 Annie has a question. I want to be able to provide a phone number to someone who wants to call into the team's meetings. What dial in number for the meeting, not assigning a user a phone number. Where and when does the number appear? So an individual would not be using the Teams app but dialing directly in. That number should be generated when you create the meeting. There should be dial in information and in the meeting information underneath the settings menu will tell you what that dial in information is. But there is also you have to have the Teams calling. Depending on the user license, you may have to have to have a personal phone number that they can call into it. You have to have that licensing, as far as I know, yep. Yeah, you have to have the licensing and anybody who is generating the meeting. So essentially, if you want the person generating the meeting to have a phone number in the meeting request, that license has to be applied to them. You can use, they have to have an audio plan, which there is a $0 North American audio plan right now. So you don't have to pay anything for it. You do have to have communication credits enabled, although you don't actually have to have any money in there. And so basically there has to be an opportunity for that to all turn on. And then that has to be licensed to the users that are going to be generating the meeting for the phone number to appear. There's also a couple of configuration steps that you have to do on the back end. So you have to go into your Teams admin center and in your meeting policy and your meeting information, there's gonna be a place to assign a phone number. And Christian, I've put the link in there just for how to set all that up. But once it's all set up, then you just have to remember anybody who when they schedule the meeting, if you want that phone number to appear, has to be licensed properly. So having a central like one person or one account that has it is doable. You don't, not everybody has to have it, the person that schedules it has to have that number. You have to have licensing. Yep. And then how does that, I know this isn't what Annie's asking, but if you've got people dialing in from different international regions, I mean, would that account cover other international dial ins or would that be US only? If I'm based in the US and that's where my license is, is it based on the license holder location? It depends on the number that you choose. So there are different, so you can choose basically a local phone number. So what's gonna happen is basically anybody within the US or North America could call that number at a, I hate to call it a old toll-free thing, but essentially there's no cost for it, but it's considered an international dial for the people who are dialing in. So actually the cost would be on them. The other option is you can choose a toll-free, a true toll-free number. And if you choose a true toll-free number, depending on how your team's calling is set up, then you can incur the cost against your communication credit. So you can choose basically when you're setting up that configuration, whether or not you want to cover the cost of anybody outside of your calling plan or whether you want to put that cost back on them. Yeah. I just want something now. Coming from the telephony world, I mean, that's where I spent a decade of my career in understanding that a lot of the, when calling within a region, within a country, and how expensive it used to be, how much of a scam it was, it was like 100% markup on what they would charge, but when you're dealing with internationals, because you're going through different CO, central offices, you're going through different switches, and so obviously if you're in the US and you're creating a meeting and inviting people from other countries, we have no control over what those other offices, what those other regions charge for that transaction. Even though, I mean, there's, I mean, it's 100% markup. It's a scam business. I have learned more about Team's Voice. I did about this much in telephony, like where it would just kind of come in a little bit and I had to do some of the software a million years ago, but with all the Team stuff and all of the clients that we support, really we've learned tons about Team's Meetings and Team's Voice and managing all the configuration behind the scenes to the point where I don't think like I'm a super expert on it, but I sure know a heck of a lot more than I did before. Yep. Well, it used to be that there were just a handful in the US, just like a dozen companies that were truly experts in unified communications. And those that would do deployments, but whenever they had actual questions, they'd go back to those dozen companies. And so that's something Microsoft has been really pushing out that education, pushing partners to take on the telephony side of the business and learn that for Teams. And so a lot of incentives for partners to be able to handle the telephony. So yeah, I still haven't done it, but. And I don't want to. I don't want to. I'll add in here too. So a really great conference. I've gone to the last couple of years that I'm doing again this year as comes to be next in Denver. Yes. It's all UC. It's Teams-based, but it's all UC. So it's all the voice, it's all the applications, but it's also the devices too. It's really exciting, because to your point, Christian, like that knowledge has kind of been in this little bubble. And I think the fact that it's getting shared out in a really great way is just worth talking about.