 David says, I recently subscribed to the MS Workplace Discount Program Family Office 365 Suite. Boy, that just rules off the tongue. Microsoft Workplace Discount Program Family Office 365 Suite, if that's the official name. Unlike my corporate account within Outlook, there is no Microsoft Teams add-in within the calendar application to create Microsoft Teams meetings. Instead, the meetings must be created from Microsoft Teams and do not sync to Outlook when created. Any support for this? Teams is the application that supplies the plug-in. The first question I would ask is, have you actually checked your add-ins to make sure that is enabled? It doesn't always happen, and it can wind up switching itself off. There is an article in the support database. Let me see if I can find that here real quick. I don't think it's not the one. Searching in the browser makes great video, too. Yes, it does. It's in the next spreadsheet, haven't we? I've had that exact scenario where I reinstalled or updated something and that add-in was lost. I just went and reinstalled it. Yeah. Make sure you've got Teams open, too, because if you've got Outlook only open and Teams not open or you've not logged in on the desktop and you're going through the browser only, you're not going to have it running on your desktop. Are you using the same account, too, between Teams and your desktop? That's a great question. If your Outlook account is a different account to your Teams account or nothing is ever anything's mismatching, then no, you're not going to be able to. It could be just disabled. That's something that you just need to enable and know how to do that in your Outlook options. On the permission side, Kirstie, I was going to say the exact same thing, because if it's confused about who you are and where that access is, clearly it's not going to be able to. It's not going to show that in the right place. Of course, the other question is, are you using the desktop version of Outlook? Are you using it online? Are you playing with the new Outlook? Yeah. Yeah. They think that they've got Outlook. The thing of it is, the home subscription, I've got the Office Family subscription. Needless to say, I've got a business account, an Office 365 account, and an Outlook.com account, in fact, two of them, and I have that plug-in available everywhere. Yeah. I mean, it doesn't take much for an add-in or your system's just going just a little slow one time for it to go, do you want to disable this? It's going a little slow, and you just click yes without even thinking about it, because you just want to get in. So people accidentally disable things all the time, I see, because it doesn't take much sometimes for that message to pop up, right? I know that there are those people who said, I never use email anywhere, and I do everything over in Teams, and I am not one of those people. There are uses for email, and there are uses for Teams, and I rarely go over into Teams and look at the calendar there. I do everything via Outlook. So the one time when that add-in was missing, I freaked out, and then I went and found it, and reinstalled it, and it was fine. But there's a different issue, the fact that I freaked out over calendar. But as I'm sure we all know, we live and die by our calendar. So, yeah, it was a big deal. Well, and I wonder if David, you know, go into your calendar in Outlook or Outlook on the web, and you should see at least a meet now to kick off Teams meetings. So maybe try that route if you're having any trouble. But I think the add-in, I think that's probably the best bet of how to solve it. Yeah. I agree. One other scenario, I know this is an edge scenario, but is that if it was installed and if it was working, if it was visible, you know, the add-in was there, then one day you log in and it's not there, try turning Teams off and on again. Because if there's like an update that's mid-push, there's something like, there's been weirdness that happens occasionally, and people go like, what is this thing that I'm seeing? It's like, you know, your tenant's probably in the middle of an update. There's something. It's one of the blessings of Evergreen software. And it's more common than you think when you see those things. Just take a break, five minutes, come back, it's still there. Then push out the angry emails. Do a restart. That's always a good one. Yeah. Just try restarting the device. And the change that you may need to log out and log back in again. That's another one of its little foibles. I had that happen a few weeks ago. I was in the business tenant where I normally hang out and switched to my personal guest account on the Microsoft community and advanced tenant. And it threw a big error and said that my business account had no permissions there. And it's like, why are you even bothering to look at my business account? It's not my business account. They don't work together. I know that. Why don't you? Yeah. So that was a log out, log back in. I get that. And I know that I was just looking at, I have over like two dozen teams, you know, environments that I have. I think I now have four different login, you know, tenant logins. I try to do everything through my company without my clav talk. I've got my Microsoft community. I've got one other, one of my former clients that I'm still an advisor to have the login access. And so I'll get things. Usually, it'll just get confused by which profile I'm using. That's why I didn't go back to where we started was I would start and make sure that, you know, are you logging into the right account? Eventually, Microsoft will figure out all the multi tenancy issues around teams. I'll be retired already, but eventually it will be resolved. I'm not retiring for 20 years. It might figure it out by then, but maybe. Yeah. That's where I use edge profiles. If I wanted to have separate personas of myself, that's what I leverage. Yep.