 Lady what is this everybody? Welcome to Chantel. Thank you, of course to JP and Liz who ran Chantel for two weeks We took a little break. We'll give two weeks and animals trade off for somebody else It's me lady Ada with me mr. Lady Ada But never about us. It's time to check in with people from around the maker community. What are you hacking 3d printing soldering coding? Cheese grating whatever it may be we want to hear Let's check in with some Adafruit. Yeah, we'll go into other Folks we have a couple things if there's time, but we're gonna get to everyone tonight. So let's start with Brad what you got going on this week? Hi, I'm programming and I'm also doing some design I've been working on doing displays for Adafruit whippersnappers So like right now if you have a board running this firmware It doesn't show anything and we have the fun house in the mag tag Which are really great boards, but like you want to see what you're displaying and you want to see like what's going on during Connecting to the internet, which like a lot of users seem to be getting stuck on and then what you're also sending to the internet So I've been using Lvgl, which is a lightweight graphics library. It's open source and it's really Robust there's charters which it's there's gauges. There's everything We need to build a really nice interface for whippersnapper. So I'm gonna show a little bit of my workflow and then a little bit of my progress um So I've been using Figma, which like Tyler who does the designs for Adafruit uses and what's neat is you can bring over the font awesome icons that Lvgl uses and also the fonts that it uses So you can create really really easy mock-ups and instead of doing like pixel perfect Like drawing it out on a notepad, which is what I've done before like a grid line like old skin you can actually bring resources in and start sketching things out and It's been really neat like I can do revisions in it and then Are you gonna show you? Am I not sharing my screen? No, oh Sorry. Yeah, so you Yeah, so you can do revisions within this tool and It's been really useful. So Then you can load everything from That tool and then I'll show my screen again PT yeah on to a simulator So this is like the screen mock-up, but as a simulator running the same resolution Scaled up on my Mac. So I don't have to do that compile Reupload compile reupload loop Doesn't touch my device at all So then when I'm finally ready to start working on the device the code from the simulator and the code for The embedded hardware exactly the same so On my device, which I'll show this yeah So I have a fun house it has the same As you saw and then It actually loads from the file system these icons light up So it's connected to the it's connecting to the Wi-Fi of my Apartment and it takes a while because it's an ESP 32 s2 and then it's up to connecting to IO. So every step the Icons colors change from gray to green like a Mac starting up with extensions like this is powerful I remember like way back in the day doing PDA development on like palms of pocket PCs And you get this like on-screen emulator and then it one of the values of it was it would match your development Yeah, we're about to deploy on your devices and it really sped things up. So this is cool that we're we're finally there Yeah, it's starting to move towards like a very modern workflow for doing embedded graphics Instead of just like blitting pixels on a screen Yeah, also like having to compile over and over again and then wait and then look and then wait and look and then upload That's what my time like bottleneck has been it's just like the uploading you know circuit pipe Still but doing everything on figma has been really useful for me. Oh, it's cool Okay, where can folks find out more about this as you continue to do this? We'll probably post it on IO dot data fruit comm slash blog and then I'll come by show and tell Once I get further within cool And then what I'll do is I'll add it to like ask an engineer or something to as the folks can Check it out. Oh We're also two devices away from two thousand with per snapper devices. Wow If two people want to connect We would hit two thousand today, which would be really cool. All right, you can do it out there We'll start having like little YouTube trophies, you know when you have subscribers and you get a thing So I'll just be like an award popping up. Yeah, all right. Thanks so much. Thanks. What next Scott. Hey Scott. How you doing? Oh No, you're muted I'm doing better and better. There you go. Some folks may not know but I'm at the end of having COVID which has been fun So I went head sound last week and I'm finally kind of like booting back up and the thing that I have on my desk is I have this giant bin This is my this is my IMX bin And if you know me, you know that I have a thing for dead boards And the IMXRT has been on my radar a lot like three years or something now And so I've kind of got all of the EVKs that the dead kits that NXP comes out with I basically have them all and I wanted to Get them supported in circuit Python This is the one that I I just stopped working on it's the 1176 Um, it's a monster Almost at a gigahertz. I guess yeah, these boards are large anyway. Here's a Scorpio for size Um, and I I got it half working. So don't get too excited about the 11 series working Um, but one thing that's crossed my mind and in the 10 series has these two are These chips here are SD RAM chips. So not only is there a lot of RAM in the chip itself But there's a peripheral that