 Sometimes, you come across a distribution and you just don't understand why it exists. And every time that happens, I usually utter the phrase, what the f*** is this distro? And I found myself saying this phrase so often, I decided to make a video series on it. So over the last few months, I've found really weird distributions to take a look at. And then I put them in this series. And sometimes the distributions surprise me. Sometimes they don't surprise me and they're exactly as bad as I expect them to be. But today, today my friends, well, let's just say this, I don't even know how to install software on this distribution we're going to show you today. I think I know how, but it hasn't worked for me yet. So it's an interesting distribution to be sure, but I don't know why it exists. So let's go ahead and jump into 4M Linux and see if we can figure out what the f*** this distribution is all about. Okay, so we're going to be installing this in a virtual machine. And if you decide you're going to try this out, if you do decide to suffer through this along with me, you should definitely install it in a virtual machine because I can't verify if this distro is good as in free of malware or any of that kind of stuff. So installing the VM first, I don't think it's going to have any of that kind of nonsense on it because it was on the front page of distro watching as we know they are the Paragon of Virtue and would never promote a distribution that would harm your computer. Installing a virtual machine because there's not a lot of information on here. So let's actually before we start this, let's go ahead and take a look at the website. This right here is the website. Now you can understand when I saw this the first time why my expectations for this distribution were so low. And it doesn't get better if you follow any of the links on here. There isn't about page. That's all you get. And it does tell you what the 4M stand for. So this is 4M Linux, 4M Linux is a small independent note that it is independent because that's going to be a theme throughout the rest of this video. General purpose Linux distribution with a strong focus on the following 4M of computing maintenance system rescue live CD, multimedia full support for a huge number of image audio and video formats, okay, multi server for DNS, FTP, HTTP, my SQL, NFS proxy SMTP SSH and Telnet and mystery, meaning a collection of classic Linux games. So one of these things is not like the other. I will admit that I have looked at this distribution now for over an hour before I started recording this video because the last time I did one of these videos, I got complained because I didn't do any research. So this time, I did some research and the one area that I didn't actually do any research on what are the games. So that should be an interesting thing for us to go through together. Outside of this page here, we also have a help section, which is at least it exists. Let's put it that way. I will say that it's not the worst documentation I've ever seen in my life. It's not it's also I will and I'll show you this once we get to the installation. It is the easiest Linux install you'll ever face. It's literally three steps. That's literally it. You don't enter username or password. You don't give it a time zone, you do none of that stuff. It's literally partition and install. I'll show you here in a minute, but it's I'm trying to find positive things and there are positive things that was easy to install for sure. So there is some help on the website, which I will applaud them for because as we've seen in some videos in this series beforehand, that's not necessarily always a given. I will say that I could use better documentation because from what I can tell, even on the website, there's no instructions on how to install software. Like I said, as far as I know where now, I have not read every single word of this. I will freely admit that, but I did search for the word install and I went through every single search results. So maybe I'm just missing it and it's completely possible. And I've also looked at the documentation that comes with distrust. So I'll show you that here in a minute. But other than that, the last time we should look at here, and this is a big critique for me is that there's not a download link. Yeah, there's not a download link. The only way you can download this from this page, as far as I'm aware, as far as I can tell is to donate. And I was obviously not going to do that without knowing at least a little bit more about it. So the only way I found to actually be able to download this thing was from Distro Watch in the direct download link that they always supply every time there's an update. So I clicked here and downloaded it like so. But from the website, there doesn't appear to be a way to actually download this directly from the website. Or from, I'm assuming that this means source forage because that's where the link from Distro Watch actually leads to. But again, why not supply the link? I'm assuming it's because they want you to donate, but whatever. Yeah, that's an it's an interesting way to force people to download to or most likely not download your distro. Anyway, so that is the website, such as such as it is. So let's go ahead and go over here to the virtual box and get this thing started. So we're going to go ahead and get this as full screen as possible to get it. And you'll see what I mean by that a little bit later. So we're just going to boot into 4M Linux