 And Scott will be doing, oh, you know, I mean, Mr. K said 3 p.m. It's actually 2 p.m. on Fridays, deep dive with Scott. But if something comes up, you can also hang out with Tim. It's deep dive. Computer's doing. Yeah, it's all the innards of Circuit Python and more. It really is a deep dive in how this amazing, cool, open source way to learn Python and also do electronics, which we call Circuit Python. Speaking of Python and hardware, code plus community. We've got a lot of stuff going on in the world of Python and hardware this weekly, Ada. Circuit Python 9 beta is almost out. Yes. This is pretty much the blueprint for Tim's project. This is Tim's project. What's you? OK, so we're doing a big push on getting 9.00 finalized. We had some folks developers had holidays, and then they had some family stuff and personal stick here, but they're allowing back. A lot of stuff was added. Some things that I personally think is cool. JPEG IO support. We can now display JPEGs natively, which is cool. I think we did GIFs before, but JPEGs are nice and fast. Update to ESP IDF 5, very important, because we want to make sure we're up to date. Trying to think, yeah, a couple of synthio things, a couple of I2S things, bitmap filter, and better camera support. That's great for Memento, folks who are getting our camera board and want to use it with doing filters on the fly. So we have some built-in filters, as well as programmable filters you can use. USB host support. That's kind of what the poster is all about. And Tim's project, which is like, you can plug circuit Python into a keyboard and have a computer work as part of the REPL. And one breaking change I think is important for people and though is when you mount SD cards, you now have to have the mount point existing. Like you can't, it doesn't like magically make it on mount. You have to create slash SD card before you can mount the SD card. Technically, this is correct, this is how you're supposed to do it, like the cell Linux does it. I think we had been borrowing how MicroPython does it, which kind of lets you do it on the fly, yeah, it's supposed to do. You're supposed to have the folder exist beforehand. So it's just something to watch for. But that allows us to do SD card support or web workflow, which also got a lot of updates. So we'll be doing more web workflow projects as well. So I'm looking forward to. All right, other things that's in the newsletter. This is a cool chart of all the express and microcontrollers. If you tune in to show and tell us Scott's favorite is ESP32S3. P4 coming up, very interesting, very powerful. You can check out all of the circuit Python 2024 responses. These are all the things that people want to see in circuit Python. You can check out on the blog. There's a lot of stuff that's just regular Python on hardware, Raspberry Pi is a Linux computer. So it has Python updates to TensorFlow Lite for RP2040 for microcontrollers. If you want to install circuit Python beta on a Raspberry Pi 02W, bare metal, that's what it's called. And then you can check out all the Python streams, parsec, tons of projects. You can make a robot with the XRP program selector. You can look at our popular posts. You can look at Playground next. Yeah, we'll get to that when we get to our learn guides. And then just like stuff that you've probably seen in either show and tell or on Playground. News around the web. It is jam-packed if you're interested in... This one was neat. I like this one. Yeah, this is a cool... This... ...circuit Python program. ...photographer made a really beautiful circuit Python-powered DIY digital clock that works on top of the flash connector. Yeah. And pretty much anything you can imagine someone's doing it with Python on hardware right now. So check out all the projects and more. This is our newsletter. It comes out every single week, tier in box. You can also look at it on the blog. You can also look at it on GitHub. You can also look at it on RSS. Go to Aideford Daily. It's a completely separate website because we don't want to ever spam you and we don't want you to think you need to have an Aideford store account just to read a newsletter. We like to keep those things separate. So it is at AidefordDaily.com.