 Nee says, I often run into challenges with SharePoint, like unexpected errors or features not working as expected. It's crucial to have access to reliable support and troubleshooting resources. Where can I find comprehensive guides or forums for troubleshooting SharePoint issues? Take community, just at least start there. Learn.Microsoft.com. That too, learning, yeah, yeah. But reporting problems, there's like providing feedback. Microsoft got their feedback channels. So many things that are retiring and swapping too, so you might need to do a bit of research around. They go, I'm still using the stream classic web part and I'm having problems. It's like, well, it's actually retired now, so it's not going to be updated or fixed. There are other things too that come into play. I too would put Microsoft Tech Community is the number one place to go and ask questions. In fact, there's something that we do for this series as we look through some of the unanswered questions on Microsoft Tech Community. But that's a great place where you can go and do the research, see if people have already asked your question, but then post if you're not finding an answer, post a question. Because I think that's where the Microsoft personnel are going to be most active. But and somebody else put on here, I think it was Sharon commented, like Twitter. Yeah. So, we often talk about the Microsoft 365 Community, so much of it, so many of us come from the SharePoint side of things, the background that it's often called, it's the best community in tech by the people that are in the community, keeps seems self-serving. But it's true, but there's so many people that are like this community was built around answering questions. So many people that are willing to jump in and help answer questions. So there are Facebook communities, there are Discord communities, there's the Microsoft Tech communities, there's things that are out on Techie Gurus, you can ask. If you find a thread that's written by an MVP, all of us here are MVPs. If we're writing about something, talking about a topic, you can reach out to any one of us, and if we don't know the answer, I bet you we know somebody who does, and we're usually able to point you in the right direction. Less it doesn't get mentioned, GitHub. There's GitHub. Yeah. Not only that, but the Feedback Portal, go to thefeedbackportal.microsoft.com. It might be something that's not actually available that you're potentially trying to do all these issues. Go and search it and see if it's something that seems to be a consistent issue or problem because in the Feedback Portal, people are putting all sorts of things in the Feedback Portal. So is it a common thing or is it just for you? So yeah. Do your research though. I mean, because if you're getting an error message, enter the error message out there. I mean, if there's something that's going on with the network, if there was just a push or some kind of a release and everybody's being impacted by something, I mean, there's a lot of things that could be going on. SharePoint, per se, but with Teams is a great example of by going in the morning and Teams isn't behaving. My first thought isn't, oh, what did I do wrong? My first thought is, what changed did Microsoft put out? Because I've done nothing different. So go and do your research, search and see what other people have posted. Try your best to define what you're experiencing. I'd also say, what browser are you using? Because the behavior and the nature of a lot of the online tools really changes depending on the browser that you're using. I've had it where it's not worked on. I might have been for whatever reason and organizations have got Chrome and it's doing something quite different than if I was on Edge and it was working fine on Edge, but it was not working on Chrome. So just have a play around and see if you've got an alternative, just give it a try, remove a part, re-out a part, refresh a page, you know, all those, I'll gather that they're doing those kind of steps, but you never know. It's completely ironic you say that because Edge is Chrome. Which is why you're using Firefox, Andy. It's Microsoft's version of Chrome. I'm using the brave browser on Linux. Yeah, well, it's different. Safari, I'm saying people using Safari. That would be another one that would likely be incompatible, which it's funny because a lot of the Microsoft meetings that I've dealt with, well, for the last couple of weeks now, they've got a broken situation where if you need to log into a Teams meeting with an MSA account and not a Microsoft work or school type account, you generally get this little URL in an email. Hey, we're having this meeting, click this. So you click this and you decide you want to use a browser. If it's either Chrome or Edge currently, what it does is it tries to launch V2 of Teams which if you have to log in with an MSA account, which being MVPs, you know what I'm talking about, it blows up. It leaves you this page that says, here's your name, you want to leave your move this on, you leave that on, whatever, but the point of it is is you wind up as a guest and you may or may not get in as a guest if they're expecting somebody who is supposed to have access. And you've got a little login link and if you try to hit the sign in link, it just blows, it's really bizarre. I've done a nice little thing for them on that, but they've acknowledged it's an issue. The point of it is a long, very circumspect methodology as I've got Firefox here, it doesn't have the compatibility issue. It loads up the old, instead of V2, the characteristics you look for is an underscore and a pound sign. That's the first part of the URL, teams slash underscore pound sign or slash V2 slash. And that fixes the URL, which I can then grab and go post, go put it either Chrome or Edge and it works perfectly. It's just very circumspect, but my goodness, you need to have more than one browser. Isn't anybody use Opera? I mean, come on now. I used to. La, la, la, la. So, but the other part of the question though, around the documentation, the guides, like I don't even know where to go to look for that stuff now, other than it's just out on the support site. But again, if you're... Everything's been moved to learn. Everything's been moved to learn. It is. Yeah. So, I mean, everything's out there. And again, with... I mean, I've been playing with more and more with the now the co-pilot in Edge and getting more comprehensive answers. So, you even get answers back to some technical questions. It points to the resource documents. And so, right there, you can click into those docs. So, it's part of your troubleshooting. It's getting better. So, the search experience is improving. I don't know if you guys have been playing with that yet in the browser, but I am liking it. I'm liking it in the Microsoft 365 apps. I've been playing with it in Outlook today, and I like it. I'm loving the... I saw it go up recently when I was chatting about it in Stream where you got the transcript. It's like summarized the transcript so that you can actually have a little blurb around your video as to what it is. It's like, oh, I'm liking that one. So, co-pilot. Yeah. Anyway, totally off topic. Yep. See what happens where it's so pervasive, this co-pilot conversation slipping into honest product questions.