 Chris asks, what's the best way to share a Microsoft 365 calendar with people outside of the organization who use Gmail, et cetera? I created a shared mailbox with this calendar and added our internal employees with access, but now they want some outside people to be able to view and add to this calendar. Any recommendations? Well, it looks like you might have some ideas on there. I put a link as a resource. You can publish a calendar to the web and make it, it basically gives it its own little URL, but I don't think you can add or edit that. It's a view-only thing. Yeah. Look, Microsoft focuses on the enterprise. This is my value add, is that when you're talking about external users and access, I mean, there's a very robust set of third-party solutions that are out there because Microsoft has never answered this. I mean, as we just discussed earlier, there are so many calendaring questions that are out there, all valid, and I would charge Microsoft that with the like they're looking at task management and they've hired somebody to look at task management across all these different products and workloads. They need to do the same thing with calendaring. There's a problem with calendars in general, but there's especially a problem if you want to do anything with external users, it's like Microsoft just not built that way. But you got the same problem because my other life, full-time job, they use GApps, and I'm going to say this on this podcast, GApps sucks, but I'm forced to use them, and I need to sync with Outlook and calendar, specifically calendars, and GApps sucks at it too. It's not just Microsoft. Yeah. Google sucks at it too. It's like the two can't talk to each other for some reason they have this thing between them. It's like a love-hate relationship, where it's like, yeah, I'll see your calendar. No, I'm not going to listen. I don't care about your calendar. No, go ahead, give me some events. No, I don't want anymore events. No, I'm just not going to accept them anymore. I'm done with you. That's how it seems because it'll work, it won't work, it'll work, it'll work for a little while. No, no, no, it's not working anymore. It's a pain, it's a total pain. Yeah. Well, there is a power automate and one of the connectors does say, when I add something to this Outlook calendar, add it to the Google calendar, and it goes the other direction. So you can keep two calendars in sync. So if they are Gmail users, for example, you could invite those Gmail users into a calendar and they could contribute. But one thing I care about is Power Pages. Because Power Pages are intended to access other external. I'm wondering if that could be something that could be used if you published a calendar of Power Pages. But you'd have the same problem. I mean, so think of like an event like the last, the MVP summit or Ignite or one of these conferences, where you could go and you can build your schedule, then you can push your entire schedule over to your calendar. Now it's a dead link. It's not going back and forth, but it pushed it the one time. Like you just said it, Sherry, it almost needs to have a solution where every time there's a new item. So you've got a Google Calendar and a Microsoft Calendar that have that sync to know that every time there's something new, it pushes this way. Something new pushes this way. And then it's activity-based. It's when something is created and then it automatically pushes to the other thing. Instead of like the manual process now is downloading like the ICS file and importing that in my calendar and doing that, automate that. Make it so that when it's created, approve the sync and then automatically push that across. Like I don't know why they don't do that. I'll add another thing to the mix is that I have a real headache because all of our family calendars are done in the Apple calendar. I count. Yeah. So now I have, I have Outlook calendars. I have work calendars in Google and then I have my family calendars in iCal. Now try and get all those to sync, okay? Yeah. Because iCal breaks if you try and sync it with anything. It's like, nope, not touching nobody. I'm iCal, I'm King, nobody can talk to me. Screw everybody else. And then Google and Outlook are just sitting there going, oh, well, we tried. And yeah, it does me know. It does, you know, it totally frustrates me and I have no solution. I've heard this, I don't know that this is true, but something that guarantees that your Apple calendars, your Mac calendars like work flawlessly is that you must be wearing a black turtleneck and have at least $200,000 in student debt. I think those two things, it just knows and has pity on you and then works. Again, rumor, but. So I did find a knowledge article for syncing the Google and Outlook calendars with Power Automate. So I will add that to the Macs as well. So depending on that, if you do that, what's the cost of that flow? Then there's the question, right? Because every time it runs, there's some overhead, but everything is a trade off of time or money in my world. And if it saves me a lot of manual time keeping two calendars up, then I'm gonna pay that. But, you know, that's the way I look at things, but everybody's not always on that same wavelength, so. I know that Microsoft is trying to bill everybody for everything now. And I can see those flows just racking up because you can pick so many free flows now and people are just clicking on them, enable, click enable, click enable and then they're running out of flows. I mean, they're running out of free flows, so. They just, Microsoft did not learn that lesson of the more you monetize everything, you make it, then I realized that there's costs behind this and why they're doing that. The downside to that is that when you're charging people to use the solution, then they will find ways to not use your solution. You're penalizing people for using your technology. So, yeah, look, I think some of you. You don't want to be better to raise the print licensing rates and just not do the pay per click things anymore. Yeah, I think it's something that's gonna evolve and change, like again, I get it. It's like we were just talking about the co-pilot stuff and I think people are gonna get sticker shock out of that but there's a cost to running those services and for the cost to co-pilot, I mean, it's very expensive for Microsoft to run that, so it's gonna be an expensive service. Six million transactions an hour, six million. That's what they're anticipating or that's what they already have. They're already at six million transactions an hour. Wow. And it's not even live after yet. That's what those 10 customers. Yeah, with those 10 customers. Yeah. I saw some busy customers, man. Yeah. Yeah. Wow.