 So, if you start putting your questions in Discord, we'll get to them, but we do have some top secrets first. I'm going to show a couple videos, and then we're going to talk about some of the things that we've been up to. So take it away past us. Okay, Lady, what is this? I've been playing around with lots of interface circuits, like rotary encoders. They rotate all the way around. And if you remember old iPods, they also had a rotary wheel that clicked around, and that's how you would select songs. So this is actually from Zippy. It's not from a real iPod. It's just very similar to it. And you can see as I rotate the wheel, it's being read by this feather and four, and it's making the neopixel go around. And then when I press the up button, you see the red LED on the top turns on. This is the left button, the right button, the bottom button, and the middle button which turns all the LEDs on. And then if you look at the computer, you see it's reading the encoder and keeping track of the direction. So this little breakout, I mean, works just fine. So you'll be able to use it on a breadboard. There you go. Hey, Lady, what is this? Hey, I built a tester for the Seasaw rotary encoder. So this is an iSquad C to rotary encoder converter manager that uses a SAM D09. And I'm using this Metro Express to run the SWD DAP code that will program in this chip. So I put it down here and I press the button. It will program it, and then that's how I know it's working. It's all rainbow-y. And then when we go over here, this is what it looks like when it's fully assembled as a rotary encoder. And it's being driven by a Metro Mini. And then the commands to control the rotary encoder and the neopixel are all done over iSquad C. So you can see a STEMI QT cable. And you can even see there's a little interrupt pin over here that whenever I twist it, it goes high and low. So that's me just testing out this new hardware that's coming to the Adafruit shop soon. What is this? Hey, I'm making a NeoKey Trinky Tester using a Teensy 3.6 and our Teensy Brains when I press this button. It goes through the whole procedure, programming, checking the USB, and locking the chip. It finishes in about three seconds. And then I've got a beautiful NeoKey Trinky. And then what you do is people can pick what Cherry and Mex key they want to solder on to it. And then you can have like a beautiful glowing keycap that does one thing. In this case, it's just doing it as consumer control, but it's reprogrammed in Arduino or circuit Python. Thanks to SAMD21E18 on the bottom there. And they'll reverse NeoPixel. So very cool, very fast, very easy. It's going to be in the store real soon. NeoKey Trinky, your best friend from Chemical Keyboards. Okay. And then I wanted you to talk about what is this thing? This is my layout for the rotary encoder tester. I use a Metro M0 to program the SAMD09 on the rotary encoder. So this is like an all-in-one tester. All right. And then this we talked about on Desk of Lady Data, but this is a big deal. PB2040. Yeah. This is an Arduino pro micro shape board, but it runs a RP2040. And we posted everything up on our blog. Take a look, folks. And I'm going to send out these prototypes soon. So let me know if there's something I messed up. Yeah. If you do Keebs, you're going to like this because it's the only replacement that's out there that's an RP2040. Yes. And it'll be circuit Python. And we have a bunch of updates to circuit Python. We'll make this the best keyboard. Check out those D plus and D minus pins. Yes. To people who are wanting this. That's top secret.