 All right, we've got some more quick tips here. Kirit brings us a quick tip about accessibility, but a cool use of it. And this is new in iOS 16 and Watch OS 9. If you go to Settings, Accessibility, Apple Watch Mirror Ring, you can see your watch face magnified on your phone and manipulate it. The usefulness? He says, I don't know. Maybe to learn, teach about the watch, to send screenshots. Maybe more features will come. This is one of those things that I had the same thought as Kirit when I saw it first. It's like, oh, that's cool. What am I going to use it for? I don't know. But that's cool. Maybe it's because there is no way to do this from the iPhone to your Mac, right? You can share with QuickTimeViewer, or QuickTimePlayer. And maybe people don't know that. You can, if you connect your phone to your Mac, I think it has to be done wired, I think. QuickTimePlayer, and you create a new movie, and you can essentially set your iPhone to be the camera for this. So you can record and see your phone mirrored on your Mac screen, but you can't manipulate it there. It would be really nice if you could use, say, screen sharing to control your phone, but that's something Apple's never done. So maybe that's why I got excited about this, because it's like, oh, this is like screen sharing for the watch, you know? So, yeah, I don't know. Yeah, I don't know. But it's a cool one.