it's pretty straightforward. Oh boy. And then of course we have the STLs available too, or the 3MFs that we're using now for modeling your own design for this board. Thank you. Check all this out. Yeah. So this is a good plug for the Adafruit CAD parts repository on GitHub. You can download 3D models of all of the Adafruit parts by checking out that GitHub repo. We'll drop a link in the chats. But you can download the 3D model in various formats such as STL, 3MF, STEP, and Fusion 360. So you can get these one-to-one accurate models, use them in your designs, and make some stellar cases and closures, props, what have you. So we check those out. I hope you enjoy them. Yeah. So that is the Adafruit CAD parts repo on GitHub. Check it out. Favorite that repo so you can get notified every time, every week. There is a new part uploaded. Yeah. Cool. Thank you for the links. Let's see if I can get it all over here. Sweet. All right. Got some more prototypes. Yeah, we do. I can't get over that. Yeah. So on the prop front, we started making another prop maker-based project. So this right here is what we'll work on. It's a 3D printed prop. It's basically the baton from the TVA from the Loki series on Disney Plus. So this is a pruner. Pruner? I'm not sure what the name is, but it has sounds. It uses the prop maker and the Feather M4. We have this very fun light-up diffuser piece that's all 3D printed. On the inside here, we have a new pixel jewel. So it's got seven new pixels. It's running circuit Python code. The prop maker Feather Wing has a built-in accelerometer. So it can detect and place some sound effects when you hit it or shake it. Yeah, and it's using the LED animation library so that it can pulsate these new pixels. So this little piece here screws on top of this like that. And most of the assembly here is all a screw-fit. At the bottom here, this is typically where you want to keep your microcontroller. I can pull it out here. You can kind of see there. So I have access to the USB port. And with most props, I tend to make a little retainer bit for the Feather board. So yeah, that is the project that we are working on. Got to make those wires a little bit tighter, but yeah. You might remember these sound effects are from another prop. Probably a few years ago now. I'm going to turn it off now. The Keyblade, I believe, is where those sound effects are for. So I might change those out for something that sounds a little bit more like the TV show. But yeah, it's a fun NeoPixel Prop Maker project. It's basically a lightsaber in a different skin, right? So yeah, there's some fun projects you can make with the Prop Maker Feathering, which was one of the product picks of the week from JP a couple of weeks ago. And that was on sale for 50% off. So if you've got a Prop Maker and you're looking for some props, maybe you want to make this light stick. We'll call it a light stick. Pruner. Pruner, the Loki light stick. I know. I think for the video, we got to go to Disney because everybody's always dressed up as Loki and just go around and start poking all of the Loki's, see if they disappear. Don't do that. I'll dress up for you. The cosplayers are usually in, you know, ready to cosplay, which is why they're dressed up in their cosplay. Don't poke people without permission. Not physically. Okay. At a distance. Okay. That's a really cool one. This is still broken. So one of the other things that you're prototyping is these super cool. You might remember these from last week. So these are the LED Adafruit glasses. They might be called the eye lights. Last week we had the Feather RP2040 this week. We have the Feather Sense because it has a built-in microphone, built-in accelerometer. Let's go ahead and plug it in. So I have this, it's a micro USB, micro USB, micro B connectors. So I'm struggling to connect it. There you go. Plugged it in. We don't have a stomach connector on there. So we have to solder these wires to the SDA and SEL, 3 volts and ground. But hey, take a look at that. This is some audio visualizer code. This is from Phil B, Paint Your Dragon. It's using the micro lab library as well, with a little bit of fine details like these little white LEDs that kind of sparkle up there. You got a bit of a rain going on and it's pretty responsive. So this is one of the many fun demos that you'll be able to run on your LED glasses. And you follow us on the socials. You can see Phil B posted up one of the other, like the sand demo, but for the ring. So as you're moving around it'll track which way the ring will move around. Righto. Yeah, so this frame is all 3D printed without supports. It's going to work with any feather. Last week it