 Chris asks, I'm looking for a way to utilize teams to import dates and tasks into a calendar. Example, I am an estimator and we perform certain tasks for every project we bid. Some tasks are done four days before bid day, and some seven days for instance. I would like to input the project name and due date and have it automatically input the tasks based on the due date. Is this possible? So it's a team planner calendar. I was going to say, what exactly is the medium? Because he says teams, Chris talks about teams, but like if it's a team's calendar, is it? Do you guys follow this one? Which two? Because I'm looking at it going, hang on, are you wanting to do tasks which is different? Do you need to bring something into list which you can import through Excel or are you wanting to put on your task list in Outlook and having it flow through into do and to do and that will flow into teams. Or you're wanting to do it. So there's so many ways you could come at this as an argument. It's like, where's the final place that you want to see it? Is it in your calendar in Outlook? Or is it like how do you want it can flow both ways? I'm going to print it out and three-hole punch it for the binder which I keep next to me at the desk a couple of times. As an estimator you very well may be bringing your own. Of course. This one screams to me SharePoint lists because which is Microsoft lists, but it's really been SharePoint lists for 20 years. Because you can create calculated fields and based on one particular field, so whatever field you're pinning off of, you can have it generate the dates on the other ones. Now can we use Power Automate against that to create planner tasks? That's a possibility. I mean, there's so many ways you can spin off with that now that we have Power Automate. So do you want to actually populate a calendar? Do you want to see it in a calendar view? Because if it's in planner, you can see it in a calendar view. And if it's in a list, you can see it in a calendar view. But if you're actually trying to populate a shared calendar, that makes it a little bit more. To me it's unmentable because really like what you said, Christy, the core of this is when are the tasks do? It's task driven. I want to see it in a calendar. Then we can use that as the... And you get it in planner. The planner shows you want a calendar as well. So if you're importing a list into planner, it shows on the calendar that sits within teams and it's a view. And so I kind of go where you're wanting it to land, ultimately. Are you limiting your options by having it in planner, straight in planner versus a list? Because you can't do calculations. You can't do calculations. Some of the automation, the back of it that you've got with lists. So it comes down to how far do you want to go? Well, this kind of is a slightly different point. I'll add on my... As Christians add on to Chris's question here. It's all... It's a blur, I know, for everybody. But it kind of gets into that, or the planner versus list discussion. And I don't know if it's just me, but my bias here, but I don't remember the last time when I created a new planner because I just keep using lists. Yeah. Well, and shameless plug. I'm doing a Microsoft list session for my Waffle Wednesday next month. And it's gonna be around that, how to customize. Because Microsoft lists is the way they're presenting it. You get like what, eight or 10 templates, whatever it is. But people to understand is behind the scenes is a SharePoint list that is a very mature technology. It's been around for 20 years and people didn't know it was there. So the title is, the tool you never wish you knew you had is Microsoft list because... Well, it's funny today, like I read some issues with a list and teams. What did I do? I went over to SharePoint into an interface that I understood and went and found it and fixed it. Yes.