-# Other stuff
-
-The extra NLNet budgets are helping, as is the continued sponsorship from
-Purism. I am beginning to get slightly overloaded with the managerial and
-bureaucratic tasks, combined with the "Engineering" tasks that, as is always
-the case, require 100% sustained week-long focus.
-
-These two (three? four? five?) things are clearly incompatible. whoops.
-
-I still have to coordinate the NLNet tasks for each of the Memorandums
-of Understanding, at which point the tasks listed on them, people can
-then get paid for completing them. I can't quite get over the fact that
-NLNet was happy to allocate such a huge amount of money to this project,
-it's amazing, humbling, and a huge responsibility.
-
-Also, we got word that the 180nm tape-outs (one in March 2020, one in October
-2020) are actually subsidised. In addition, we have *verbal* informal
-confirmation that some proprietary cell libraries are about to be
-announced as being libre-licensed. This is particularly fascinating.
-
-Reading between the lines, we can surmise / hypothesise that various
-"noises" about how hardware is proprietary and how difficult it is to
-do Libre / Open ASICs (people basically give up and don't even bother
-because it's so ridiculously costly, no one individual Libre / Open
-ASIC developer could possibly imagine themselves contributing to,
-let alone raising the multi-million funds for, say, a
-4 GHz 10-stage 12-core SMP multi-issue processor, so they don't
-even bother to design or release anything that *could* be part of
-such a design), and consequently it looks like various large companies
-who shall remain nameless for now are quietly and subtly waving around
-very large amounts of cash in front of the noses of Foundries, tempting
-them to release things like Cell Libraries under Libre Licenses.
-
-Given that the U.S. Trade War has recently caused a whopping
-**twelve percent** drop in
-[ASIC sales](https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/20/02/07/2157253/chip-industry-had-worst-sales-year-since-dot-com-bubble-burst),
-with USA ASIC sales dropping **twenty four percent**,
-they're probably "quite open" shall we say to large up-front cash deals.
-
-Anyway, as always, if you'd like to help out (and actually receive money
-for doing so), we have a nice shiny new section
-[on the website](https://libre-riscv.org/), "How can i help?" and there
-is a heck of a lot to do. Feel free to get in touch, any time.
-
+### Other Stuff
+
+The extra NLNet budgets are helping, as is the continued sponsorship
+from Purism. I am beginning to get slightly overloaded with the
+managerial and bureaucratic tasks, combined with the "Engineering"
+tasks that, as is always the case, require 100% sustained week-long
+focus. Making all these things compatible is a challenge.
+
+I still have to coordinate the NLNet tasks for each of the Memoranda
+of Understanding, at which point people can then get paid for
+completing the associated tasks. I can't quite get over the fact that
+NLNet was happy to allocate such a huge amount of money to this
+project, it's amazing, humbling, and a huge responsibility.
+
+Also, we got word that the 180 nm tape-outs (one in March 2020, one in
+October 2020) are actually subsidised. In addition, we have *verbal*
+informal confirmation that some proprietary cell libraries are about
+to be announced as being libre-licensed. This is particularly
+fascinating.
+
+Right now, when it comes to creating Libre ASICs, people basically
+give up and don't even bother because it's so ridiculously costly --
+no individual Libre ASIC developer could possibly imagine themselves
+contributing to, let alone raising the multi-million funds for, say, a
+4 GHz 10-stage 12-core SMP multi-issue processor, so they don't even
+bother to design or release anything that *could* be part of such a
+design. Yet, reading between the lines, we can hypothesise that
+various "noises" about how hardware is proprietary, and how difficult
+it is to do Libre ASICs, are starting to yield some results, as
+various large companies who shall remain nameless for now are quietly
+and subtly waving around very large amounts of cash in front of the
+noses of Foundries, tempting them to release things like cell
+libraries under Libre licenses. Given that the U.S. trade war has
+recently caused a whopping **12%** drop in [ASIC
+sales](https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/20/02/07/2157253/chip-industry-had-worst-sales-year-since-dot-com-bubble-burst),
+with U.S. ASIC sales dropping **24%**, foundries might be quite open
+to large up-front cash deals.
+
+Anyway, as always, if you'd like to help out (and actually receive
+money for doing so), we have a nice shiny new section [on the
+website](https://libre-riscv.org/), "How can I help?" and there is a
+heck of a lot to do. Feel free to get in touch, any time.