 Song in engineering, stand-up meetings every morning around the world, around the country. This week's chip shortage, Lady Aida, is ST. And you were saying it was a little bit like Mad Max around here. So I have a little clip of who runs Barter Town. Who runs Chip Chordish Town? Who runs Barter Town? Do you know who? Say, Master Blaster. I think the refresh button runs Barter Town or Electronic Chordish Town. I mean, it really is Barter. I mean, everyone's just scrounging around for whatever they can get. We'll get the gasoline. Yeah, it's a gasoline, but it said it's chips that you need to fuel your projects. All right, so it's ST this week. So this week, we're actually doing a favor for our BFFs over at MicroPython. We were chatting with them more about that later. Happy nine years old. MicroPython, we're going to talk about MicroPython in a big way in our Python hardware segment. But we're doing solid, as they say. Yes, because MicroPython needs chips because MicroPython, you know, we have like 4,000 products. So if we can't get one thing, it's okay, we'll get something else. And we can also put a lot of money into inventory and ordering ahead of time. But there, they have one product or two products really. One is the Pie Board and the Pie Board has an STM32F405 on it and they really, really need some chips. And this is an important project, not just to promote ST, but to keep the Python hardware community going because selling Pie Boards is how MicroPython supports and funds a lot of the development that they do. So it's really important that they get chips. So our chip shortage video this week is to ST, ST, please, please, please, get MicroPython 500 to 3,000 of these STM32F405RGT6s. They desperately need them. It's going to, you know, they haven't been able to get them for a long time. They desperately need them in order to keep MicroPython going and to keep the funding going so that they can continue the development that people who buy ST MicroControllers use. They're doing so much free development for you, I think, I don't even think you should charge them for the chips. I think you should send them real for free. Well, all right. No, no one's asking for anything free. It's just like... No, I don't know. It's worth asking. Yeah. So I guess here... Maybe if you kept buy chips, can you get free chips? Since you're a domain expert, as they say in the Bisley Day, where do you think these chips are going? I think these are going into a lot of products. I mean, STM chips are very popular. They're used in the industry. I don't think they're necessarily going into automotive, but I think they're going into a lot of industrial products. There seems to be the default, but you hear about like, oh, there's not manufacturing. People aren't building as much stuff. So where does it go? It's mysterious still to me. Yeah. And they're also... There are... These chips are available, but the prices are like three times, five times as high, and MicroPython can't support that. They need to be able to sell the boards at a price that people will purchase. And so that's why it's important that ST provides the chips and not to go on the secondary market, where you can get untrustworthy chips that could be not true, they could be fake chips that are rebranded. So they need genuine parts and they need them soon. So this is our chip shortage request with our catchy tune. Yeah. And we'll send this out to ST and our contacts there, and maybe they have some small allocation that they can help MicroPython with. It's not even for me. I don't want the chips. I'm good. They need the chips. If they sent us the chips, we'd just send them to Damien and MicroPython. So anyways, that's this week's chip shortage. Take it tune.