 Okay, listener Michael brought us a thing. He was suggesting that I used Siri to create notes. And he says, what he does is he says, I use Siri to create a new reminder in my ideas list. And then from that list, I can parse to any of my, you know, other to-do apps or however I wanna organize things. So that's interesting. So adding it to a specific list that's not, that's really just for idea capture. So great, thank you. The other thing he said, he says you also mentioned iCloud Drive, which is to our family only good. He says it's lack of ability to selectively sync to different devices like Macs and PCs, where we have to use both for work, is a real issue. With Microsoft's family plan, we get office on all of our devices and one terabyte per person, up to six people in a family, an easy file sharing to each other, and the cost is $99 a year. So this gave me a little bit of pause because I thought, wait, did he say $99 a year per person or is it $99 a year for a family of up to six? And so I chatted with Microsoft and it is indeed for a family of up to six. And listener, and Microsoft Daniel, who I chatted with at Microsoft, this was about two in the morning the other night, said, look, it doesn't need to be family, family either. It can be four friends and a pet horse if you really wanted it to be. And I wondered if my horse really would need a full terabyte of storage, but as Michael pointed out, he says, think of all the hay you could store there. And then he pointed out, he says H-A-A-S, hay as a service, it's gonna be big. So virtual cloud hay would be Microsoft's fun thing, but it was actually nice to have an actual humorous response, but confirming in fact that yes, regardless of what you call your family, 99 bucks a month gets you a terabyte per family member for up to six family members total. So you could have six terabytes of storage for $99 a month from Microsoft. And oh, by the way, this is Microsoft 365 family. So you also get Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, I believe with that. So that's pretty good. Did I say, have I said $99 a month the whole time? If I've been saying $99 a month, if $99 a year, did I say a month? I can't remember. I'm thinking I said a month. I don't know. It's $99 a year for six terabytes of storage and Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. That's pretty good. That's pretty good. Or I think I saw $99 a month if you wanna do it monthly. There you go. But yes, yes. So yes, I was incorrect. I kept saying month, it's obviously not $100 a month. It's $100 a year, or as you pointed out, John, 10 bucks a month. Yeah. Great stuff.