 Hey everyone! As we heard from Space Mike yesterday, a Cygnus spacecraft recently launched to the International Space Station carrying over 7,000 pounds of cargo, including two Astro Pies and children's books. It's going to arrive today, December 9th, 2015. This is a Raspberry Pi microcontroller, and two of these have been specially modified to work in space and are known as Astro Pies. They have temperature sensors and humidity sensors and even some cameras to detect infrared and visible light. A competition was run in the United Kingdom for school-aged children to learn how to code and write programs that could be run on these Astro Pies by UK astronaut Timothy Peake as part of his six-month mission called Principa to the International Space Station. After Tim launches to the space station, currently slated for December 15th, he'll be able to run these programs and download the data back to Earth for the school kids to view. You might remember way back in March, I did a space pod on a program called Storytime from Space, where astronauts read storybooks to school children around the world. Well, on Cygnus, there are seven new books going to the space station that will be used for storytime in space. Current ISS astronaut Kimya Yui recently read the book Max Goes to the International Space Station to some school kids. Actually, two of the new books that are flying up on Cygnus are by former astronaut Mark Kelly, the brother of Scott Kelly, who is on the space station right now for his one-year mission. I think this is really great news for the people behind the Storytime from Space project, as they were actually scheduled to have some scientific demonstration equipment aboard SpaceX's CRS-7 resupply mission, and we all know that that didn't end successfully. So it's great that these books are out there now so that Storytime from Space can continue. I would like to know what you guys think about the Astro Pi competition and about Storytime from Space. Do you think it's a waste of time that we're sending Raspberry Pi's and books up to the International Space Station? Or do you think it's really good as an educational outreach program for kids? Let me know in the comments below or it through social media. Also, don't forget to subscribe to our YouTube channel at youtube.com slash T M R O. And feel free to share our videos with your family and friends. I'd also like to give a huge shout out to all our patrons who have contributed to our crowdfunding campaign to bring you these space pods. If you'd like more information about how you can crowdfund these space pods, head over to patreon.com slash space pod. We've changed our reward levels just a little bit to make sure that space pods can be self-sustaining for 2016 and beyond. Thank you for watching. My name is Lisa Stodzianowski and until next time keep on discovering.