 So I got this new M1 MacBook Pro. I ordered it on release day, John, your announcement day, I should say. And I opted, I chose the option on the right when you go to customize, I wanted a 14 inch and you can choose the option on the left, which is an eight core CPU, eight core CPU, 14 core GPU, 16 gig, 512, that's where it starts. And the option on the right on Apple site is the 10 core CPU. I thought, oh, let's go with the 10 core CPU, which meant because I chose the right path, the path on the right, not necessarily the correct path, that I got the 16 core GPU. I didn't really care if I had the 14 core GPU or the 16 core GPU, I wanted the 10 core CPU. I could have, as per Allison's chart that we mentioned just before, I could have chosen the left path and upgraded only the CPU to 10 cores and leaving the GPU on 14 cores and saved myself 200 bucks. I did not take that path. Quite frankly, I didn't know that path existed. So maybe you're right, maybe we are in the performance days of choosing your system on a chip with the M1. It is fast, but for what I do, I cannot tell that it is twice as fast or more as my M1 Air previously. Any difference at all. It starts up super fast. It wakes up super fast, it's just fast. How about the fans? I have not been able to get the fans to turn on even when running Geekbench. Do you like the screen on this? A, the screen is just gorgeous and B, it's bigger, but it has a notch. As we mentioned in the last show, conceptually, the notch really doesn't bother me. I like the fact that we're making use of that previously unused space, right? Because the space that the camera occupies was unused across the entire horizon of the screen. And so now it just raises up. That would all be fine if the things that would spill over into where the notch was could be used. But in, I am at a loss for words. The OS doesn't understand it yet. It sort of understands it, but what it does is it punts. And by that I mean, if you have menu bar items that move into where the notch would be, you don't get to see them. Thank goodness, bartender, they haven't done an update specifically for, oh, they are working on notch supports. I literally just launched it and it says there's notch support. So I don't know what that means because I haven't installed it yet and we're doing the show literally right now. But I did turn on an option in bartender at macbartender.com saying use bartender bar to show hidden items. And so instead of it showing me the hidden items in the menu bar, it drops down a separate bar to see them. So I can at least see all my overflow stuff if I manage things properly. So at least there's that. When I got it, I noticed two interesting things, John. The first was that it identified itself on my network as MBP 14 inch 2021. That was the DHCP client ID that it sent along when it grabbed its IP address for migration assistant to do its job on the network. The other thing which was a pleasant surprise is that my error was on 12.0.1 because that's how you upgrade to Monterey. Even though I was in the beta cycle, I got off of the beta cycle and just did the normal upgrade. My MacBook Pro came with 12.0 on it, which is interesting. And it allowed the migration assistant migration to happen. No Rosetta apps would launch until I did the update to 12.0.1. Don't know what that's about, but if anybody finds themselves in that same scenario, make sure you're on 12.0.1 and then I should say no Intel apps would launch, but it's a really nice machine. The keyboard is like butter. That may be the reason that I keep it is that keyboard. Not that the M1 Air's keyboard is bad, but this is definitely nicer. It's a little more spread out. I found myself initially typing the wrong letters because I was moving quickly like I would have on my Air, but it's a wonderful machine, obviously. And it's pretty and does all the things that it does, but it's got all those ports, which I think is great. I would love to have a USB-A port on it. I know I'm not gonna get one, but if we're gonna have ports, I would like USB-A because it's the thing that we all use the most when we're not using USB-C. Like HDMI is good, but it's not. I get why they put it on here. Totally makes sense for the graphics pros and all that stuff. Like 100% understood. And for the same reason I agree with the SD card slot, like go talk to the photography folks. They want that, great. But I would loved, I think we all would have loved a USB-A port.