 So our full has a question. We're working on having the organization update email signatures. Just for us to get an idea of where which client staff is using Outlook from. So Outlook Windows client, Outlook for the web, Outlook for iOS, etc. Would be possible to run a report on the admin side of the Exchange or Microsoft 365. We would like to see the use of the web, Windows versions, and Mac versions of Outlook in use. For example, we have some PCs in Outlook 2016, some in Outlook 2019, and others on Outlook 365 in use. Yes, you can. Yes. In the reporting, it actually shows you who's using, who's using what when it comes to Microsoft 365, and that's overarching. Yeah, that data is there that you can easily go in and find for the entire organization of how people are accessing and the various tools. So yeah, that's like an out-of-the-box report. I believe it's shown right on the mailbox statistics. If you pull up a mailbox, it'll show you what if anyone is connected and what they're connected with. Yes. Right on the main admin center, you can go to reports and go to usage, go to Exchange and go to email app usage. It tells you everything you want to know. Yeah. Yeah. That's for a lot of them under the app usage. It will go into quite a lot of different ways because it will look at Windows, it'll look at Mac, it'll look at Outlook Mobile, it'll look at mail on a Mac. There's are they using an iMac or Papa? There's all the different ways that they're actually coming in in terms of the way the user is doing it and then what app are they actually using to access. So it will actually go through all of those components. Unless you've actually got the identifiable information turned on in your reporting, you're not going to see who's doing what. So you have to have that turned on if you really need to know the specifics to be able to help or support them, especially if it comes to anything off the back of it. Well, the other half of this is working on updating signatures and managing signatures. Is anybody try to do that out of the box? It's actually coming, it's a new feature. Microsoft have turned on to be able to do the auto roll-over from if you move device. I know that is in play, but the auto signature to say, I haven't seen anything that would push out. Have you seen anything? So I haven't seen anything that would say it is on a mobile or it is on, it's there on a mobile automatically. It comes up and you can leave it in. But apart from that, I don't know about it being, you can set one up for your desktop. But if you set it up for the desktop and with the new feature coming in, that might then roll over to your online through the browser version, which would be because they're trying to sync the way that it looks across all of them. I'm not sure that would work. Just signatures in general, do you know how the ability to synchronize your signature in the Cloud? So any device you connect once you've done that automatically gets it. It's just there. Yeah. I love my third party. It looks really great. I was going to say, look, I'm biased. Exclaimer is a partner and I've worked with them for years and they're pretty much the leader in centralized signature management across multiple platforms. So if you have users that are using Gmail and other email platforms as well as Microsoft 365, but they're primarily predominantly within the Microsoft space. But then you could actually go in and I'm actually writing an e-book for them right now. But you could actually go in and do, set it up and do marketing campaigns. So you can have email signatures that automatically change by department, but based on campaigns that are rolling out, or if an event comes to an end, it changes the banner that's attached to it. You could do polls through signatures. It's amazing what you can do when you centrally manage those components. That is stuff that is not available within the Microsoft out-of-the-box solutions. So depending on what you're trying to do, there are great platforms out there, but I would definitely go take a look at Exclaimer. I'm not paid for saying that, I just really like their product. Doing other stuff with them, but yeah. Yeah, we know. It is one of those solutions that where people that finally go and see it and be like, why have I not been using this as a company doing this? It's pretty slick, but all right. There's a lot of great third party. A lot of times the things that we answer do have a third-party solution. It may not always be inside Microsoft, so knowing which ones can do what is also important. The best one. All right. One of my favorite things to do to go to events is walking around the Expo Hall, especially the larger events, and be like, what's new? What have I not seen? What new? Because so much, what's interesting about the ISV ecosystem is it really helps you better understand the limitations of the technology that we use. And Microsoft marketing will try to paste over, cover over, paper over, the sometimes the gaps in the feature set, and where partners will go right in and automate, organize that. They're the paper clip for the paper. You're not saying that they Vib, are you, Christian? Oh, no, no, no. I'm just saying, what I'm saying is that sometimes, occasionally, the marketing is slightly ahead of what the engineering team has actually done. That's all I'm saying, you know, I'm sorry. Good try, good try, good try. Suddenly, Christian Buckley is no longer an R.D. and MVP. A non-paid, non-attorney spokesperson, yes.