 You want to take us to Bill? All right, Bill got to this one's quick. Bill asks, do you know if it is possible to target boot a MacBook Air 2015 to a MacBook Air M1 so I can transfer files? The differences are that article does link to another one. Apparently, it's a little different doing it on an M1. So they have like a subarticle transfer files between a Mac with Apple Silicon and another Mac. Mm, which is what he wants to do, right? So yeah, OK, that's interesting. What is the difference here? Because on Intel Macs, to get into target disk mode, you start it up by holding down T. Apple, thankfully, has gotten away from us needing to memorize all these different incantations. So on a Mac with Apple Silicon, it says to press and hold the power button until loading startup options appears. And then when you click options, you can go, oh, yeah, it's a little bit different. You click options and then continue. And that brings you into recovery mode. And then you go to Utilities and Share Disk. And you pick the disk or even the volume that you want to share and click Start Sharing. And then on the other Mac, you open the Finder window. Oh, you click Network. So there is no target disk mode on Apple Silicon. That's interesting. So there, no, so the answer to his question is no. You can't put it into target disk mode. This is, yeah. Yeah, it says you can connect a Mac with Apple Silicon to another Mac so that the Mac with Apple Silicon appears as an external hard disk. And then you can transfer files between the Mac computers. Yeah, this is interesting. I could have sworn that they would do target disk mode, but evidently not. You gotta do it over the network. Yeah, there is no connect a file between them. Really? Yeah? All right. Well, we'll put this link in there. We talk about learning five new things. I learned a fifth. So that's, or maybe a sixth. That's great. Very interesting.