 John says, I had a user that was hosting a Teams meeting today, but they did it while they were remote and were logged into their work desktop via TeamViewer. So not to be confused with anything in Teams, but TeamViewer. The meeting worked fine for everyone else, but he could not hear anything and they could not hear him. So that's an issue. So you're reading the transcription, hopefully transcriptions on for that problem. He knows now in the future to log into the web version of Teams and not remote in through TeamViewer. But why did his audio not work? Is this normal for a remote connection? 100 percent. So in any type of scenario through a TeamViewer or a virtual desktop by nature, those are not turned on. Also depends if you're using the free version or the paid version if you can even control those settings, especially with TeamViewer. But definitely a TeamViewer configuration. If they can fix it, not sure it depends if it's the paid or free. Yeah. I mean, when you go through any one of those solutions, virtual remote TeamViewer, nothing is ever going to behave the way that you would like it to. They all come with their idiosyncrasies when you're going into it and there's so many potential complications around things like audio and video as well as another. What type of browser are they actually using? Because if you do Teams through that viewer using that browser, that can have complications using a browser too. But there's just so many potential minefields really on that one. You're adding multiple actual application configurations to it. Because you go into the admins and I can figure teams and here's our policies and this is what you can do and you can't do. Then in maybe TeamViewer, you're a lot more lax. You allow more things, but then when you're trying to use TeamViewer to Teams, you're still those things aren't going to work, because you have conflicting configurations. I was just thinking too is that through the work device, but some if it's a shared device, if I've had that scenario or again like the browser, everything seemed to be fine in the settings of the browsers, no, but the machine itself, they're set up, they're meant to be quiet, not have the sound and directly they're not meant to be used in that way. You have to think about those factors. Now, for everything we just said, if he was able to go in and join the last Teams meeting in the exact same scenario and yet it worked there, call us. Well, that's a different issue. So something else might be going on. That may have been the Teams issue, do sure as well considering how Teams tends to want to change on a day-to-day basis. Well, we've talked about this in other recordings too, is that I have the exact same setup. I have the regular meetings, work meetings, the community calls like this. I don't change any settings. So I know when I log into a Teams meeting, if something's not working, it's not me Teams, it's you Teams. It's definitely there's something going on there. This scenario, it's a non-normal, non-standard for the way that John describes it to dial into that. So that could be a number of different things. Then there's going to your mobile, host your meeting from a mobile, host reading, there's so many other options that you could have kicked off as well. A lot of people do that at Automatic. That's a great point, because a lot of people do that Automatic by default now, and I do the same thing as Teams, if you've got a decent phone connection, it's super easy to switch off. And it's an inter-enabled authentication with your organization to do a meeting on Teams, because a lot of organizations will go, no, we can't do BYUD on a phone or anything like that. So there's that, but yeah. It's a great option if you're having problems with the desktop. And there's an upgrade, there's something that's happening. Microsoft is updating something on the back end, and Teams is acting a little loopy. Oftentimes the phone, I'm just saying, in theory. But, and people will jump over to their phones and the mobile version is working fine. So, and the mobile version actually works pretty good. It does, it's a fairly nice client now. I would argue it's more stable than the desktop. Yeah, it is. You've got a good valid point there. Yeah, and the transitioning from one to the other now, for your own one, you need to cut it so much better. So much better. Yeah, I'm regularly doing that, especially if it's the, Microsoft calls two or three in the morning. It's like, I'm gonna transfer over to somewhere where I'm really warm. Now, if we could get that Teams mobile experience on a Windows phone again, that would be dreamy. Oh my. Windows, we're back to that. Christian, you, Windows phones, Zunes, I don't know what to do with you anymore. Yeah, can I get Teams on my Zoom interface?