was the feather up at 40. This week feather sense. Just got to solder these wires here. One of the tips here, you might want to put some standoffs in between the 3D print and your PCB. Just to have a little bit of elevation because when you have some wires that are soldered, you might poke the bottom a little bit. So that's why I have these little extra hex nuts that kind of elevated ever so slightly away from the 3D print. But yeah, that is the feather sense. Built-in accelerometer, built-in PDM mic, and this is the wolf silkscreen. People wanting the glasses. Yes, there are more being produced as we speak. Can there be an exchange so you can trade duplicates of orders between people? Yeah, you'll have to exchange those through the community at your own risk. But we probably won't do that. Hello! It was going to clap to go. Ow! My ears. Yes, we're cool. Coming soon. Coming soon. This code is available right now. Would you like to drop the link? I mean, like, in stocks. Okay, the hardware itself will be in stocks soon. Yeah, these fit over my glasses quite well. I was afraid they wouldn't, but yeah, they fit fine. And if you look at the product page, the video on there shows you the type of glasses that Lamar used, just off-the-shelf ones you can purchase at most costume stores so they can go on to your, any existing frames with some zip ties. So not required, but super cool to be able to customize them to your face. Cool. Well said. But yeah, the code is on GitHub. It's a part of the examples folder of the IS-31FL3741 library for Circuit Python. See it on the links. I think I got all these. 3741, yes, IS-31FL3741. We can just sing that all day. I stop at IS-FL, that's all. No, IS-31FL3741. I kind of feel like Dory when she, Wallaby Way or whatever. I sure would, Wallaby Way. Anyway, enough. Yes, so Squid was saying, yeah, it's good to hear as a fellow glasses wearer. Yeah, Lamar demonstrates it. She puts it on over her existing glasses, so they do fit over just a bigger frame that would be bigger than your glasses and they should go on quite nicely. And then there's all those additions you can add like adding some pads on the nose or modeling those in Ninja Flex, so you can have those elastic on your face as well. All right, that's what we're prototyping. If you got yourself these glasses, definitely check out the library, the example code for the IS-31FL3741. I need more coffee. Sorry, I was checking to see what's in stock. Not yet, but keep that page open and maybe later today. All right, moving on to Shop Talk. Shop Talk where cameras broke. A Wirecast. All right, so it's that time of the year. Yeah, it's that time of the year again where all the devices get updated and this year's no different. We do a lot of app development here at Aid Fruit. There's a really cool one that's coming up. I think Scott and Trevor have previewed it during the show and tell, but they're just super simple. They are cases for the new iPhone 13 Pro and the iPhone 13 Mini. So just like many years before, if you look at our Thingiverse profile, it goes all the way back to I think like the X and the ones before the X. There's a ton of them, like the S5s. So updated case design using Ninja Flex, all of the Elastomers, and like we were saying before, it's for the Pro 13 and then the Pro Mini as well. So we've got a couple of different designs that we're able to do on there because of the MagSafe battery. I did some cutouts so that the battery would fit on there to give you the most magnetic grip. Make sure that that is close up against the back there. So super easy to print out. One of the tests that I was doing with these was actually doing the prints all on the Bowden extruders and it worked pretty good. This is the 85A, sure hardness. So it's super stretchy. It's got that elastic, elastic rubber band. And then one of the other things that we added as well is because all of the phones now have such a big sensor, the camera bumps are pretty big. So we have all of the lens frames on all of these. So I have one for the pros as well. So you can lay this down flat without scratching the lens. And then we also have them, so we got one from my mom too and she was like, I don't like that open case. So of course we made one that hasn't been closed. That's not what she sounds like. And so we have a little cutaway here. So that it's actually thinner on the back. So the MagSafe battery can have more of a better grip to the back there. So you can choose whichever design that you want to do. And then you can adhere the little lens frame on the back. And then of course have fun with your colors. So I've got the blue one here and with a blue framing on it. And