 Steven, hips us to a new thing in Monterey, if you go to the command line, he says there is a new command line tool to do a speed test. It is called network quality. And the way it's listed in Monterey, or the way it listed in the terminal is it's all one word network quality with a capital Q. Everything else is his lower case. And it will immediately start doing a speed test. It doesn't tell you what servers it's using for the speed test, but it will go out and do a download test and an upload test, and then it gives you some, you know, it finishes. So when it first started running for me, I thought, oh, it's never going to stop. Like the way it was reporting it, it seemed like it was just one of those commands that runs until you tell it to stop with another quick tip. Control C is generally the way that you would do that from the terminal to stop something that's running. But you don't have to stop this. It does the test and then gives you a summary. And I thought this is great having a having speed test built into Mac OS. I think that's cool. I think the difference is that this is now baked into every version or every computer that has Mac OS Monterey on it, right? So it doesn't give you information you can't get. But lots of people out there that don't have Oogla's command line speed speed test tool installed. Now it gives it absolutely gives them information they can't get. So Oogla are the people that make speed test.net. That's how you know them more, more, more likely that is more familiar to you. But you can install. They have a command line tool, which if you have homebrew installed, you can install with brew install speed test dash CLI for command line interface. But then you invoke it by just typing speed test from the command line. So it's a little bit it's one of those tools that's a little bit different, the name to install it is different from the name. So, yeah, interesting stuff. Thank you for that, Stephen. I, you know, we love tools like this. It's great.