can interface with these SD RAM chips Um, and so I've kind of put that in the back of my brain is like, how would we use that in circuit Python? Um to have a lot of RAM, but not necessarily just use it for Python Maybe allow you to to manage it yourself Um instead because the DC doesn't necessarily work great if it's a bunch of RAM So playing around with that. I've got uh, the 1015 here as well, which is just like the slightly better version of the 1011 Um, the 1015 is interesting because it has a little more cache. So I'm curious to get that going Um, but yeah, that's that's my work in progress is is more of the IMX RT series All right, very cool. And uh, I think tonight we have a couple fun things that we're going to show on the Python on hardware section in uh on ask an engineer another version two versions came out Yeah, Dan's been busy Dan's Dan's been handling all the version stuff, which has been great. Um, so there's a beta of 81 and then there's a new 805 that is a stable release that has I don't even remember what the fix is but Dan's been shepherding all that and uh, we're kind of hoping to pivot towards 9.0 after 8.1 is stabilized um, so that'll include IDF five which will Hopefully bring in support for some of these newer esp chips. Like I I saw you listed the h2 I uh signed up to get one of those Like I said, I I collected kits. Yeah We have a similar collection And all of the more has been since like yeah, here's uh, there there's an IMX file Yeah, there was a period of time where um, like every dev board company was like, we're we're gonna send you our Arduino killer So the more has it been of things called It's surprising to me that all of these have Arduino pinouts on it Yeah, although the 1015 doesn't actually have a populator. Yeah, and then lately Um, some of the boards that folks are sending us their uh feather format They're like, hey, like we've moved from that pinout to Yeah, that'd be great time to change it. All right. Yeah, I I just would like on some of these evks that they would actually label things Well, I mean like Good to pay a cent for every silkscreen letter. Oh, I know the service. It's a it's a subscription fee for that They're they're getting better, but Not very quickly All right. Well, thanks so much Scott. Thanks and glad you feel better. Thanks. Bye. Bye. All right. Next up. We're gonna go to Jeff Jeff, how are you there? So it's another day with the imxrt and today I've got it hooked up to A nun shock and if you want to come back up here. Oh and and the speaker see the speaker So you bring me back big here. I'll show you how my improvising musical instrument works you can control the volume And the tone of the note from square to a sine wave And you can select a bunch of different chords And add some other stuff so what I've been working on Is adding support for this multi voice synthesis within circuit python and it will do up to 12 notes at once and It got merged in today So it will be in an upcoming beta and I know JP and Todd bot are Looking at doing some stuff with it and I'm really excited to see what they Come up with because I mean, I've invented a musical instrument, but it's not a very good one Here's the thing about synthesizers Nobody's into synthesizers is good at music. You know, I mean, that's an interesting point, isn't it? That's why you get into synths Everyone uses so just tweak some knobs. That's what I got. It's like an advanced form of thermo or something That's very cool. It's kind of like that. I mean, I love the analog aspect of just Changing the sound quality Uh, which is just like in python. It's taking a linear mix of a sine wave as a u-lab array and a Square wave and you just add them together and it varies how it sounds and I'm like, well, that was easy There you go. Now you're a synthesizer dropper. All right. Thanks so much. Yeah All right. Bye. Bye next uh speaking of musical instruments JP Hey, what's going on? Well, check this out. Look at this adorable game controller. Uh, this is a fisher price Game and learn. I think they might call it. Uh, it's a really nicely made game controller shaped toy And I always ignored this thing when I saw it at target Because I assumed that this was like one button and this was one button that might make a noise or something But phil said hey, check this out. Someone actually Converted this into be a real game controller. Take a look and see what's involved. So in its normal state It does little nose light up nose Light up nose a little rgb led in there. You can pick a couple of modes That's a real button. It's a really annoying button Yeah, we know one of these for our kid before we even saw the the hack that you're very cute and they're well made because they're designed to Be played with by someone who's gonna, you know wax stuff with it But the good news is that they as you can see it's separate buttons They have a test pad really generously place test pads for everything on there And so this is based on Some tweets we saw from robert dale smith who converted an existing rp 2040 game pad library written in pico sdk to our kb 2040 If you stop on my show tomorrow, I'll open it up and we'll we'll look at the guts But you can see some of some of the guts right there so mine right now is Actually still wired to the microcontroller in there which is grabbing its power off of the kb 2040 But you can see I've got this usb-c Uh Cable there i'm gonna turn off the sound because that got annoying for me and if you look at my screen back here Maybe you can go big