all of these are exported as 3MFs. You can check those out. Also export the STLs too. So you can have fun with all the different colors. And man, I just can't get over how good the printing on all of these came out with a Bowden. How clean that looks. That is very clean for Ninja Flex. Shout out. And again, this is not the 95A. This is 85A. This is like super soft and indestructible, which is why I didn't even bother making the PLA ones. Every time we would drop it, it would immediately break. These are like pretty indestructible. And one of the things that we're showcasing here are some of the Ninja Flex colors that we have in the shop. So we have this very lovely orange lava, I think is what they call it. I put the link in there. I'm going to show these off as I put the link into the chats for the Ninja Flex colors. They're the category for this. Yeah, a quick way. You could just use the search box on the top of the site. Type in Ninja Flex and you'll get the whole list of them. I was going to type in the category name or the category link for them. Yeah, because there's all sorts of different colors. It's a really good price point. $29.95 for a whole kilogram spool or half a kilogram rather. They're typically $50 to $60 anywhere else. And what's so cool about this is that they last quite a while. So I think we got these back, oh my God, like eight years ago, some of these spools, how long we've been carrying this, that Adafruit, and they still worked perfect. One of the sad things though is that some of the colors, they don't even make anymore. The purple, the sky blue, so bummed out that I'm literally like on my last spool of that color that doesn't exist anymore. Only three spools left of the lava is that orange. Yeah, this is really beautiful orange, which looks really contrasty against the blue mini. So nice. And then of course the red. Oh, this one is $49.95. What happened to the price? Oops. That's interesting. It's a pretty color. Yeah, definitely worth it. Yeah, I think they're like $50 on Amazon. Huh. Why would that one be? Is it the spool? Oh, do you think it's $1.5? They're all $1.5. Let me go back to $5.5. Yeah, there's the sky blue and the purple. Discontinued, discontinued. I wonder if we have some of those stashed. Oh my gosh. Yeah, we still have the gold. Oh, my favorite green. I know, we had like every color. Here it is. Yeah, for some reason it's $50. I guess because we only have three in stock. I don't know. So Storz is asking what printer did we use to print the cases. It was the CR-10 V2 and the V3, the direct drive. Cool. Those are real nice cruelty printers. Yeah. And I just used the, for the profiles, I just used the V3 Ninja Flex profile for that. And it worked pretty dang good, especially with having like retraction on it. Except for the prize that it did not buckle like I'm used to seeing on a boat, an extruder. All right. And here is the Thingiverse link. Did you place that in the chat rooms? Oh, no. Let me put that in there so you guys can pick these up. I would here, loaded. But yeah, you can pick up the STL-3MF fusion files. They're all here. I'm going to take some of these lovely photos. Let me just full screen that. Great job on the photos. This is great. Hey, you can see, you know, a little bit of bumps here and stuff. But that's typical with Ninja Flex prints. Yeah. So the, I think of the travel, if you turn that, the travel off, it'll come out even better. But you'll have a bunch of clean up to do on the little veranoid parts. Cool. And here is a photo with the MagSafe battery from Apple. Yeah. It's like the cutaway for the MagSafe. Or I really like these MagSafe pop sockets because it gives you like a little tripod and an easier way to grab the phone. That's cool. A nice opening for any MagSafe accessory. Yeah. Yeah. So they have like tripods and like stabilizers for it. And that's a good way to attach it. And it's super strong. So I wanted to be able to keep that on there. So this is a special pop socket with a magnetic plate or a metal plate. Yeah. It's got like the MagSafe little circuit just pops off. You can kind of see the ring of magnet all on there. And the indentation for sure. Yeah. Very cool. I like the way to hold that up. Did not make one for the iPhone 13 Pro Max this year because I did not get one this year. Last year like I had the Max and man that thing is so heavy and big. And the only reason I got it was for the sensor size but now all of the smaller ones have the exact same sensor. And we're chatting with Scott who was saying yeah. He thought that the mini had the exact same case or the batter. I'm sorry. The lens. But no, it is way better after doing some testings