 All right, I had a chance, John, to check out something new from Kingston. It's their Kingston Data Traveler Max flash drives. And these are USB-C. They have a USB-C connector. It recedes inside the flash drive, which is kind of nice. And they are, as they state, USB 3.2 Gen2, which means that the interface can run up to 10 gigabits, which means up to 1,000 megabytes per second. I tested these. They have a one terabyte, a 512 and a 256, going from 262 US dollars for the one terabyte down to 91 for the 256. And I was able to get over 900 megabytes, sorry, per second reads and over 800 megabytes per second writes. So very close to their claims of 1,900, respectively. Yeah, it's super handy thing, you know, and it's funny, it arrived, the test unit arrived about, I don't know, an hour after I sent some data from my laptop, we had some songs that were mixing for, we're putting out a new fling EP and we've got some songs that we were mixing and I had them on the road with me so I could do some mixing and mastering while I wasn't home. And so it was, I don't know, five or six gigs of data or something. And over my Wi-Fi network, wherever I happened to be with my laptop at the time, it took, I don't know, seven minutes or something to blast these back to the iMac here in the studio. And the email came in that this was out for delivery, like while I was sitting there doing this and it was like, you know, I should be smarter about this because I could just copy it over to this thing, bring it up, plug it into this iMac and I'm good to go. So these things are handy. SneakerNet still has its place in the world and I was proving it to myself at that time. So yeah. Yeah.