on Just uh going big Um, here's a here's a game of mario playing in an emulator on a laptop over there Uh, and I can Actually control it and it controls really nicely. It's actually a completely Uh serviceable d-pad which is usually the problem with these things and I've got uh All I need is two working buttons on there in the start button Which you can see if I press that big one there it starts uh and and pauses Um, but meanwhile it's still doing all that all that jazz so you can see the lights are lighting up That's really annoying It makes you want to jump into the uh great beyond there after So i'm gonna be Doing some stuff with that on the show tomorrow and maybe uh taking a look at some other Of these game line toys that they put together But they're really fun really sturdy nice to nice to open them up and take a look and see how they put them together In discord, uh, philby posted up a link. I was gonna do this too So we made a joy controller a million years ago. It's an ate a fruit feather and the idea was It was like a tomagachi and it would tell you to stop playing video games for a while And you'd have to take care of this thing. Maybe take it out on walks everything So that's in our in our um learn system now. Yeah, this reminded me of that actually Yeah, because it like looks around and everything. It's kind of cute. Um, and I think this this People will be able to do even even more stuff because like the game controllers. There was um It was like the sega dreamcast you could plug in a little thing and you could raise a little creature inside of it Or something like that, but I think we might see see more Yes, they had the lcd on the controller All right, well, thanks so much jv. By the way, I'll show this off tomorrow But you know that the the people who are developing this were uh gamers because the economic code works on this I'll I'll show it tomorrow. Yeah You know one thing just a side note for everybody said Because we're now in the we're now in the kid toy market like we like buying kid toys market So they you know, they have to have batteries, but they're very specific It's like we're gonna put screws to make sure the batteries never come out But that just means a lot of these things are serviceable and repairable and hackable And so these are like really durable enclosures like this is a really good game controller Like people might actually want to do more stuff with it. Absolutely and this thing costs six dollars and 68 cents on amazon Like it's how could it like how's that possible? Yeah They fell individual buttons. Yeah, and you can get one of our little uh keyboard boards and play around with it And now you have a great controller and you can do all sorts of neat stuff. So anyways, these are fun projects Yeah, all right. Thanks jv. Thanks jv Next up we're gonna go to lis lis. What you got going on? Hello, uh, I guess it's controller night. It's all right. Thanks for you got the memo Yes, uh, so I just wrote up my first circuit python library and it uses the joy con, um, sorry It uses the we classic controller connected to The breakout for the nunchuck adapter because all of these we accessories are actually on the same i-square at the address So basically I just added in support so that recognize all the buttons and you can see it later for edwin Yeah, and then if I do the joysticks it gives the x y And then on the official we classic ones, there's these are actually like analog inputs. So they're like pressure sensitive And what's nice is there's these um like snes and nes controllers that have the same Plug and they are pin compatible. So if I press a button with this controller, it will also recognize as the same code So uh, this library is now in the circuit python bundle if folks want to try it out. Um, so Very cool. Have these recognized circuit python. Yeah And like if anyone's using if they're doing any type of where they need a controller for something just use one of these like Yeah, it's ready to go All right, thanks so much and thank you for writing that library. Good work. It was fun. I'm trying to up my coding So yeah a good challenge It's all about the libraries Yeah, yeah, someone said we we hit another milestone for just circuit python On we did we hit we hit our community bundle milestone, but uh, a thousand translated Straight a thousand translations or something like that. Yeah. Oh cool Nice one thousand translated translation strings. Hey, yes, we have a lot of languages Yeah, we have playing on lots very important. Okay. All right Next, uh, no, what you got going on? Hey folks, uh, yeah, so I got jp's hexagon keypad Um, so this is a project that I collabed with jp. Uh, he did a really good job on making the pcb It uses a qt pi rp 2040 to make a midi device And we're using key switches And uh, I wanted a 3d print, uh, these keycaps that are in the shape of hexagons And that's cool. We could print them ourselves, but I wanted to try out the clear resin Um prints from pcb way. So I got these printed from pcb way in that utr 8100 resin It's it's really nice stuff and uh, they they uh, they look really really clear Of course, you could 3d print them on your own printer, but it's really nice to have like a service kind of make these for you Um, so yeah, I also did a little bit of filament changes on on jp's case So, um, that's where you change the filament out to get kind of multi color prints So I've been having a lot of fun with jp's um midi device There we go, so uh jp put together the learn guide and I also helped out