at night during like fireworks over at Disney. You can definitely see in the wide angle lens that it's shooting at f 2.4. Well this one's shooting at f 1.6. Wait what? Yeah. The wide angle like the fisheye. So it is yeah. It is definitely worth going with the pro if you know taking pictures of your family is super important. You definitely want to make sure that you have the most you know best focus and all of the exposure settings and the ISO isn't like completely killing it with all the noise at night. So definitely recommend getting the pro on that one. But if you want to go along with the little tiny small size do man. We're still going to use this for like the remote for all of the camera setups and like the tripods that have like the pan and tilt motors on them. So we're using the little mini for. All right. Did you post that link? I did. Yeah. Cool. Come check that out and download these for free. And of course the Fusion 360 files are available as well. So you can edit that and I don't know maybe have some other sort of attachment to the case. Yeah. Play around with the layer thickness if you want to make it thicker or thinner or what have you. You always get that cool veranoid pattern going on. You can always add your own. Cool. And of course the other thing too is to look out for that awesome. It's two iPhone apps that the team is working on. Super cool. I don't have a banner for that. I can't. I think Trevor's showing it off. Sending the by Bluetooth with the app. So you can like send texts or emojis and maybe GIFs after. GIFs or GIFs. Yeah. So hard cheese and soft cheese. All right. Well that is your iPhone commercial. Thank you so much. Well it's supposed to be an ad for the Ninja Flax iPhone apps. No you didn't. Hey. There's always an alternative to. There you go. Flexible filaments. Get your flexible filaments from us please. Yeah. So this is with Halloween coming up. We have some of the glow in the dark, the semi-translucent and the weight. It's excellent for diffusing LEDs. We've got a ton of projects that show that off like the sewable horns. I forgot about this almond peach smoothie. Yeah. It's actually what I tested everything on because we had so many spools of that. That color. You got that price tag. Yep. Okay. Okay. You could always buy white and airbrush it whatever you want. Yeah. Definitely good. There's great diffusion materials. We've done lots of fun diffugie projects. Diffugie, diffusion-ish projects. Whirrables. Yeah, they're all there. All the spiky things. And your face. The starfish on your face. Yeah. The most comfortable starfish on your face. All right. Ninja case. It says Yanisku. That's pretty much what the most used. We use these Ninja Flex 4. It's like a case. And Bruce, shout out to Bruce. Rock in the refurbished iPhone 6S. Oh yeah. I think we have a 6S design. I think it's a 5S. Yeah, we still have it on there. So if you want to try that out, you can still check out one of our old cases. They're not old. They're just experienced. All right. Checking out the... That was Shop Talk. Ninja Flex. Yes. iPhones. Paul Cutler is asking about the sound reactive code. Yeah. It's going to... Let's... Let's together go on the journey to GitHub. Oh, we got something. It's going to go to GitHub. Slash Adafruit. Right? So GitHub. Dot com slash Adafruit. I'm going to search for the IS-31FL. And there it is. Under Adafruit underscore circuit python. IS-31FL 3741. I'm going to want to download this guy here. Using the code button. There's a little download zip link. And this folder here. Examples. So when you want... Oh boy, it's not in here. I have... I am so sorry. I have lied to you. So let's go ahead and go to the learn repo. Because that is where it is. I thought it would be a part of the library, but it's not. Is there audio? Yeah. There's some like crackling. Keep going. Keep going. Keep going. All right. I'm going to keep going. So bear with me. I'm going to go back to the Adafruit GitHub repo. I think that's the best way to get to it. It's actually a part of the Adafruit... It won't open. It's not open. All right. I just had to change the mic. Sorry about that folks. I changed the mic. We're over here now. I apologize again. I'm sorry. Rest in peace right here. Don't recommend doing this. Yeah, I know. We just lost everybody. I'm so sorry. I won't sleep tonight. So you're going to want to search for iLight. In the list of all of the sub holders. There's one called Audio Spectrum. iLight's Audio Spectrum. I'm going to go ahead and just copy this link and drop it in. Where was the chat from? It was in the YouTube. In YouTube? All right. I'll put it in there. I will grab it. I'll do