 One of the biggest announcements out of Ignite was Microsoft Loop. The question, I saw this instantly in feedback like Twitter, and the community chatter was, where does Microsoft Loop fit with Microsoft Teams? So I hate to be the one guy here to say this, but I didn't get to attend any of the Ignite content. So I am not familiar with Loop. Can you give us the 30,000 foot? I haven't seen anything, man. I've been totally heads down. Yeah. So if you go and look at the micro, for those that aren't familiar with it, either the Microsoft 365 blog has, it's a new full-fledged product. It's like a next-generation Microsoft Office. So it's a, what's the best way to, I like describing it as a new Microsoft Office Candice, that incorporates a bunch of different things. So it is a collaborative space that is using the Loop components, so the real-time collaborative components. So for example, we're working on a project together. I might then, as we have chat that's going on, we're co-editing on like a Word document type thing. But as we're talking about it, we might be moving the order around. We might be doing sidebar comments, asking questions, might then insert, hey, this is relevant to this data that's out in our CRM system or add a poll question, and people can respond to it right there in real-time. So it's the live components, so it allows you to jointly collaborate on something while pulling components from elsewhere, the CRM platform from a Microsoft list somewhere from SharePoint, OneDrive. Yeah. Components of what? How? Components and people. Okay. Correct. That the space, if there are other people that you think might be involved with this, you can actually loop them in, and in the process of looping them in, they get access to everything that you've been doing across all the various platforms you've been doing it on. Oh, nice. It sounds like it doesn't do anything revolutionary, but it streamlines common things that trip people up, like maybe access and getting documents and things. The demonstration I saw even included a virtual workroom which looked very much like Alt-Space ER, except it was all clean and nice, and prettier. That's interesting. I'm wondering whether they're going to loop that in or not. Alt-Space VR is something that I've gotten exceedingly fond of as a big night because I was involved in the six Alt-Space VR sessions that were held during the two-day event. That was basically you had a landing zone in teams and then you could head off to three different rooms on each one of the sessions where you got to talk to subject matter experts and the beauty of it was that you were in a room, literally in a room, and you could be off in one corner talking to some people. There'd be another conversation going off in another part of the room. You can hear the conversation and you can turn away from it or to it like you're in a real room. It was a thing of beauty to behold. Yeah, that's just like a whole other topic. You're between the three rooms and yeah, well, never the less. It meshes a whole different topic. It doesn't make the conversation get out of it. Yeah, yeah, but the loop specifically instantly made me think of the Gig Jam announcement a few years back, which is actually 2015. It has, we finally see it, it's live now with the loop components, part of the vision of that Gig Jam. So Sherry, you had a question, your hand is up. I said a comment. To me, the teams seems to be like the structure so it's around the groups. I always direct people to create their teams around the who needs to work together, the channels or what are they working on and the tabs across the top or how are they going to get that work done. But loop seems to be a little more fluid than that. So it's like we're working on a document so you can create a workspace. That's, to me, it looks like a workspace. Does anybody else feel that way? Like it? I think that's the thing. And Norm, sorry, not ignoring your hand, it's also up here. But there's, so back to Sean, who didn't pay attention. Three, there's three components, so there's components. So the loop components, there are loop pages and then there are the loop workspace, which is in a whole standalone app. I actually was thrown for a loop. The fact that there was a yet another full app, I knew that it was like the components. I thought it was just gonna be an integrated component. Like I could see that you have a loop page or workspace that you, once we have deeper integration with teams, there's loop components that are available now. I actually just noticed it on my work tenant today. In fact, so we're able to go and add those things into a chat and add live components in, which you'll be able to leverage it and use elsewhere. I just assumed that that's how we would consume, how we would see team or loop was through teams as a primary interface, not as a standalone application. I don't know when that's coming out, but that, again, threw me for a loop. But in Norm, you had a quite, sorry. I think it's gonna cause more confusion about where do I go now? Because that's what we're doing. So, sorry, go ahead. No, it's, loop is interesting. And it's not something that I initially paid attention to. But the more I watched the teaser videos, I was left with the impression that it's very much like one note where you have the ability to free form content into it. But with the additional power of the co-authoring experiences that you get in something like Excel. And so the demos are always great at an event like Ignite, but as you said, Christian, it is starting to light up in people's tenants in teams chats. And so in practice and real function, it is really almost as effective as you see in those demos. So it's quite easy to move content, to build dynamic lists. I think that it's going to be one of those things that people will create a loop list versus something like a SharePoint list. Like it's just going to be much easier for them to collaborate together. There won't be a dependency on anyone person, but it is quite interesting. And there's going to be a hierarchy of those different components, right? The ones we get inside of teams chat, the pages, and then eventually that workspace. So it's gonna be very similar to some of the hierarchies that we have in teams, right? With the team, the channel, the tabs, and stuff like that. So those are my observations of it. It looks pretty exciting. It talks a lot about extending the fluid framework and the fluid framework has been really interesting to me because it's all that office integration stuff. So basically what's happening is think about it this way. Instead of having to build a connector or an API to bring productivity information into something like teams, it's now kind of built in its own area where we can say, okay, I want to integrate directly with this thing. And I've got a component like Norm was saying to bring in to use. So this is a manifestation of fluid. Yes, yes, yes it is, yeah. Gotcha. I'm excited about it. So that aspect of it, I mean, we knew it was coming. This was not new, it's the packaging of it. And then like I said, the way that they broke it up into workspaces pages and components. And then thankfully, this is not one of those times where they announced something which sounds really exciting. And then there's nothing for us to touch. You know, look at kick tires around for months or years like it's available, it's out there. So it has to be enabled within your tenant, but you can play with loop components today. I have a lot of clients who are going to be really, really excited because there's a lot of features that we've worked on that I essentially, we haven't built custom yet, right? And I think this is gonna solve some of those needs to integrate some of that productivity stuff. This is your area Sherry, it's all the graph stuff. I mean, it's all the waffle stuff, right? Where's the waffle? Well, guess what? The waffle showed up this time. Yay. That's right, that's right. Neil, do you have anything to explain yourself, Mr. Microsoft? You know, any thoughts, your impressions on it? Well, for a lot of things, I'm a little bit like Sean in this respect. I'm too busy to attend Ignite these days. So I don't get to see very much. I'm in catch up mode, reviewing all of the recordings. So what I've seen looks interesting, but I'm not immersed in it and understand it really to the point where I could talk in any way authoritatively about what it's supposed to do and what it's all about. Just being honest. Yeah, no, that's fine. That's valid answer. But all right, there's a lot to look at and folks, again, I recommend that you go take a look at the Microsoft 365 blog, so the Microsoft blog and go and look specifically around the announcements around Microsoft Loop. So that's where you'll see links to the demos, kind of an explainer, what Microsoft is doing, kind of the future vision for this and timeframe for expecting additional aspects of Loop to become available.