on On some of the 3d printing aspect of it Um, but yeah, you can build your own you can get this Uh pcb manufactured from any number of the pcb services Yeah I can't hear you guys Oh no, there you go. Yeah, there we go. Yeah, we that's all right There's a little bit of silence there. I was scared. It was like, oh no, it was my internet gun um We were just in awe Also on your show today, uh Folks and watches if they want to go to like youtube or whatever you think you should this off on 3d Yeah, totally. All right. Thanks so much. Yeah, for sure. All right next, uh, pydra What you got going on Hey I was just getting ready for my easter sunday getoff. Thanks for the idea phil So we got a super cool little out there darko bunny hat here But the cool thing about it is it's that up here familiar with the tpu. This is 85a so Super flexible nice and like soft Uh, the only thing you got to do is just poke holes in like the ears and the nose, but how about that? I should give some context. We um We're dressing up our kid as a rabbit for easter and so i'm like, well Frank the rabbit from donnie darko is a well known easter tradition. So that's cool to see Let me just show the detail again for people that are familiar with tpu 85a that is the most flexible the most elastic Super hard to print. I didn't think this is gonna work. I was ready to email you ptb like sorry, dude. It worked, but So, you know how everybody's talking about all those new printers that came out. Oh my god The cold knew this knew that dude. I'm using this on our old you guys have this one the smart pro so Oh, yeah It's just great. I like that's why I like it because I like when I print stuff. I never have to worry about it Yeah, that's what they got. That's exactly what happened. I hit print walked away. I'm like, you know 20 hours later I took like two days to print. I'm like, oh, no, it's gonna be a mess. Oh, it looks freaking phenomenal. Holy crap Great, but yeah All right, you want to see that go on. Yes. So last week, uh, we were uh showing off the air quality case is a little compact case and Hugs and super, uh, you know, shout outs to Liz. He did the ui for this. This looks so cool Um, I think uh, we were modeling after that IKEA one that's come that's been out Everybody's been hacking on it. Like we wanted to get one. Of course, it's out of stock And I just wanted to show like the real time of like how it's able to you know, calculate the air quality Um, people will know the uh heat shrink stuff. It smells like so bad But look how fast it's able to you know, tell you that the uh here is pretty bad And what's so cool about this case is the um, it's all modular So you can all this stuff comes off like the bezel and everything see that, um Brent's still working on the display stuff. So until that we have a little blank case in here to Put in there once, you know, that's all nice and working So the one thing I did for the video was, uh, make this little cool, uh three printed Handheld little elastic things you could wear this around and I just took this around some of the parks to see What is the air quality inside like batoo or whatever at star wars? Yeah It was pretty good. It was like, you know one or two What I should have done was taking it to where they have those little race cars where it's all gas and see The the number just jump up. It's probably where all this Right, dude, so crazy. I've been wasting all that gas on that But yeah, nice wearable and of course you can swap this out Originally was trying to say that it was like modeled after the uh lisa computer Kind of looks like it but you have access to all your three buttons and then your restart come here And then you have your uh, co2 sensor on the back here and a bunch of nice little vents to keep Everything nice and cool. I think during three you hang out. Somebody was posting that they made One so hopefully they come on show and tell them to show it off as well Right on All right, good stuff. Thank you so much and thank you for, uh, making this a very special Easter for us Oh, no, thank you for the idea All right, take care All right, next uh, phil b what you get going on if you got people I can come back next week No, we're gonna Okay, we're gonna do all of it even if we go a little later. It's okay time doesn't exist That's cool. Okay. So like if I say like anime cyber deck like a picture comes to mind, right? It's like it's gonna have a handle on one side. Yeah weird offsets. It's like I've got dolly in my head It's right It's and floppy disk has got to have a like super industrial logo with like a diagonal stripe on it, right? Yeah, and there was like a corgi with like a lens and yeah This was an actual machine It like I don't know which came first. Did did anime get it from this or did this? Oh, wow It's very anime-esque. Yeah. Yeah, I don't know but uh the amstrad ppc 512 and 640 from 1987 This was the weirdest form factor computer ever like, you know, there were there were the suitcase luggables and then the lunchbox and then Yeah, this is like you have an x-wing fighter and you need to bring a laptop with you. Okay, cool This was like this was like a platypus of portable computers. Nothing followed this form factor It looks like something from like the alien universe two like it's a little bit stromo Yeah, but it was a portable computer You know that you could you could tote it around And if this is the strangest thing, um, it could be powered off 10 C battery Yeah, uh, you know because like, um, you know lead acid or whatever