 All right. Good afternoon. Happy Friday. Let's see. This one, let's tweak this. Where did the chats go? How's it going? Good afternoon. Good day. GdjSky01, Jeff. How's it going my friend? And Bear as well over on Discord. Nice to see you, you folks. Let me just shuffle a few of these to where I can see them. Let's go to Michael Pocusa as well. Nice to see you, my friend. Hi from Los Angeles. Nice. Los Angeles probably, I don't know what the weather is like there, but I'm guessing a little bit warmer where I am at currently. It's about 30 degrees and snowing, but not like heavily snowing, thankfully, which is nice. How's it going, Justin? Let's do quick introductions. So, hello, good day to everyone. Thanks for tuning in. I have got a cat attacking my foots. Welcome to the deep dive. My name is on top of me here. All right. As I try to appease the cat while I do the intro. My name is Tim. I go by Foamy Guy on GitHub and Discord. This is the deep dive, which is a weekly live stream. Sometimes it is with me. Other times it is with Scott. Scott's the lead developer of Circuit Python, which is a good chance to take a quick step back for anybody that might be new catching this for the first time. If you don't know what I'm talking about, Circuit Python, you can learn more at the main website for the project right here, circuitpython.org. This is basically a version of Python that runs on tiny computers called microcontrollers. These devices typically will plug into your real computer, your big computer, your regular desktop or laptop computer with a USB cable. They show up like a thumb drive. You edit a Python code file on that thumb drive, and then when you save it, the microcontroller, the actual computer that is inside these little chips on the devices here will execute your Python code for you. It can interface with all sorts of extra hardware peripherals as long as you connect them. What you'll find is that of the 468 devices that currently support Circuit Python, there are loads and loads and loads of different shapes and sizes and capabilities with different pieces of built-in hardware. Some have just bare bones with pins. Others have screens and Wi-Fi and touch screens. Others are like entire gaming handhelds. There's all sorts of different form factors of these things. The common thread amongst these 468 of them is that they can all run Circuit Python. Circuit Python is an open source project, but it's primarily funded by Adafruit. If you would like to help support Circuit Python and those of us that work on it, you can do so by purchasing hardware from Adafruit. They are a hardware and software company based out of New York. They design and manufacture not only the microcontrollers themselves, but they also design and manufacture different add-ons and things for your microcontrollers. Stuff that you can plug in in order to achieve other stuff. Sensors, beacons, buttons, beepers, buzzers, levers, switches, any kind of little light-up widget or doodad that you can imagine really that you can connect to an electronic circuit. You can probably find that thing, whatever it is, over at Adafruit. So head over there, get yourself some toys. Thank you to everybody who shops at Adafruit, and thank you, of course, to Adafruit for making Circuit Python possible and for paying the team who works on Circuit Python, including Scott and myself and some other folks. So today, we are going to take a look at an upcoming kind of like proposal for a way to refactor the way that the network management works. Let me catch up on the chat as well. That seems unusual. Deep dive, Adafruit. Oh no, what did I do? Did I mess up the YouTube thing? Timely project, I've been working on this, Sonny, I hope, Scott's. Yeah, Scott's, I believe, out of town for the week, but definitely Scott's in all of our thoughts and everything, for sure. Let me check. I feel like I have messed up the YouTube thing. Let me go try to figure out what I did. How did you find that? Can you link me to that or something? I only see one. Oh no, I do see the second one actually. Deep dive. Okay, I've never done this live, so I don't know what's about to happen. If we lose, folks, I'm sorry. Try refreshing. If you're on YouTube, especially you might get lost. There's potentially two YouTube links, so if what I am about to do cuts you off, maybe try looking for the other link. If we have somebody in the chat on Discord in just a moment who is watching YouTube and it keeps working, drop the link to the one you're using, and then other folks can maybe switch over to that one, because I don't think I'm really meant to be on two. I'm not sure, for sure, if that's going to...