 And similarly, listener David said, I listened to the latest episode about backups and I've had my own journey on this. What I used to do on my Mac Mini or MacBook Pro was I would carbon copy clone to an external drive. I would time machine to a drive on my network. I would iCloud drive, so syncing things because all my devices have this by default. I would use Synology Drive to sync things to my Synology and then I would have certain folders and content backed up from my Synology to some cloud-based service like Amazon S3 or Wasabi or something. That's what I used to do, he says. What I do now, I have iCloud drive on my devices and I have time machine to a drive on my network. He says, I know, I've cut it down a lot. He says, I've recently had a Nuke and Pave my Mac Mini and just to clean up my MacBook Pro and did so without referring to or restoring from any of my backups. He says, I had been religiously making my backups for years but I was able to restore the OS, reinstall apps and once connected to my iCloud accounts be backup and running in maybe a few hours at most. The OS install taking up the vast majority of that time. He says, we literally don't have much of anything that is truly local only now and only on one device. He says things like photos, contacts, email, documents, passwords, et cetera are all either on our Synology or on iCloud. So synced somewhere. Sure, he says it's a bit of a hassle to reinstall apps and re-log in but compared to a restore of a computer there really isn't any time saved at least not for my use case. He says, I know it seems sacrilege to say we don't really need to do backups anymore but as long as my content is somewhere safe and he says, safe of course is a relative term. He says, but for us, I just don't see the purpose for what we do. But other than that, all my data is there. So yeah, I don't know. Backups aren't as necessary as they once were.