it. Don't worry. I got it. Thank you for bearing with us. But there is the link. It is a part of the Adafruit Learn System Guides repo. It's called the Adafruit Learn, underscore learning system guide. And it's called the iLight's Audio Spectrum code. This was added three days ago. But Phil B. Shout out Phil B. Yeah. Whew. Clear about that? That's what we have backups. Yeah. You sure do. I've only had backup. Oh, camera. Yeah. It's been busted since the morning. It's going to be their reoccurring joke there. Oh, boy. All right. Well, let's end the show so we can reflect on the mistakes that we have done. All right. Going over to the community makes, we find some designs from the community. We 3D print them. This week, it's a practical print from Arturo on Twitter. It goes by Arturo 182, I believe. Yeah. This is a really cool way to snap the headers so they can fit on feathers. So if you ever buy one of those heathers that are, you know, pretty long, I think it fits like 16-pin ones. You can cut them down to size. And you can see that has this nice little groove. So you can go in there and snap it off. And here I am completely doing it wrong because there is a camera that I have to be worried of. This is how video production works. Oh, my God. But you know what? The design is so good that it works both ways. How cool is that? And a lot of people were asking about these really cool colored headers that we have in stock. Check these out. These are so cool. We have blue. We have red. We have green. And not just the header pins, but we also have like the header, the female headers too. And there's coming a couple other colors. So we got like yellow and white to go along with the red and blue. I think blue is my favorite one here. So you don't have to be boring with just the plain old black ones that everybody else has. You can spruce it up, spruce up your design and get a nice blue one. So super simple to do the sky in here like that. And because the camera is facing this way, I can actually use it the correct way. And snap it like that. Oh, did I do it? Oh wait. Oh man, this design. It doesn't work when you have to hold it. You have to hold it a certain way for it to work. There you go. The camera works. Yeah, yeah. See if better. Right. But here you go. You'd have a nice sized header that's perfect to go on your feather compatible board. Super cool. And I'll post the links to all of the cool colored headers that we have available. Because this is the whole reason we do this. We can show you guys all of the cool components that go along with the design. Cool. Yep. Shadow Atturo for the free design. You can download it off Thingiverse. I think you also put a fusion file in his Twitter. Yeah. And somebody's already remixed it as well. You can check out that design as well. Okay. Is our audio okay still? Yeah. Okay. I'm just hearing a minute delay I guess. Yeah. Oh boy. So our camera broke, our audio broke. We couldn't demo the thing. And I think somebody was asking if it works with the headers. I don't think so. No. Yeah. Those aren't meant to be snapped. They don't have any perforations. Yeah. If you want to snap those, you know, you can I guess maybe score it or something. All right. Yeah. I think the flush cutters will do that. Okay. Okay. So we've got a couple of other community makes. Yeah. That's right. We do. We have two of them. So let's go ahead and pull this out. Everybody for posting your community makes. It means a lot. This first one. What happens? Here we go. All right. So let me run through these real quick. All right. This week we have a make of the Mario Buu. This is a planter or a candy dish or whatever you'd like to stuff inside of it. It's a 3D printed planter thing. Candy dish inspired by the, the Mu, the Buu, the Buu from Mario. Super Mario Brothers. Thank you sir Willis for posting this up. Folks paint it, add plants to it or just use it as an overall candy dish. Another idea. It's a festive season. So, yeah. So my son Gavin dressed up as Mario one year for Halloween and he just attached a handle on it and used it as a, you can put little candy bags right here and a hole right there and then put a little strap there. Paint it up, put some lights in it if you'd like. But yeah, it's a fun, no supports for those prints. So thank you sir Willis for posting up your make. And then we have one more here. It is prop season. Yes. Is this the little sister? Yeah. So this is the syringe from BioShock. That looks good. This is little sister syringe. So Dan at Pichera on Thingiverse. Very cool. Posted up their make. And this looks fantastic. It's been painted. It's been weathered. It has some blood stains. Look at that, that