(1/3) Good morning friends,

I know I've spammed you a lot lately about my entry in the 2018 Hackaday Prize, so this will be the last ask, I promise 😇

The challenge my project is competing in closes on Monday, April 23rd and the top 20 entries (based on "likes") will move-on to the finals and receive $1000. Currently my project is at #13 on the leaderboard:

https://hackaday.io/prize

2018 Hackaday Prize

The 2018 Hackaday Prize, Build Hope.

(2/3) If you haven't already, it would be super awesome of you to visit my project page and "like" it. This will require creating an account which I know is a pain, but you'd be doing me a big favor:

https://hackaday.io/project/85392-rain-mark-ii-personal-supercomputer

RAIN Mark II Personal Supercomputer

RAIN is an open-source project to design and build open, efficient, and accessible supercomputers. RAIN&apos;s mission is to make supercomputing accessible to a wider and more diverse audience and encourage the development of new, innovating and compelling high-performance applications.This <a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" href="http://Hackaday.io">Hackaday.io</a> project is focused on the RAIN Mark II Personal Supercomputer. The goal of this phase of the RAIN project is to create a small, inexpensive computer with the same architecture as a large scale cluster to facilitate learning and the development of new high-performance applications while making owning and operating the system accessible to a wide-range of programmers, designers and users.Completion of the Mark II PSC will provide a platform for research &amp; development on the next phase of the project to make the design even more open (switch from ARM to RISC-V) and more powerful.

@jjg done!
@dixongexpat thank-you!