with the default drivers. And as far as I can tell, it's actually installing all the software like this. Every time you boot into a live environment, it does this. And then it starts X. So this is an X org based distro. And by default, it uses the JWM window manager. Now, I have never tried JWM in my life and I have no clue what it is or how to use it. It reminds me a lot of LXDE quite a bit of LXD. It also reminds me a little bit of like it has some like early GNOME vibes because you'll see like if we click on the menu here, that's kind of a GNOME thing or like a GNOME 2 thing. I guess not anymore, obviously, but something like that. So you have a menu here. But anyways, first time you start up into the live CD, it's going to ask you some questions. So it's going to ask you, do you want to change the English keyboard layout? And I do not want to change that. And then it's going to ask you if you'd like to set up a root password. And I'm going to go ahead and do this. Yes. And I'll enter a password, my normal password. It's going to tell me it's too short, but it's also going to let me do it anyways. As far as I'm aware, it doesn't actually ask me to redo it because it was too short. So I'm assuming now my root password is my normal password. I'm not sure because if I, as I'll show you later, pseudo doesn't actually exist on this system. So, um, uh, and when I tried to do pseudo something, uh, I figured, well, you know, maybe they use do as no, do as isn't here either. So it's weird. Anyways, here's, here's another funny thing. It asks, do you live in Europe? So this is, it's asking you to set the local time basically. It assumes you live in Europe. If you don't live in Europe, which I don't live in Europe. I mean, always kind of wanted to visit, but I don't live in Europe. I'm a, I'm an American boy. So I hit no, it exits out. So it makes, actually makes you go through through and it just sets it as UTC. It doesn't ask, go through and ask you what time zone you're in. You actually have to go through and do that later. Uh, so, uh, that's just, I mean, I don't know why even bother just just run this thing here. You're in a terminal already. Just run this here and then people set up their time zone. It would make a hell of a more sense than assuming that you're in Europe. And if you're not in Europe, just stopping. So we can not close this window. So it's gone. All right. So this is what JWM looks like. Now, the first thing I tried to do and the first thing I always try to do is get myself set up for getting this thing full screen. So I tried to use the, the GUI to do this, so I go settings, devices, display monitor, and yet 1080, 1080p is not there. Uh, why it's not there? I don't know. Uh, so I tried to do X render because we know we're using X. So we should be able to do this 1920 by 1080. And yeah, that's not there either. So it turns out that the only resolution that's available to JWM, at least the way I have set up is 768, 1920 by 768, or not 1920, but whatever it is, we can actually see what it is. It's 1024 by 768. Yeah. So we're not going full screen. All right. So, but that's not a unique thing to the 4M Linux. I've had problems getting display things to work on other distributions as well. So I'm not going to be too hard about it. So let's go ahead then, before we take a look at any of this other stuff. And before I, you know, do anything else, let's take a look at the installation. Now, usually with a Linux distribution, the installation thing is right in front of your face, or there's an icon on the home, you know, you're on the desktop or in the bar somewhere. And yeah, you can, you can just look, you can look for that all you want. As far as I can tell, there is no button here to install. There's not. So what would you do? Well, you would look through the documentation. Now the website has a really good documentation on how to install it. But being the person that I am, I didn't look at that documentation first. I instead was looking at the documentation that the distribution comes with. And there is documentation. So if we go here to 4M Linux in the menu and hit help, and I apologize that I can't make this any bigger, at least I don't think I can make it any bigger. Oh, I can make it bigger. Cool. Let's go ahead and make this bigger. Cool. All right. And that way we can zoom in a little bit. All right. So we're here at the top. Now you would expect in the documentation, the very first thing that they would tell you how to do would be to install it. That is not the first thing they tell you to do. In fact, it's actually the last thing they tell you to do. Well, other than the license and reports, the last thing is installation to hard drive. And this is how they tell you to hard drive. So you have to read through all of the documentation to figure out how to install it, unless you go back to the website and then look through the documentation there, which I highly recommend you do because it's better documentation than this. So we have to run this command here in order to install. And like I said, installing is actually fairly easy. So we're just going to go ahead and close this and we'll start a terminal. So by default, for Amlinix comes with bash and it comes with another shell here as well T CL SH never actually heard of T CL SH before, but I'm not surprised that it exists. There are tons of shells out there that I just have never heard of before. So I'm going to zoom in here. And if we run that command that we saw in