 Python on hardware, we got a bunch going on. Okay, let's zip this, there's so much going on right here, we got to zip through it. We want to just pick one thing. I do. I'm just going to hit a couple things real quick. We already talked about the learning system project bundle, so this is a little bit of a breakdown of what it is and some screenshots. I'm going to work on that. Catney Haxter featured the flowers, this is winter bloom synth, and it's powered by CircuitPython, check out that cool interview, a recap of Scott's deep dive, and then news around the web. Lots of Pico projects, CircuitPython, CircuitPython, but definitely a lot of Pico projects people are building stuff. Yeah, Todd Bot in the chat is doing a really neat thing with all these encoders and MIDI stuff, so check that out. I was looking at that right before our show started, we just posted up some cool stuff in GitHub. Here's a Raspberry Pi Pico video conference controller running, you guessed it, CircuitPython. If you look about what's happening, you'll see a lot of people are taking stuff that they already did in CircuitPython and then seeing if it works on the RP2040, then there's people who are like, I want to do a project, but the code isn't available yet for RP2040 unless I use CircuitPython because there's a ton of libraries, codes, support projects. We're seeing, like right now, it's our number one download, and I'll talk about that in a second. It is, right now, the most downloads that we're getting for installing CircuitPython is on the tens or thousands or maybe even hundreds of thousands of Pico's, so if you have a Pico and you want to do something but there's not software yet or you're just looking for some help, CircuitPython's the way to go. We have things for the Funhouse board, the Pico phone that was just on our show and tell. So a phone made with, you guessed it, lots of key micropads, lots of keyboards. This is a cool CatZoom demo with a Neo Trinky, a Citron MakerPyPico, and it works with CircuitPython, that's over at Tom's Hardware, who's been covering a lot of what's been happening in the world of RP2040 and more, including their like, it's like gossip, it's like, look, there's chips on the way to Arduino, and they have a shot of that. So this week, the big story I wanted to talk about, which at least the big story I think, and I'm just going to go over to the video in a second, is these CircuitPython-powered wings. So this was a feather project that has these flappy wings, and it uses CircuitPython, and they were, you know, fairy wing-like, and trust me when I say the world of cosplaying and fairy wings, it's not all happy rainbows. And so we wanted to make sure that we got like the best guide that could be used for anything. We spent a lot of time on it, and check this out. We did not expect these cool, like... She's got wings and a tail. Wings and a tail, and this is like, kind of one of the best examples I've seen of animatronics, and it just happens to be CircuitPython, and this is someone who does cosplaying, I think, for a living. Tons of amazing costumes, that drivable car from Wreck-It Ralph. It was just like, it was unending, as soon as I saw this, I'm like, this is the best thing ever. So this is all made with CircuitPython, and if you needed to make adjustments to your code at an event or something, it shows up as a USB drive. You can change the speed, you can change how much it pauses. You might want to do something like, oh, I'm doing a photoshoot right now, it'd be great to have the wings do this. So anyways, this is like, I think, like, culminates so many things together, 3D printing, or learn guides, and all this, and projects like this will even be easier, and we'll talk about that in a bit, with our new bundler. And then the other big news, that just happened right before the show, is we're up to 200 boards. Yay, 200! So like I was saying before, the number one download right now, out of all 200 boards, and what are 200 boards? A bunch of them aren't even from Adafruit. We made CircuitPython so it could go anywhere, run anything. Other people can use it. And so now we have 200 boards, and if you look, 1, 2, 3, just in the top 8, 3 of the boards are, oh, sorry, 4, half, 50% aren't from Adafruit. And the reason I'm mentioning stuff like this, is because you know, you have people that are nice about things, are like, well, why isn't it all Arduino's? Why isn't it all something, something? Why isn't it all this? And what we want to do, is that you can take a board, and you can run MakeCode on it, or you can run Arduino on it, or you can run CircuitPython on it, and the developers who make boards, they want to have something that's updated all the time. They don't want to write an entire, like, almost OS at this point. Yeah. So anytime you update CircuitPython, you get all the new features in the latest boards. That's right. How nice is that? So this came along, because we thought this was a good idea. We have CircuitPython.org, it's on Adafruit, and the top boards aren't from Adafruit. And so it's all open source, and we have all these contributors. So we think that if you're, it's like one of those things like Be So Good, They Can't Ignore You. Like I understand, like, people dig in, they're like, I should always be C and C++ or whatever, but give it a try, because it's a huge ecosystem. And it's fun. It's fun. And we're up to 200 boards. You can choose any, any weird board, any, imagine it. We probably have it. You like it? Got it. You got, want Bluetooth? Got it. Like, STM? Got it. And we'll have a lot more. So congratulations on the team. Yay. Everybody out there, everybody community member, there's 200. We're going to have 200 more. And check out CircuitPython.org slash downloads, and you'll be able to see all the boards, scroll through them fast, and just use the filters like Wi-Fi, you can see all the Wi-Fi boards. And with that is that, that's this week's Python hardware.