 I stumbled on something, John, that I now find has been here for about six months. And that is if you go into settings, this is on your iPhone, settings, music, and I'm going to go there with you here to make sure that we're going to the right place. So we go to settings, we go to music, which I will find, I swear. And then if you look in the audio section, well, first of all, there's the Dolby Atmos stuff. If you have AirPods Pro or AirPods Gen 3, I highly recommend turning on the Atmos stuff and playing around with that because it's really awesome. Like it's so well done. If you have tracks downloaded onto your phone that are not yet Atmos, you need to delete them so that you can hear the Atmos versions of the tracks. But but there's some fantastic stuff like Abbey Road is amazing. It's awesome that there's other stuff that's good too. But the second thing in the settings, music, audio section there is audio quality. And you get to pick what type of quality you have on different on different methods, right? So for downloads, you can tell it how you want it and you get different options of how that's going to work. You can do lossless or not. Wi-Fi streaming, of course, you get to pick. But the one where it gets interesting is cellular streaming. And there are four options if you are an Apple Music customer and two options if you are not. The options are high efficiency AAC with low data usage that's available to everyone as is high quality AAC 256K. And then you get two lossless versions if you are an Apple Music customer. Just the typical ALAC up to 2448 and then what they call high res lossless, which is ALAC being Apple lossless audio codec up to 24192K. So if you have the ability to hear frequencies that only dogs could hear, maybe that'll make a difference for you. So yeah, and it's that I've set mine on cellular streaming to be the high efficiency AAC with low data usage and it like generally the only place where I would hear stuff like that is in the car and I have not noticed a difference.