 So this week's top secret We have some s3's off the line. So it's you know, you just saw them debuted So just imagine yourself like a day ago or so and then we'll show a couple boards So here's the first two videos and then see on the other side Okay, what is this? This is a still toasty PCB panel that just came off the oven Right here. This is for the feather TFT ESP 32 s3 We've got this awesome tft feather in the s2 format But this time we've made it and you can see it's got the s3 mini The end for our two sorry our four and two which means it's got PSRAM four megabytes of flash So we're gonna put one of them is missing because we're gonna do the first article inspection But if you loved our feather ESP 32 s2 tft feather, you're gonna really like this one It's got twice as many cores more s-ray and it's got blue tune. So nice. Oh, great We'll show real soon early. What is this? Hey, I'm just doing a quick demo for a new product. This is The RCWL 1601 this is an ultrasonic sonar distance sensor What's interesting about this is this one is in i-squared C mode So it does have a mode where you can query it over i-squared C I've got some resistors here because that built-in pull-ups and then I've got it plotting out the distance I can put my hand up and down to change the output It doesn't work. I will say one thing about this It doesn't seem to like to share the i-squared C bus, but there's some situations where you don't want to use Like the pin trigger pulse style of ultrasonic sonar sensor You don't want the u-art style. Maybe you don't have a PWM input You have i-squared C and as long as you're cool with just not having anything else on that same bus like in this case I've got this OLED on a different bus. It seems to work just fine Okay, and You published some boards by publish. I mean emailed it to me so I can post online later So it will be published. So this really is top secret. What is this? This is an adapter a lot of people like our Pi zero compatible spy cameras And they want to use them on a classic Raspberry Pi, which doesn't have the 22 pin high pitch CSI DSI connector instead it has the lower pitch 1 millimeter pitch 15 pin connector and Raspberry Pi used to create an adapter board that they sold that was used with the compute module IO boards that did this conversion and they no longer sell it So I just quickly quickly whipped up this little adapter based on the schematics they published Even though it says DSI. It's actually this is the CSI adapter only is the camera connector The display connector would be different, but I don't think anything uses the 22 pin connector for DSI. So basically we'll let you use pi zero cameras with a classic Raspberry Pi Okay, what says and then someone asked for a stem aqt hub So this is just a stem aqt size board point seven by one inch Which is our standard stem aqt board size, but it has five Vertical stem aqt connectors on it and so you could you know if you have non Chain not non chaining I squared C like you're using Grove cables or something Or you're just due DIY I squared C you can use this to basically share the I squared C ports And that's not secret