 So Rajesh has a question. Hi, all. How can we copy Microsoft Teams channel containing videos of size more than 100 gigs to another Microsoft Teams by the PowerShell script since the Graph API can't support large data to copy? I'll climb blonde on this way past my skill set. Yeah. Well, you're trying to put too much to the pipe. Graph is good for certain things, but bulk moving of data is not one of them. So if you go against the SharePoint APIs and you can use PowerShell to move it across that way, or Sharon had a wonderful suggestion. I think PowerShell is great as well. I think the thing with PowerShell is that you just have to understand the variables of where you're taking it from, where you're making it to. Plus, there's lots of different command lists and there's nuances and variances in all those command lists as I found the other day when I was doing a command lit. And I realized that there was two command lists that did basically the same thing for two different pieces. So if you don't want to learn every single command lit in all of PowerShell, you could use a third-party tool that has a nice easy button. Well, the other side of that too is if you're going to move masses of amounts of data, I mean, the system is an online service. So you could be throttled as well. There's other problems with that. It's one of the reasons why like as another option or the third-party migration tools, one of the benefits of that is that they're encoded so that Microsoft recognizes when a tool is being an authorized approved tool is being used and does not then throttle. So could also be like, what's the volume that Rajesh that you're trying to move? Yeah, we definitely run into throttling quite a bit. We do a ton of migration work and we're always running into some sort of throttling issue if we do it with PowerShell or the Windows migration tool or some free version, like we always get slowed down. Yeah, it's worth noting that throttling can occur at multiple points. It's not a single valve. There are probably four or five different points, I think, at which throttling can occur. So yeah, any chance you have to sidestep those, definitely can help you out. It's like getting to the front of the line. You have a golden ticket. Right, well, I mean, so the only, and the only other way to do that is if you are doing it manually is again, this is sometimes a bigger hassle than it's worth, but be in touch with Microsoft, be in conversation, let them know what you're doing and so that they can see that traffic and okay, I see that you're doing that and help unblock you. But again, that's what the third party tools do that in a more automated fashion. But even then, there could be multiple reasons why you could be throttled. I heard people submit a ticket and let them know, is that a real thing? You can, you can submit a ticket, they'll call you, you can schedule a date, but I'm gonna tell you this, yes, you can. However, it's a very big company and depending on how much you're doing, they may or may not remember that they told you they'd do that. Vies matters. Yeah, yes. If you got a lot of data, you're talking like terabytes, exabytes of data, you definitely want to coordinate with them, but if you're moving 100 gig across, drop in the bucket. Agreed.