 I want to share a thing that I saw on Twitter, I believe, from Jeff Gamet. He's been running the iOS 16 and iPadOS 16 developer betas, and he points out that you can see the password for the current Wi-Fi network now. You can expose this in iOS. This has never been something that you could see before. There was, I was in a, I went to a Sonos event years ago, and it was for, I don't know, they were releasing some, I forget what they were releasing, but they set up a Play One in each of our hotel rooms, right? So that we would get there and it was set up with an iPad so that you could get to the room and you could play whatever you wanted, you know, on this Play One in your hotel room while you were there for the weekend. It was a really good, you know, smart move for a press event. Great, great idea. And I was like, well, I want to connect to this from my devices though. I don't want to just use their iPad, like, but I can't get the password for the Wi-Fi network out of that iPad because it doesn't show until you have iOS 16. And this was in the past, it's not the future, so I didn't have iOS 16 yet. And then I had an idea, John. I was like, okay, wait, if I log this iPad into my iCloud account, my Apple ID, it will then sync all of my known Wi-Fi passwords back and forth, bidirectionally. And sure enough, as soon as I logged it in, the Wi-Fi password showed up in the list on my Mac and on my Mac, I can go into the key chain and see it. So I was able to get the password and then log things in. But it was a little extra to have to do that. So now you don't have to do those sorts of crazy things. Yeah, it's good, fine.