 Jazz Marie asked the question, just wondering if anyone found a solution to replace InfoPath. My company currently uses InfoPath and would like to find another alternative. Not an alternative, whatever you were thinking of, another alternative. Another alternative. It depends. We knew we'd get that in there. Do we actually have, off the top of our head, the deprecation date for InfoPath? When is it going to stop functioning? In my mind, it's already dead to me. It's zombie life now, right? Do we have a funeral for it? We had a funeral for it. We had a funeral and it was reincarnated. This is one of those things where I know that there's a number of third party solutions that are out there. And so I know we jokingly say it depends. But depending on what you're trying to do, there are quite a few options that are out there. I can say with a rather large organization, about 50% of their InfoPath, I was able to build in Microsoft Forms. It was anything above and beyond some of the functionality. It went into PowerApps, which most companies, if they own licensing to that point, they already have PowerApps. So they're probably already paying for it. So those, to me, should be your first two options. Keeping it in the ecosystem. Yep, yep. Again, you do things that are beyond that. There are third party solutions that can go do a lot of other things and some that you may already have licensed for those. But yeah, Forms, PowerApps, Power Automate, the things that are out of the box, the things that you probably already have use. And then, you know, whatever remains, it's like anything. It's the 80-20 rule. 80% of it will move across easily. Then you spend your life trying to move the other 20%. Yeah, it's just kind of like development. Reforce of whatever you're trying to build is probably out of the box. And only a fourth of it really needs development, depending on what you're doing, right? So you just kind of got to keep those things in mind. I'm sure there's something already there before they go to the extreme. You know, it was already there before your 75% was my 80-20 rule. 80%, 75%. I don't know why you're nitpicking on that 5%. Hey, I'm here to nitpick. That's what I'm here for, right here. Some of us are just holding on to the legacy tools. Just couldn't let it go. Just give me my 80% and just let it go. Thank you. That's all I asked for. Thank you. Some of us are just hanging on to our legacy tools. I still use Pull Out SharePoint Designer every once in a while, but... Shame, you're sure you're not. I do all of my best work. I do all of my best work in front page, so. Oh, God, that hurt. In front page and MS Paint, I mean, I'm telling you. Is it almost 20 years since front page been dead? I think 2003 was the last version, if I remember right. I believe so. Yeah. Can you believe that? 20 years ago. Was it? No, no, no. We all may be showing our age here. Just going to... No, it was later than that. I was at Microsoft when they shelled it. So I started at Microsoft in 2006. So it was like 2006, 2007, wasn't it? Must have been the zombie stage. We know how that works. I guess we could all go look it up somewhere. It's going to have that. There's probably a Wikipedia page, which I'm sure is completely... It is. Office Suite from 1997 to 2003. OK, plus I stand corrected. You were in zombie stage. Yeah, I was in the zombie stage and there was that even like an open source kind of effort around it. And so, good times. They did kind of start giving it up free once they decommissioned it. So, yeah. I'm not surprised you were excited about that. Yeah, I don't think about front page anymore. I'm still dealing with all of these, all this work that I did in Silverlight. Or Flash. Flash. Yeah, Flash. As I sit here listening to my Zoom, yeah. Yeah, you're an old fool from the old school. There we go.