the documentation install to HD, we're going to get some air. So we're just going to hit continue. And we're going to see air no petitions found on dev.sda. So this is the most complicated part of installing it. And it's going to require some Linux knowledge. So you can use fdisk, you can use CF disk, I use CF disk because it's easy. So we just go ahead and do a partition. Now I don't know if form Linux comes with something like G parted, I can't be sure it does or does not. I've gone through this. Wait a minute. It does in fact have G parted here, but it's not the gooey version, the gooey G parted that you'd expect. It's the terminal version of G parted, which I frankly never used before. So we're just going to go ahead and create a DOS partition. We're going to do a new one here, full size, primary. And then we're going to write it, write it and then type in yes. And then we're going to quit. That's all there is to doing to make a partition that'll actually work with. So now we're going to do install to to HD again, and then we'll enter. And then we will provide the name of the device that we're going to install to. So in this case, it's going to be SDA one. We'll do that. And then do you wish to change this? No. And then is form Linux the only operating system on your PC? Yes. And then enter. And then do you want to install now? Yes. And it's going to install now. That's literally the installation. That's all there is to it. The hardest part is giving the hard drive a partition. And it's done like literally normally at this point, I would say, well, you know what, we're going to pause and I'll come back when it's done. That was literally the entire installation. That's all there is. So pro points. This is the fastest Linux install I've ever seen. I'm going to call it the easiest because I know how to create a partition. I guess if you didn't know how to create a partition on a hard drive using CFDisk or FDisk or G-Parded, you'd have some problems. But outside of that, it was, I mean, stupidly simple. All right, so we're going to go ahead and shut this machine down. Now, sometimes virtual box will remove the ISO. Sometimes it won't. In this case, I know that it won't. So we're going to go ahead and power off and then yes, we don't see a grub menu at all. So whether or not it even installs grub, I'm not sure. I'm assuming it probably does and it just doesn't show the menu. So how it would work if you're installing this on a drive that has multiple partitions and multiple distros on, I don't know. Well, it would have to, it'd be something you'd have to find out. I don't have that set up. So as was before, you're going to get this the first time you log in. Now, whether or not you'll see this on your next login, I'm not actually sure. We might have to test that out. I haven't tried that. So we're just going to, we don't want to need to change that. We would like to have a root password. So I'm actually going to enter a very complicated password this time, like actual complicated password. It still says it's too short. That was eight letters long. Okay. Okay. And I'm still not in Europe. I haven't magically transferred ported myself to Europe. So I'm just going to hit no here again. And then I'm going to show you how to go about setting up the time zones. Because why not? TZ select. Okay. And then enter proceed. We're in the Americas and we're in the United States, which is 49. And then one is fine here as well. Okay. And then one for yes. Okay. I'm assuming that that is a bash script of some kind. But the way they had it set up, you have to actually enter one or two instead of typing yes. So they didn't do the case statement as well as they could have. But we now have the proper time. So what's next? So normally during this thing, I would go through and install some software. Now, the thing is, is remember at the beginning, I told you that this was an independent Linux distribution. And then I said that that would be important. It is important because you can't use a standard package manager. There's not apt on the system. There's not Pac-Man. There's not DNF. There's not Zipper. There's not EO package. There's not XPBS. Literally none of that stuff. So going in the biggest problem with this distro that I've come across is that there's no easy way to install software. Now, if you go to the website and search for install and try to go through the documentation that way, as far as I can tell, there's no documentation there that tells you how to install software at all. There's just not. Now, there is, if we go here to the helpful documentation, we go through and change the font so we can actually see this again. We'll go back to 16, do OK. And then maximize this. If we search for, actually, I can just scroll down to it. Again, installing software seems fairly important. And it would seem logical that this would be the second thing in the documentation. Like right after installation, here's how you install. Here's how you update the search, especially when you're doing an independent distro that uses its own package manager, which this does. You would think that you would go through and provide that information right up top, like right after the installation that that would be the most logical place to put it, but it's not there. And instead, it actually is all the way down the document. No, we're going to continue to go. We're going to continue to go. We're still not there. No, still not there. Oh, here we go. Right here. It's actually under 