 Khan has a question about Word. We've not handled Microsoft Word in a while. So a Microsoft Word document has content and a signature part in it, and when the user uploads this doc to SharePoint, then the signature part disappears when viewing the document from SharePoint. Please help to fix this issue. Yeah, there's probably a couple of things in that. First of all, is it a docx format? So is it a current file format? Because otherwise it's not web compatible. And then some of those extra web parts like headers and footers and building blocks and things like that aren't visible in the web. So they mean how to download the file and edit it from there. Those are my two thoughts. Yeah, I'd back that up. I do see. I mean, anything that's got a header and footer, it will always drop off when it goes to online. It can also come down sometimes to fonts as well, because we've got different fonts like that whole sans-serif font, certain fonts might actually drop off if they've got fancy fonts. Sometimes if it's a picture too, if they've got a like a picture, a graphics kind of thing rather than actual type text, we have building blocks. Look, sometimes they work sometimes because it's kind of sits into the macro side of things. As you said, yeah, there's can be a combination of things going on. Also, if you change the formatting. So if you go in and are formatting things and changing the level of content, or you change things around and you reformat it using the standard format template components, then that can also suddenly wipe it out. I've found that to happen. One other idea of something that it could be, if you have it actually not as a signature block, but have it for some reason, labeled as something other than that. If it doesn't know that it's a signature, so it will not treat it the same. So I know that sounds weird and I'm not describing it right. But again, I'm thinking of where I've had problems with a disappearing signature in the past. Fields as well. Sometimes if it's set up as a merged field from somewhere could be another component too. Trying to think where else I've seen. I mean, as Sherry said, you can always just go file, open it and take it down to your full desktop version and see if everything's in there and investigate it through that. So you might see what is it first as to why it's actually disappearing on you. That's always fun to do too, just because it might just suddenly appear there and why does it look different than when it's in SharePoint than when it's opened up locally. I don't know. Sometimes it happens. There might be ways to mitigate that too if they're uploading it to SharePoint and it's a library that consistently holds these types of documents. It might be better to set the default setting for the library to open it natively instead of in the web first. That way people don't get confused because if you don't, the default is to open in a browser, and then pieces and parts are missing. So maybe it's a change. Well, I think we're all skirting around the real solution of this is that, excuse me, but I never had this problem with faxes. I think the solution might be an e-fax. Tell it. Tell it. I had the tie-prider with the carbon copy all the way back where we didn't even have liquid paper back in the day. So I mean, we could. If you mess it up, you have to start over again. Yeah. Laugh if you will, but I still have a USB connected 56k fax motor in my bag that I can plug in. You just never know when you'll need that. I just, I know what it's like. You'd be surprised how many people these days you want something from a doctor's office send fax. You get it in the legal community, send the fax. Anything like that. I'm telling you, when World War III happens, fax will become suddenly essential to send around to communicate in a secret way, you know. And you're Zoom, and you're Zoom lives on Christian. That's right, and my Zoom will be there as well. Zoom and fax. Well, what can I say? They tell you the cockroaches will eventually inherit the earth. I guarantee you, they'll be sending faxes to each other. That's right. Get those opposable thumbs working, guys. Absolutely. Wow. OK. A fax and a Zoom reference. That's good. That's classic. That's that's good.