 Let's do some Python on hardware. We've got news and reviews and more from the newsletter. Some good projects in the newsletter this year. So this week, we cover a lot. So in addition to CircuitPython A210 release news, you can check out the notes. News in the industry for those who design Python on hardware. Renaissance bought Altium for $5.9 billion, more consolidation in the industry. So Autodesk has Eagle CAD and Renaissance has Altium. And KeyCAD or KeyCAD, depending on how you pronounce it, is free and open source. Some of our folks at Adafruit use KeyCAD. We're moving towards it. We have a lot of stuff in here. Yeah. Eagle, obviously. We'll see what happens in the industry and what folks use. So is there any other ones that people use that are going to get gobbled up already? KeyCAD, but I think that isn't owned by anybody. It's another popular one. Altium is very popular. A lot of people use KeyCAD. Yeah, that's kind of the one, right? It's like the number one most pirated. And then, yeah, OrCAD is used by some people as well. But I use Eagle CAD. And then Eagle CAD is kind of going away. It is. The 2026 is the end date. And I'm slowly, slowly, you know, I just wanted to get all these revisions done and I didn't want to take two things. So I wanted to do the revisions. Now that revisions are done, I'm kind of looking again at KeyCAD. Yep. Telegraph interviews have been up and about the upcoming stock IPO that is Raspberry Pi going public. Hands on with the bus pirate, some Python packaging and Rust, you have another Raspberry Pi or five review. Helen is interviewed by the embedded FM podcast. Really good podcast. Check that out. And then all the projects, this was a neat one. This was that Radio Shack, you know, 101. We do it, yeah. And how we added the Pico. Our popular post of the week last week was the Raspberry Pi alternatives. We also talked about Blinka on the show last week and more. And then we have some custom firmware. We've got some work today by the way. Workload again. Like hot news, by the way. If you're like, I want to get it back. But let's talk about, you wanted to talk about there was an update. Yes. For Memento. Yeah. So Memento specifically, this board had a little bit of a bug in CircuitPython9 beta one and earlier that made it so that if you were using the internal file system, the CircuitPy drive and you dragged really big files, you could accidentally crash the board because it thought that it had a three megabyte drive, but it actually doesn't. It has a one megabyte drive. And so it gets very confused. Good news, it's not going to damage your hardware. But what you should do is if you have a Memento and you are running, if you've installed something before CircuitPython9 beta two, you'll have to erase the file system to kind of reset the board. Or you can install the factory firmware reset over again. If you've never installed CircuitPython before, as long as you install beta two or above, you won't get that bug where it accidentally thinks that it's three megabytes, but it's not. Again, it doesn't damage your hardware, but we want to make sure you don't crash your board because that's sad. You don't want to crash your board. But thanks to Jeb Blur and Dan Scott who fixed this super fast. Okay, great. It's all part of our newsletter. You can go to AdafruitDaily.com, sign up for that platform on our newsletter, or you can read it online. You can read on GitHub or you can do an RSS feed. It's all part of AdafruitDaily, a completely separate site, so you don't have to worry about getting spammed. We promise, but what are promises anymore? You have to prove it. You have to prove it, yeah.