3.4, a 4M Linux packages, so-called add-ons. So this is how you install software. As far as I can tell, so 4M Linux add-ons are accept tar archives, which are named in the following way, add-on underscore, whatever. And then they are stored in slash var slash 4M Linux. You can easily view their contents with the net commander, which is installed. You can use the script ZK to install packages. So it's a simple package manager. It can be used as follows. So ZK add-on under dot tar dot xz will install add-on dot tar dot xz. Now, as far as I know, this doesn't actually work that way. Now, I notice here that it says underscore and then start. So I'm assuming the name of the package would then go there. So we're going to try this here, because I didn't notice that before. So what I would really like to do is install NeoFetch. So I'm going to go ahead and close this here. And I'm going to go to the web browser. Now, by default, as far as I can tell, there's only one web browser installed. And that is PaleMoon, which is a really old fork of Firefox. And you can tell it's really old by the fact that it looks really old. But it's here, and it's functional for what it is. You'll find a lot of websites that don't work in it. And you'll find there are a lot of parts of websites that don't work with it. So if we go to Researcher NeoFetch, click on this. And I believe if we try to hit the normal button to get the get cone URL, it just sits here and spins. That's a PaleMoon thing. It just doesn't work with that. But it doesn't matter, because Git's not installed anyway. So we can't actually do things that way. So we're going to go here over to Releases. We're going to scroll down to the Releases. This is the tar.gzm. I'm hoping that this script will actually work with a .gz zipped file. And it doesn't have to be the other way around. But we're going to go ahead and try it. There's nothing hurting us from trying it. We're just going to go ahead and save. And then we will get out of this and go back to Terminal. And we'll cd into Downloads. The good news is this is just bash. All your bash stuff will work just normal. We'll do this. And then what we'll do is I'm going to go ahead and do an LS. And what we're going to do is do that other thing. So I'm going to go back here to remember what it is. zk and then addon underscore then the name. OK, so we're going to try this. So we're going to do zk addon underscore and then the name, which is neo fetch, neo fetch, if I can spell, and then dash 7.1.0.tar.gz. OK, we're going to hit the Enter button and see if this worked. Maybe it did. Maybe it did. It did not. OK, so that got closer than it did when I was trying this out earlier. Earlier it just said you couldn't use it because I was just trying to do zk and then neo fetch like that. I assumed that it worked like that. And if you hit this, it just tells you how to use zk. So how do you install software? That question remains unanswered. I have no clue. I'm assuming maybe that the reason why neo fetch didn't install is because it's dot gz instead of dot xz. Frankly, I don't know why they would set it up that way. They're both tarred balls. So why it couldn't handle both? I don't know. So that's just the thing that we're going to have to live with. We can't get it to install software. Now, the good news is that if you want some other software, there is a way to do it. So if we go up here to extensions and then we say, let's say we want Firefox. Let's just say Pale Moon is just not doing it for us, which I won't blame you. Like, Pale Moon's not a very good browser. It's just not. So let's go here to extensions and then NetApps and then Mozilla. And it's like, oh, look, Firefox is installed. No, it's not. So if we hit Firefox, we're actually going to see a terminal pop up. And it says, would you like to download and install Firefox? So I hit yes. And it's actually going to download and install Firefox. So there is a way to install software. But basically what this is doing is just going through and taking the tar ball of the binary for Firefox and then installing it and then launching Firefox. That's literally what it's doing. Why there isn't an easier way to install other software that also comes in a tar ball? I don't know. I don't know. I'm 100% sure I'm doing something wrong. But without really good documentation, how am I supposed to know? So here we are. We have Firefox installed. Now, that's the thing about forum Linux that you have to know. There's not a ton of software here installed by default that you would expect there to be installed. If you go here to the NetApps, Chromium is not installed by default. With all these not installed by defaults, you have to install those things just like we did with Firefox. I'm pretty sure Thunderbird is exactly the same way. So most of this stuff that's here is not actually installed. So if we go to, let's just say office and do library office, it's going to ask you to install it. So most of that stuff, it appears in the menu, but it's not actually here. So there is some stuff obviously that's actually here. So we know Pell Moon is installed by default. But I'm guessing that none of this other stuff actually, so let's see if SM Tube is not installed. So SM Player is not here. This is kind of a mess because you don't actually know what you're getting. We know there's no way that YouTube, BL and Handbrake or Blender are actually here installed. Those are going to be things that you haven't. So let's see if VLC is here. VLC