you'd had it But just that was too sci-fi at the time. Yeah, so I had this option to run off C cells I wouldn't call it a laptop because it's just too freaking huge but um, anyway, I just I love the the cyberdeck aesthetic of it and These are not rare museum pieces And another thing also the screens very often go bad on an old one. Yeah, and so If you want to like Retrofit like a raspberry pie in it or something. Yeah, you don't have to feel bad about it because Like I say, they're they're not rare. They're not super valuable. You can find them on ebay You know, if you find a beat-up one, it might be under 200 bucks And you you could stick a pie in there. Yeah, whatever you like, but It's such a bizarre ass form factor and totally looks like You know, can I see the size there's a floppy drive on the side there? Yes, of course Yeah, there's two of course. Come on. Yeah one for boot one for apps. Yeah. Yeah But uh, strange strange strange item that just nobody ever revisited this form factor Yeah, for reasons. Yeah, I wonder why it looks like some type of like at&t Telephone transformer like you have to like this is how you repair a switchboard in 1986 or something like that Yeah, I pulled it out a couple days ago for a friend. He thought I had a defib defibrillator Oh, that's a good idea. Yeah, but even even the logo just screams anime. Yes, that's cool. All right, good find Thanks so much. Nice work. All right next up Matt, how you doing Matt? What you get going on? Hey, can everybody hear me? Yeah Hey, so I'm Matt from DC and my recent project. I've been working on too long Uh, this is called a calendar ring and it's not in its form factors. Just still in the real Basically, I wanted a like a visual indicator of What's like how far we are in the year and so I want to put this 365 led ring with a wall And there's a real-time clock and a rangefinder And the first day of every month is highlighted the solstices and equinoxes are highlighted in the purple Today is the green day right here and it's pulsing and I have a rangefinder So if I get close to it, it'll light up on the wall And so Uh, yeah, it's been a really cool project. I went here. I've been trying to do use the dot star array dot star And I'm having a serious trouble with the dot stars and the serial outs on their debugging stuff and so The dot stars have a tighter density of leds as opposed to the neopixels And so I was just basically hoping I Flip my project in the chat if anyone has can show me what I'm doing along with the dot stars Yeah, because I cannot get the dot stars to interact with the rest of my code And it's just causing these ridiculous errors that I cannot figure out So yeah hang out in the chat. There's there's someone who's who knows something that'll help you Get in the right direction. This is neat. It's like a light up progress bar for the year. Very cool All right, well, thanks so much man, and if you get everything working come back. Yeah, okay You can you could set it on your calendar the year you could you could put it on your calendar. All right. Thanks, man All right. Next up is sigh. How's it going? Hi Um, so april is citizen science month. Um, so I built a data logger That's the size of a key fob Rp 20 40 microcontroller So like when you want to do data logging you can just connect it to your phone It powers off of the The usb c port of an android device and I have an app quality sensor here But you can connect any sensor of your choice for data logging Yeah, and That my I do plan to develop an android app so that the data could be logged using an android app but for the time being I also added a micro sd card slot So you can insert a micro sd card and log data locally and copy the data over That's cool. Yeah, I plan to Develop and you know design an enclosure so that I don't break this usb c plug. Um, it's a little You know touchy when it comes to like Breaking this connector. Um, so I need to design an enclosure to support it This is a great idea. Um, if you if you get everything going where you want it to be by the end of the month Drop me note and we'll make sure we we get the word out because this is one of the things that we've seen like there's a lot of Air quality sensing that people are doing depending on what natural disaster or who knows what's happening People want to be able to do stuff and this is like this is a neat way. Um Isn't there there might be some apps that work with this already So you don't develop an app. I'm trying to think like maybe nordic has something where you can get I don't know if it logs though Nordic might yeah, I don't know. Yeah. Anyways, you might there might be something out there that that can Well, you have an sd card now, but there might be something that could do the logging now because it's kind of a pain to develop apps Yeah, I agree. Um, so I planned at least get the serial for going by then. Yeah All right. Well, thank you so much and happy citizen science month Thank you. All right next up. We're gonna go to paul guy and then tj devin paul. What you got going on I am happy to announce that after being on hiatus for a few months the circuit python show will be back on monday Yay So first up, I'll be interviewing danie staple who just released a book called Building Robotics with raspberry pi pico and he also used circuit python. So we have a great chat about that um So for everyone who hasn't added it to their various ways of listening to podcasts or whatever What's the best way for books to subscribe youtube or podcatcher? What are