 And, uh, and listener Stephen says, says, uh, I found that in Monterey, at least in the Monterey recent beta, the reset Bluetooth module is no longer available when you option click the Bluetooth menu in Monterey, John, but listener Stephen found the answer, uh, you go to the terminal and he, and the idea is you just kill the Bluetooth, um, demon, which is the little process that manages it all in the background. When you kill that, it relaunches that effectively resets everything, right? Because of the way it works. The command that he told us to use is sudo space P kill space Bluetooth D and that kills off Bluetooth D. But what I did not know about so, so that in and of itself is a tip, right? That's great. But I didn't know about the P kill command, John. I don't know how I missed this, but P kill lets you kill a process in UNIX by name, not by, um, not by process ID. I always used to use kill all to, uh, to do it by name, but P kill lets you kill by name. So, uh, you know, we get to learn two things in one tip, which I like. So thanks for that, Stephen. Good stuff. Pretty good, huh, John? Have you started running Monterey yet? No. Oh, yeah. I'm just looking here on my big sir machine. I thought there was a way to do this from the Bluetooth menu with, with a modifier key. Yeah, I think with the option key down, um, you, that, I mean, that's where you've always found it in the past is reset Bluetooth. Uh, it might not just be option, right? I mean, you, you've always been sort of the master of this, but, um, let's see. So, isn't it not the option key? Maybe it's option shift. Option shift gets you reset the Bluetooth module in big sir. Ah, good. Okay. Yep.