is not here. So other than Pell Moon, I'm not actually sure what you actually get. I'm guessing like VirtualBox, you're going to have to install that. Like you would with Firefox, get GUI is going to be the same thing. Now here are their games. I'm not going to install all these or even read through them because there are, there's a ton of like, okay. So let's just see here, SuperTux cart two or SuperTux cart. You have to install that too soon. So what, basically, if you do any of those games, you get them all. I'm assuming with the 4M Linux game packs, we're going to go ahead. Yes, there and let that install. I have noticed in my times where I could get the pre-loaded stuff that's not actually installed but can be installed. I've noticed the mirrors are, how would you say, really slow. Yeah, they're really slow. Not that surprising. It's just a small Linux distribution. So you're not paying for a lot of servers or whatever. They probably have one, exactly one server. So I'm not going to, you know, poo-poo it that much, but just don't know going in if you're going to try this, that, yeah, the mirrors are slow. Okay, so when you go through and install all those games, you then get this pop-up that says Pulse Audio should be disabled. Okay. Why though? Why? Like, we know Pulse Audio is kind of terrible. You should be able to game with it, right? None of those were, can I disable Pulse Audio for you? Hell no, I'm interested to see if any games will launch with it running. I mean, I just want to break something. Anyway, let's go back up here to the games now. And let's see here, Altress, this is going to be Pulse Audio. So you can't launch any of the games without actually disabling Pulse Audio. Pulse Audio, and then we have a full screen version of LTRS, which I'm assuming is going to be Tetris, basically. Yeah, it's Tetris. I've never heard of this before and I'm no cool how to play, which I'm not playing. I don't know what to say. Yes. The real question is, to get out of this, you just keep hitting escape, which is probably a good thing. At least it wasn't control-delete. So yeah, gaming, apparently you can do. It has some games here, but you can't use Pulse Audio with it, which would then lead me to wonder, how do you get sound? I don't have my headphones on, so I can't tell you if it was actually playing sound, but I'm assuming that it wasn't because it actually killed Pulse Audio. You could see it do it. I don't understand, okay? Like, we know that it is possible to have Pulse Audio running while gaming. It's been working for a long time. It'd be like having to shut your internet off every time you wanted to game, or turn Xorg off every time you wanted to game. I mean, well, that's really weird, right? So yeah, I'm not gonna go through any more of the games. You're free to install this and look at those games if you want. I mean, fine, well, go ahead and launch SuperTuxKart and see how this goes. All right, let's see how it goes. You can, keyboard is not working. I think I was going for there for a minute. Okay, there's no, okay, because it's not full screen when the, yeah, all right, let's get out of this. Get out of the exit race, Lord. Why the other one opened up full screen? I don't know, and why the keyboard wasn't working at all. I mean, I've only played TuxKart maybe one time in my entire life, but I'm pretty sure there are keyboard controls. Like it's not like a mouse-based steering game, but I could be wrong about that. Maybe I'm just misremembering it. I thought WASD was the thing that would work. So gaming was a fail. Okay, all right. So if we go back up here to the, up here where it describes the four M's. So remember, this was four different things that it was aiming to do. One of them was maintenance. So theoretically, you could boot into this live environment, the live environment that we were on, and then CHroot into a system that you had installed on a hard drive. You could do that. And you'd have to use, so if we go back to the terminal here. So you could go through and do, get into the terminal and hit sue. And then if you had a password, which apparently it still didn't take my password. I don't know why I didn't take my password because now we're in root. We were in root before because there's no user, there's like no user account here. So you're always running everything as root as far as I can tell. And that's the reason why there's no sudo or anything because it doesn't need sudo. It's already in root all the time. As far as I can tell, don't ever run everything as root. Okay, just don't do that because that's not, you're gonna RM, RF slash or something and you're gonna delete your whole system and don't do that. It's not healthy. It's just gonna lead to heartache. So you can in fact use forum Linux live CD to then do things in midnight commander to back up your files or do whatever you need to do from that. I don't know why you would use this particular brand of Linux to do that. You could use the ISO of the distro you were trying to save. And thus this is the distro you're trying to save but whatever floats your boat. And then I find it entertaining the second end is for media but VLC is not installed. I'm not of the things that are here for media apps. I'm not sure what actually is installed. So we know SM tube, which is SM player. Is M player installed? No. So how can you be for media if none of the media things that you would use or installed by default? Is X sign in? No, none of these things are