 Ariel says, I have a customer that we're migrating Microsoft tenants because currently they have exchange online through a marketing company that is hosting all of their customers in the same tenant. As such, I know I'm going to have to do PST exports to move the mail. I'm not worried about that. I'm mostly concerned about how I'm going to reroute mail through the correct Microsoft tenant. Is it as simple as adding and verifying the domain in the new tenant and ensuring DNS records are correct? DNS hosting will remain network solutions. I'm just trying to avoid potential mail routing issues. That's it for the most part. DNS, DMARC, DKIM, and SPF. If you get those all set up correctly for the new domain, there shouldn't be any issues. I always say that going back to the early days of MMS and BPOS and then was rebranded Office 365 and when customers were being onboarded that exchanges the oldest and most mature of the pillars of what is now Microsoft 365. There's just a lot of experience there. There's still a lot of people that are in engineering and on the product team that have been involved in exchange for 25 plus years. They just have a lot of knowledge, a lot of history there and it works pretty smoothly. The whole point is when you put in the new DNS records, it's going to prompt you for the other ones as well anyway. Hey, you need a DKIM, you need a DMARC, you need an SPF. Here's how to go about doing that. At least that's my recollections from having set it up. I'm web design, I wouldn't say novice. I've done my own and I was able to do this for my tenant and for my son's business tenant and there's really good guidance out there. I put a link in the spreadsheet for that and if I can do it, you can do it. As long as you have a little bit of web understanding, I think just being able to know where your content is, who your host is, which is network solutions. You have to go in and add those records and then it's whoever's managing your host and also your tenant. I'd say the other thing I learned is DNS gets cached. If anything with the DNS changes, even though it's still with network solutions, you want to find out how long the information might be cached for, so you're not trying to troubleshoot something that's cached for an hour or 24 hours, for instance, and thinking something didn't work if it's just cached records that need to be flushed and updated. Good point. One thing I would say, again, not having worked with network solutions for a long time, but every vendor that I saw, I just did a migration and moved my site to a new hoster is that these companies, their documentation, their knowledge bases are fairly robust. Again, this is a fairly standard activity. I'm sure that they have the walkthroughs of all of this in detail to make sure that it's done right. I would go there and, of course, out to YouTube because YouTube has videos on everything in your life. Yeah, I just fixed something on my car this last weekend from a YouTube video, and I had it on my phone, was pausing it while I was doing the next step, and it worked out great. I haven't blown up yet. Every time I need to change batteries in the key fobs, which I couldn't figure out why they go dead so quickly, and it's because they've got all this proximity stuff in them now, so they're always being pinged. Any of the cars where I don't have to put the key in the ignition, the batteries seem to last maybe a year, and then you go to YouTube. Here's my key fob. They show you how to open it, what battery you need. I would agree. Super, super helpful. Do you alert something? I'm with you, Christy. That's why I love these because I'm like, oh, teach me stuff because I like it. Now, you weren't thinking it would be being taught something about your car, but yeah, still. You know, with my Mustang, I go through them all the time. In the next one, we're going to go through them. We're going to talk about groups in exchange and neutering a cat, so it's all good. Why not? My cat's already done. They're having a great time. It's okay. They're having too good of a time. That's why we're neutering it, Christy.