 Jose says, how can I monitor teams? I'm having connectivity issues. It's slow and there are connectivity cuts. Could you help me? Actually, this was something that Richard Toland covered yesterday in his session on Comsynex, which will be recorded and posted. But he went through and he's, sorry, he went through and he outlined why, you know, all the hardware, the hardware and software issues and connectivity issues for this reason. But I will defer to the technical people, but I just thought it's funny, this is a second time in two days I've heard this. Is there a link to that that we can provide, Sherry? Are you able to find anything from Richard? There will be. The recordings from the conference will be posted within the next few weeks, I'm guessing. So, yeah. I'll grab you the link to the session page, which should get updated with the live video once it's available. Awesome. Yeah, so, I mean, because the first thing I, you know, having the connectivity issues, one problem that's very common, like if I go into a meeting or I'm going into a community call or something and there's issues, I mean, my first thing as I do is like, if I'm experiencing that and maybe a couple others, but maybe nobody else is saying, hey, I'm having issues, I exit and I go back in. Sometimes that solves. Other times there's something funky going on that other people are reporting similar issues. There may have been, it's just the reality of the sass world, the evergreen world, is that there might be an update that's partially filtered through the tenant, whatever that you're on, that could be impacting something. So that's just another reality. It's like sometimes when, remember months ago, that the record button just disappeared. It wasn't a menu option. My tenant, same meetings that we record like these, these sessions, and I would, you know, in half a day or a day later, there it was again. So there's those kinds of issues. Again, it's just because of the nature of evergreen sass offerings. And I think a lot of it is like, is it me or is it you, right? So the first thing I do is I hit a browser and do speed tests and we was like, how do you do a speed test? I'm like, you go to a browser, you type in speed test and a little button comes up and says, run a speed test and find out what your upload and downloads are. And if it's you or if it's me, you know, sometimes it's teams and sometimes it's my connection. And there's things you can do, like turning off the incoming video or turning off your own camera because teams kind of goes through and cherry picks and prioritizes for you what's important and you know, sharing video or sharing your screen, you kind of have to decide if you've got low connectivity, what you're willing to give up because in order to improve the other areas. So first thing, do I have a good connection or is it not me? And then you go in and like, change the incoming video in the more options menu. Yeah, I mean, like anything is, how many tabs do you have open in, you know, in Chrome or Chromium, you know, that impacts that, what other applications are open? Oh yeah, I had Spotify on pause for the last three hours and I, and the 40 tabs that I have open and other applications and things that are going on. I'm playing Halo in the background. I mean, all of those things. I'm playing Halo while on my teams meeting. Just an example of things that could be happening out there. The first thing Richard showed was a screenshot of his system file that, what is it? They control it to leave it going. Yes, that's right. And every, all the processes that run, as soon as you launch teams, there's like 20 processes that fire up. And if you're like me, I'm usually working in multiple teams. So I've got teams open in a browser. I've got teams open in the desktop and each one of those is spinning up and sucking up any kind of processor speed I have. So, you know, that resource hog, yeah. Along the resource hogs too, is that I find that, especially if I'm going to record a segment, I turn my VPN off because that cuts my signal in half. As fast as they say it is, man, that's just brutal what it does to teams. So usually I turn that off and teams brightens up right away. And then of course all the hackers get in. He talked about that too and how the VPNs are set up with their tunnels. And let's say, you know, you're overseas, your tunnel is in the U.S. So you're saying you're having, forcing people to go back to the U.S. to come back to where you are to participate in a meeting and that can really- Well, that's why you change your location of where you're routing that through in your VPN. So that's something when I travel, I do, I'm very aware of, okay, which office is this going through? Yeah, for exactly that reason. And most of us would not know to do that hand in ear. I would not know how to do that. I would also offer this, going back to my old role many, many years ago, wow, 21 years ago, if you are in an area region where you have habitually slow internet access, poor access, there are other tools that are out there. There are various edge devices, there's WAN optimization solutions and things that can help improve the performance. But I mean, sometimes the answer is like, look, Teams is a hog and you need a fatter pipe sometimes, yeah. So- And a faster processor, yeah. I used to do recordings like this on Wi-Fi in my house and yes, I live in a community where internet, I've got fiber coming to my house and everything but if your Wi-Fi is terrible, your Teams meetings are gonna be terrible. And I now have 100 foot blue cat five cable, cat six cable running through the center of my house because I haven't had the chance to properly install it yet, specifically because of this exact problem. Yep, I'm wired as well. Yep. Also going back to Sherry's comment about Toland's presentation with the systems tray, I can't find it and I'm really upset but there is an Obi-Wan Kenobi meme that's going around where the systems tray has crashed and it says non-responsive and then it's Obi-Wan going, you are supposed to solve the problem, not become one with it. That would be awesome. You need to find that and share that with us. I will find it. But I think one of the takeaways here is you want Microsoft Teams to just work like a light switch, turn it on and it works but between the three of you, you've listed off at least three or four different factors that can affect the performance. You might have a great computer but if you don't have an equally proportionate bandwidth or the other resources or if you're doing too much on your computer or you're in a resource constrained world, if it's not in balance, well then Teams for the volume of data that it's pushing through, it's gonna suffer. So I mean, these are fundamental problems that it's not a Teams, the most of what we described are not a Teams, a Microsoft, it's look any high bandwidth application, enterprise application and having a good connectivity. Specifically, has Microsoft talked about like monitoring specifically? I mean, admins can go in and look at Teams performance and look and see like which workloads that are struggling and having problems because there might be one aspect of Teams or another that could be experiencing issues. And as I mentioned, it could be updates and other things, new features. But yeah, I mean, for end users, it's really just the performance of their system and their connectivity that you can monitor. There's nothing that they can see about how Teams health in general is running. You have to be an admin to see workload health within the admin portal. I agree on the team side. I don't think there is very much for the end users. I go back to Sherry's recommendation. Like when you aren't in the meeting, do a speed test and run a speed test like on a semi-regular basis and keep track of what that looks like. Cause if you notice that at one o'clock every day, your network goes slow and you run a speed test and you verified it, I bet there's something on your network doing nefarious things that you don't want done. So that's really your first line of defense. And my brother is a gaming streamer guy and he's a hardware guy. He built my system. So usually it's not my system. Let me just say. I've got a gaming system, it's a VR system. It's high-end graphics, like all those kinds of things, normal things. I've got a fiber connection. I'm usually somewhere between 600 and 800 with the VPN running. So when I experienced issues, I was like, there's something else going on. It's like, it's not me, it's them. Yeah. It's not you, Kristen. It's never you. Of course not. Word change. Yeah.