 Sure. So, Allison has a question, maybe. Allison at potfeed.com, does a Mac podcast? I've heard of this podcast, yeah. No, she does a great job over there, yeah. So what she says, on macOS Big Sur, my spotlight index is getting corrupted, then sorts itself out, and then it corrupts again. I use it primarily as an application launcher, and some days it has no trouble finding apps in the next, instead it just shows me web searches for the same text string. On the days it works, it usually says indexing with a progress bar when I make a successful search. I know the trick about how I can put my entire drive inside system preferences, spotlight privacy, close, and then take it out again. This causes the re-indexing, and for a day or two it will work, and then it gets messed up again. I have other app launchers, but I like spotlight any idea of what I can do. The one suggestion I have, so, yes, dragging something in privacy and then out again is one way, but you may want to try some command line magic. I think that does a more thorough re-indexing, and you do that by going into the terminal and typing sudo mdutil dash e and then a slash, and that will rebuild all spotlight data on everything. Yep, and we'll put that in the show notes so that you don't have to, you can just copy paste from the show notes and be safe. I mean the other thing is if you're using spotlight mostly for an app launcher, you could, so this is my suggestion, system preferences, spotlight search results, maybe just choose applications as the only option there. Yeah, there you go. Yeah, yeah, and what we had a quick tip last week, maybe a week before, about using launcher as your application launcher, which I forget which listener it was that I forget the name of whichever of you it was who sent that in, but you can map command space bar to fire up launcher and then do it that way. So that would be another way because that's only applications there, so that might do it. But yeah, as I understood, I agree with you wholeheartedly, the way it was explained to me years ago was that by putting it into privacy and taking it out, that does cause a re-indexing, but it leaves the database intact. So if there is some corruption in the database or the indexes for the database, that won't necessarily get cleared out. Whereas if you use mdutil-e, that literally erases the spotlight index files and forces a rebuild. So it's a little more, you know, it's the shotgun approach. But if you truly want to blow away those indexes and force them to be rebuilt, it's not so bad. And on SSDs these days, indexes tend to get rebuilt pretty efficiently. So and don't like crush your operating system performance while they're doing it, usually. So, cool.