 Hello, hello, I'm on stage now. Yes, you are on stage. Yes, you are on stage and then you can start talking you can you have your for five minutes. I'm not sure. Anand, can you hear me? You are already on stage. Hello, I hope you can hear me. Let me just share my screen. Sorry, couldn't figure out how to share the screen, but I'm going to talk about BBC Microbit. So this is a device called BBC Microbit, the small microcomputer that can run Python back in 2017 when I went to US UK Python. There was a demo of microbits and I grabbed some of them from the organizers there. And I've been using it on and off. I did a session at Python India after coming back from there and I've been giving it to kids that I know. So because of the pandemic, my kids and my external family have been not doing much. I was getting bored. I thought let me choose programming. So I took this thing and then introduced them for a week and they were quite excited and then started playing with stuff. I'm going to show some of the interesting things that you can do with this. Before I get started, let me kind of show what this device is about. So this device runs Python natively and it has a very simplified interface. You can see there's a 5x5 LEDs here and there are two buttons and then there are extensions that can connect any hardware to it. So this is a program that my daughter has written which basically she very dies. So you click on the button A, that means this button, it will roll a random number and then show the number that you can actually show. So you can actually show different icons on the screen and it can support different gestures. It can shake it, it can throw up and down and you can show different icons. I'll show you that in a minute. So this is showing a message on launch and when you press a button, some kids at home have built on that. I'm going to ask them to show at the mic. Can you show what is this? How does this work? This is representing a smiley icon. When you press button A, it shows icon heart which blinks. And when you shake it, it shows an icon confused symbol. It's in a confused state actually. So what you can do is basically, these are things that kids have picked up in a week or two. This can be programmed in block language, Python and JavaScript. So this you can play with these buttons. So I've seen two of the examples. I'm going to another example. There's another small little circuit you can see here. It's a micro bit connected to... That's driving that circuit which is a traffic lights. I'll ask, so she'll explain what is that. Hello everyone, this is traffic light circuit. If we press button A, the traffic speed will increase. If we press button B, the speed will decrease. If we press both button A and B, it comes to the normal position. So the reason I'm showing all this is, these are the kids who have no programming background at all. And within couple of weeks, they could actually pick it and do all of that. The other interesting thing is, it gives a lot of motivation to try new things and then learn programming and do other stuff. That's about it. I would say if you look at some of these kids that I'm talking with, they wouldn't consider themselves really smart, etc. They don't really like mathematics, etc. So there aren't typical bytecates that you can think about. Anyone who can get a simple device like that and then start playing with that, I think there is a lot of encouragement and motivation to try new things. So it's a wonderful device if you ever want to introduce programming to any kid. Think about micro bit. This is now available also on Amazon, so you can buy it as well. That's it. I'm going to do a buff sometime tomorrow on micro bit and other hardware. So please join. That's it. Thank you so much.