pacifier there. It has been, it's been weathered. That looks so good. It looks so good. This was an interesting prop because Pedro originally printed it in copper filament, which is from, I forget, ColourFab I believe makes this. I think so, ColourFab. It's actual filament that has real copper particles in it. And you can sand it and iron it, iron it. You can shine it. You can brusso it. You can let it rust. You can let it rust and actually get rust. And it's PLA mixed with actual copper. So that's really cool. That's what Pedro did in his version. But this version, maybe it's different. I like it. Maybe it's just PLA with some paint, which looks really great. Excellent. And it actually lights a real LED as well. And that is this week's community makes. Thank you everybody for posting up their community makes. Is there any info on their make? I don't believe so. But I put a nice comment saying the weathering looks really great. Nice work. Thank you. So what we did with ours was the bottle itself is a Ninja Flex. This is Pedro's wife, Brandy. Hey, Brandy. Yep, she was a little sister. She was a little sister. And then you can see some of the components. Super easy using a coin cell and an LED to illuminate. And everything fits inside. The handle actually works as a on and off switch. Yeah, it's got a bit of a springy. The little hand, the thatch waiter is the lever there that pushes up against the button. Oh, you see his copper tape? Yes. That's cool. Yeah. Yeah. The colors. Super fun project for props. 2015. My goodness. Blow the dust off this one. Sorry, folks. Showing our age there. Showing our age. Yeah. I haven't played by a shock in many years. Fun game. All right. All right. Well, thank you everybody for bearing with us. We apologize again for the issues. But you know what's live streams are like that? You believe we've done 344 of these? Wow. Wow. Eight years. Yeah. Still have all the issues with our mics. Not just the mics, but the printers and cameras. Cameras. Why? Disconnected and reconnected. What else do you want? All right. Well, we'll see you tonight. I invite you, I implore you to share your projects. Because live streaming is always working. It's every Wednesday at 7.30 p.m. Eastern time. This week is going to be hosted by not yours truly, but Mr. and Mrs. Lady Aida. So they will be judging you. Just kidding. I need to stop. Come by. Come by. Show off your awesome project. Doesn't have to be finished. I love watching you as you work on a project to complete it. So definitely stop by for that. And then right after that whole hour of Lamar and Phil on Ask an Engineer, check out all of the awesome new projects coming out and products, as well as behind the scenes and the secret stuff that they're working on for a later release. Don't want to miss that. That's right. Wait. That's right. And then tomorrow we got John Park's workshop. Awesome project. So he's going on as he readies up for the next eight a box. So definitely want to tune in, get some clues on what's coming up next, as long as as well as other cool project was all the other available boards and project products. I believe Scott will return next week. Oh yeah. Yeah. I think he's off this Friday. So check on the previous archives of D dives with Scott. Typically every Friday at 2 p.m. Pacific or 5 p.m. Eastern. He'll be back. Thanks Scott for holding it up. And then Sundays is from the desk of Lady Aida. She streams on Sundays at random hacker hours with great segments such as the great search with Digikey. I'll try with a lot of the components shortages. She shows you what alternatives are out there and what she thinks on the availability of them. So definitely check that out on how to search for that component. You're looking for it. Yeah. Submit your requests. Yes. Monday is the circuit python meeting. This is where the core devs in the community come together to chat. All things circuit python. It typically happens on a Monday at 2 p.m. Eastern time. You can always check in Eastern Tuesdays is John's product pick of the week where you can get up to 50% off on selected picks from J.P. himself. Bananas. Yeah. So check it out. Every Tuesday at 4 p.m. Eastern or 1 p.m. On Wednesdays we try to do the show our darndest. Sometimes it doesn't work. But hey, we're still here. Eight years running. We do the show every Wednesday at 11 a.m. Eastern time. That's like 7 a.m. Pacific time, huh? That's way too early. Sorry folks. I'm just falling apart here. All right. And then we're back around tonight. Lots of shows. Thank you so much for dealing with us. I have been a person. Pedro. Pedro. Make a great day. See you next week. Or later tonight. Bye folks.