 Let's do some cool stuff found. We have a couple of minutes left. Listener John sends us one. He said the MyRadar app, M-Y-R-A-D-A-R, all one word capital N, capital R, has a feature that I haven't seen before. And he sent us a screenshot where he says it shows when the high low temperatures will occur, not just what the high low temperatures of the day are. And it is. He sent us a screenshot of a five-day detailed forecast, and it shows a little bar that covers the 24 hours of the day and wherever he was. On Thursday, it was going to be a high of 73 and a low of 64, so he definitely doesn't live where I do. And it showed that the high was going to be at 1 p.m. and the low was going to be at 11 p.m. That's pretty cool. And the other days, the same thing. I like that. That's outstanding. And it even shows a color-coded graph of the temperature evolution throughout the day, too. And again, some of this stuff is obvious. But one day, the high was going to happen at 3 p.m. instead of 1 p.m., which is... And depending on where you live, I remember when we were in Texas, the high would generally be about 4 or 5 p.m., not noon, which, growing up in New England, I was shocked about it. I was like, wait, I thought the high was always at noon. I was like, no, no, not just here, not everywhere. Yeah. I think it also shows one day where the high was 47 and the low was 33. That's pretty close to freezing. But the bar is differently colored for that day, which I think is what it's indicating. Because for those of you that live in certain parts of the country, when it's freezing out, that's bad for... You don't want frozen pipes, which I had once, and it's not fun. No. You want to make sure your heat's running. That's right. Yes. Yeah. Yeah, that sucked. We were out at Macworld, and it got to be like two degrees at home. Oh, yeah. That's not... No bueno.