 The console has a question. Hello, everyone. I have a customer list that retrieved data from customer SharePoint list. When my team entered data above 2,000 records, it's not shown in the gallery. Noted data were recorded in SharePoint list, but it's not shown in the gallery list. How do we solve this issue? It's generally an autumn limit. Yeah. There's a threshold. There's a list threshold limit. I believe it is 2,000. And the best way to fix that is to create different views of the list. So if you only have recent ones so that you don't have 2,000 items trying to be displayed at the same time and views are the best way to do that. I only want the ones from the last three months. Whatever brings you less than 2,000. If it's 10 years of data and 2,000 takes you to five years, then make that the limit. Just kind of guess at what you think. That's one of the choices. And there's also a browser limit on that too. So the browser can sometimes limit how much data brings forward as well. I've seen that occasionally, but not recently. So that was the old technology. But if somebody's using the old version of a browser, they may be having that same issue. So upgrade your browser. It's free. Good old days when we used to have these kinds of limitations. And so, OK, well, anything that's, as you end up doing time base, like list items for the last 30 days, load that off into a May 2022 database for that subset and have the latest. And so then you'd have to go and put together joins and pull together and combine data to give people a more comprehensive view. And that's the old world, the data warehouse. I thought we were supposed to move all beyond that. You would think. Thanks, guys. No, no. We're digital hoarders. We are all digital hoarders. We've got to keep things forever. See, that's what used to happen is for so long, we knew we had those limitations. And so we would conserve space. We would clean things up and only hold what we needed. Then we got space, got so cheap. Storage got so cheap and we want to keep everything. We don't know what we might want to have later. And then we'll regret getting rid of things. Yeah, I actually had the question just yesterday in regards to planner and lists and can I archive so that I don't have all that task done. We've been doing it for a year now and I want to kind of get rid of all of that. And it sort of goes, have we finished what we're doing on the Kanban Boys, but not actually kind of delete them. And it's like, no, it's one of those ones that with data, some people do want to get rid of it, some don't want to get rid of it. It's just nice to have both solutions, but they're not always there. Yeah, I move things into buckets and I drag those buckets clear to the end of the planner. So I don't have to look outside out of mind. I'd have to scroll to see them. Yeah, yeah. You had a friend that used to be in the Microsoft ecosystem when he's over in the DevOps world now, but I think his Twitter handle used to be hoarding info. That's great. I'm a shocker for hoarding info. I was an, used to be an executive assistant and we could not delete a thing. Not even a deleted email could be deleted because you never knew when you had to cover your, cover the, you know. Cover what? Kirstie? Cover what? Cover the behind. You didn't cover your behind. You're, you're, you're it always it, so. C-Y-R, that's right. And a receipt hoarder, my bookkeeper draw, you know, she's like, we can throw all these out. No, no. Just in case. Just in case.