your favorite podcatcher? I'm on all the platforms whether it's spotify or I've got a youtube channel too So however you want to find it you'll it's there All right, we'll be listening We'll be catching the pods. I think and put this in the latest newsletter as well Um that went out, but if if it gets I saw this uh hit main box. I'm a subscriber. Um if it uh Didn't know um because I have to read the full newsletter Let us know let me know We'll add it and we'll have it on repeat from the newsletter Sounds good. Thank you. Thanks. Well, welcome back Guy Hey, y'all um, so I've been playing with tiny usb a bunch for another project That I'll show later. Um, but I might have been on a side quest I want to get an http server working over usb, which fortunately There's a there's a lovely download for that in the tiny usb And I also wanted to make it work with circuit pythons. So I cheated. I used two chairs I had two kpis talking to each other Um, but I can show my screen. Yeah, let me add it Um, I'm gonna go to http slash tiny dot usb And you can see I've got a little web page served up here And I can change the color You can change it all the way Um, and the cool part about this is since it's just http over usb, you know, ethernet over usb There's no configuration at all. I could give this to anybody They plug it into usb hit the url and And it's something similar, you know, they had an r in dis At the point when you plugged it in and I thought it was very cool and weird It's it's it's a really nice. Yes. I have a remarkable tablet does it too for loading files on it So nice. I don't have to use like a cloud service without gadget. Yeah. Yeah But yeah, so it's it's just I spread see serving Like reading files across it and then I've just modified the ampule Web server library to do i squared c instead of socket 3 This is so it's like the first time you get a device and you're like You could type in 192.168.101 and you're like, look, it's like, oh, I have it and then eventually you could put a word in It's a domain and it's like, oh, this works and now you can do this with a mic controller. Very cool Yeah, thanks. Okay. If folks want to um, play with this, which I'm sure they're gonna want to wear Wear how and when uh, I'm trying to figure out how to untangle my My implementation from the of course, I just committed everything to my own fork of the tiny usb repo In the examples folder. So I got to untangle all that and and I'll I'll I'll make sure I post it I'll put it on twitter. Yeah, drop me a note too. We'll put it in the newsletter. This is really cool Thanks. All right. Thanks so much guy We're gonna wrap up with dj devon what we got going on Oh, there we go. Can you hear me? Yeah Okay One second. I actually have notes this time. I didn't want to forget anything. Okay. This is an update from last week This project uses two adafruit blue alpha numeric backpacks And adafruit esp 32 s2 feather, which is built into the enclosure and a 350 mAh battery just in case of power loss Uh, and this is a new redesign custom two piece snap fit Thanks to no one Pedro for teaching me how to do that Uh, there is a python script running on the pc that Goes out the steam downloads some csv formatted files Parses them to json on the pc copies the json file to the circuit python device And then that's basically what you're seeing. I've Edited all of the text though to be like completely obfuscated now. So yeah, that's not real data from from steam, but it's an example Um, so yeah, that that's that's working. Um, and I will show the insides now because I am quite proud of this 3d design So it's got a little crossbar in there that's where you slide the uh, The alpha numeric underneath of it and it kind of feels like a you're loading a gun magazine when you Slide it under there and then you add the second one. This is all on stemma And then mounted on the crossbar is the esp 32 feather And then this little oh, there's a tiny little the Tiny little thing there for the battery Which I forgot to do an infill stopper. So half of that is actually filled with infill that I cannot get out of there But the battery for the tiny little battery fits. So yeah All right Nice peel it. Oh and the uh the window tint stuff makes a nice nice defeat And then uh, if folks want to try to follow this along Anyway, are you gonna again have a place for them to play around with this? Uh for this eventually for the steam uh partner api. Yeah, I think so that that'll probably be on the github Uh, the 3d file is on printables already um As for the generic demo because there's two different versions. One is a csv Version that actually parses it on the esp 32 itself like 64 Kilobits of data parsed through a csv file. Then the other one is the python that runs on the pc Okay, wait, wait, we don't we do have to get going Okay, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. So I'm not sure I want to make sure you tell you're about to go into a whole thing. Yeah, post up my github eventually. That's awesome Yeah, post it up in the chat. This is really neat All right, thank you. Have a great day All righty, we got through everybody that was that was a big show. This is epic epic We're gonna be here next week. We'll see everybody. Thanks for making this best happen over the week Every single week whether we're hosting or if it's one of the e3 team members Thank you so much. Thanks for coming in with some awesome projects Faskin engineer starts in negative five minutes as fast as I can press the buttons. Bye. Bye, buddy