 Dave, as a musician, you probably know about the quest for ear protection that doesn't ruin the tone of the sound. So yeah, earplugs, the wrong earplugs, and to a degree, even the best earplugs, like I have custom fit musician earplugs, they somewhat changed the tone of the sound. On my keyboard forum, people were talking about AirPods Pro Gen 2, so the current generation of AirPods Pro, and the adaptive transparency feature. It basically tries to keep loud sounds under 85 dB. And the interesting thing is that you can see the volume reduction right there on your Apple Watch. You can see the volume that is external and the volume that's reaching your ears. And he said, it can be used as essentially an earplug. He says, I tried this with a loud guitar, and yes, I could see it limiting the volume to peaks of 87 decibels, and then bringing it back down to 85. But there's more. You can customize this transparency. You connect to your AirPods 2 and play a song from any audio app. You have to do that otherwise, none of these options will show up. Once you're playing music through your AirPods 2 on your iPhone, go to settings, choose your AirPods, go to accessibility, go to audio accessibility settings, and turn on headphone accommodations. Scroll down to the bottom, and you will see apply with phone, media, and transparency mode. Make sure you turn transparency mode on. So this enables a custom transparency mode. And you can set the amplification to the lowest setting. You can adjust the tone, darker, whatever you like. Now, when you go put your AirPods 2 on, AirPods Pro 2, sorry, and play with like a band, it will limit the sounds. It's pretty amazing. He says to make sure. In iOS 16, it's called adaptive transparency. In iOS 17, it's called loud sound reduction is on because adaptive transparency was not clear enough.