installed by default. You actually have to go through and install them which is fine and dandy. I install software all the time. We all do if you have good internet but if you don't have good internet you have to go through and install all the stuff. Adding on top of the ISO that you already had to download. Now I don't remember what the ISO was in terms of size. I'm assuming it's really, really, really freaking small. It says here that MPV is installed. I don't see MPV there. Do you guys see MPV there? Like I don't see it. I mean is that what? I mean maybe they called it. No that's MPV, that's not MPV. That's a different thing. Let's go here multiplayer. Let's play. You wanna? I wonder if this is the stuff that is. Oh, see I've been doing this wrong the whole time. I think, yeah. All this stuff here is actually installed. Okay. Now I understand. So like G-Parted is here. Okay, all right. And let's see. Office Abbey Word is here. Okay. I got hung up on this section here. So this is where they use, this is like their little app store. None of these things are gonna be installed. But up here we have some stuff that's actually installed. Okay, it makes you feel a little bit better. So if we go to multimedia, we do have things like Minitube and MIDI installed. Let's view G-Pick and then edit. We have Audacity here that's installed. Devices, but I still don't see MPV. Like I don't, I don't see MPV. I see Minitube. I don't, I'm assuming that's for playing YouTube videos. So that is for playing YouTube videos. And interesting. Okay, so if we go back here and do, yeah, celluloid is, that's gonna be a, that's going to be a video player. Okay, it says MPV is played, is installed. But I don't, I don't see MPV here at all. I don't even see the option to install MPV. PAV use controls here, even though it turns pulse audio off every time you launch a game. Image magic is here, conversing, which is an image conversion thing is installed by default, which is a weird choice. A lot of stuff for like webcams is installed. Maintenance, we have a few things. We have NNN and MC is installed. PC Manifem is the GUI file manager. We have GNU parted and for partitioning, NetWatch. I really was hoping that there'd be something here for NeoFetch, but there's not. There's an antivirus installed by default. Wonder what fornerd is here. So we have Vi, MG, Nanos here, MC edit, Huntsabelle, okay. Internet, NetSurf, HexChat. NetSurf is a open source web browser that I've literally never heard of before. So that's new. Taurus here. What is, GNOME PPP is going to be like that phone dialer thing, right? GW get, you get is here, but git wasn't installed by default. Selfie is going to be a email client. Really old email client, really old. I'm not even sure. I'm not sure that Selfie is still being developed. It could be. I haven't used it since I first switched to Linux and that's been four years. So all right. I think that this has gone on long enough. Now there are other things that it supposedly does. Miniserver was another thing. And then we looked at the games. So at the end of these videos, which usually go much longer than I expect them to, I usually try to answer the question we started out with is what the fuck is this distro? Why does it exist? And in this case, I don't know. Like I don't know why this distro exists. Now I'm sure it's possible that the guy behind this did this for himself. And I'm sure that's 100% true. Right? So I don't want to derive his effort because it's obvious that he's gone through and put some effort into this. Like this is an independent Linux distribution. It is really fucking hard to even conceive of, let alone do. I make, this thing works. Like you can install it right now if you want to and you can do stuff on it. You can play SuperTux cart. You can go through and text edit and use Vim, which is not by the way installed by default, but there is an option to install it, which is a saving grace, I should say. But anyway, so you can do it. So the fact that it exists and there's literally probably just one guy behind this is actually fairly impressive. I think that, or at least I hope that he, or they did it for a learning experience. Like they wanted to learn how to do this and so they did it. I hope that that was the case. I hope that there's not actually any expectation that this thing is for other people to use because it's not very good. I would love to know how to actually install software. Like I would, I'm assuming that the reason why that tar baldin install was because it had the wrong extension at the end. Maybe, or I was just doing something idiotically wrong, which is also 100% possible. So that is for him Linux. If you've used this before, let me know in the comment section below. I would love to hear from someone who actually used daily drives this thing. If that happens, I will give you a heart automatically whether or not you like it or not. And if you haven't used form links, let me know in the comment section below if you would ever actually give this thing a try because I'm highly interested in that too. You can follow me on Twitter at Linuxcast. You can support me on Patreon at patreon.com slash Linuxcast. Before I go, I'd like to take a moment to thank my current patrons. Devon, Chris, East Coast Web, Gentoo is one too. Patrick O, Primus, Sid A, Marcus, Meglin, Dex, I'm tool Steve A, Mitchell, ArtCenter, Amateus, Merrick, Camp, Drashly, J-Dog, Beat, Disruptor, Peter A. Thanks everybody for watching. I'll see you next time.