 So I've got a question here. Maury asks, I maintain a Microsoft list of events and activities in one team with a large number of people contributing, but I also have access to and responsibility to make updates to another leadership team, Microsoft list of similar events, another calendaring events, list management. The problem is that there are entries on my first list that don't show up on the second list because the owners on my first list do not have access to both lists. Is there an easy way to automate entries between these lists? The answer is yes. The short answer is yes, right? But the tools are there. You can use Power Automate to cross post. Between now that the thing you need to watch is that are you doing one for one? Maybe over here that entry items are like in a specific column have certain values and over here they have different ones. And then what makes it, there may be triggers that only certain items from those lists go over. So if it hits a certain status or it has a certain category or combination of those, both you kind of have to look at what makes this item in this one list need to be moved or copied to the other list. So you can move it, you can copy it either way, but if you wanted to mirror. Again, we were talking earlier about syncing, what if this one gets changed? How do you make sure this one gets changed? Yeah, we had a similar question in this series that around calendars, this one talking about lists specifically, but it's essentially the same, the same issue. Same thing, yep. Yeah. But what is a calendar? A calendar is just a list. The calendar is just a presentation of that list data. Yep. Yeah, and so moving data around with a tool like Power Automate, I mean, that's kind of what it's designed for. So the key part now will be to establish the business rules. Much to what Sherry was saying like, are you simply adding based on a certain event? An event could be adding a new row. Another event could be changing it a status value from draft to complete. And that sends the work off. And so you're going to have to handcraft something in Power Automate. There's a little bit of a learning curve but there's plenty of resources out there that will show you that type of pattern. I've blogged about this one in the past. I always get lots of feedback on it because there's some nuances with lists. It's not all like string data or numeric data. They have these constructs like a person column. And that's a bit tricky to move over from one list to another or they have choice columns or choices columns where you can have multiple values selected. So references are out there. Power Automate's a great tool, Mori, Lotta Meyer and you probably have lots of friends who know what they're doing with this stuff and would be more than happy to help you out. But list to list, moving data around 100% possible using the tools you already have at your disposal. I have a question for Mori Lotta Meyer which is why are these two lists being maintained separately rather than as a single list in the lists application with everyone just having access to them? Different audiences was that, yeah. And different need. Not everything in one list needed to be in the other and it drives a dashboard. So they, yeah. So what I didn't get out of this, what I didn't get out of this was that there were, that some items wouldn't cross post. That's the part I wasn't understanding. I understood that some items weren't cross posting because people weren't doing it. I didn't realize it was because there was a business reason not to do it. Yes, yes. So these are all activities which could be, speaking events, blog articles, whatever they, all the events, all the activities and the second list only has events. So that was my understanding. Okay, there's always, I mean, look, there's other things that you can, if you need to do more Karen feeding these things, I mean, you could just like look at all that new items, have a flag, send a notification to somebody who could go and manually push those over, review them, push them. I mean, nobody wants to do that. We want to automate everything. And so it just happens in the background. And, but there's always going to be the problem is like, okay, let's say you set a flag on those items and those, and that other team. So the, let's say the regular employees and management team, I like that, you know. And they may not know or may erroneously not set the flag to push it across. So having the eyeballs reviewing that stuff, you make sure that we look at all that new. I see the flag, did anybody missed the flag on those and then push it across manually. So most, you know, for, from a leadership team, especially when we're talking about, you know, calendars and lists, they're, they're not in there looking at it in real time. They have like a weekly meeting where they're reviewing. So you just schedule to do this, review everything every Wednesday. So it's updated Wednesday night before the Thursday meeting, you know. So you can automate. It's not going to catch everything that humans make a lot of errors around that. But, but you can automate a lot of that. And it's pretty straightforward. But then it doesn't have the relationship. It doesn't have the inheritance. If changes happen. Right. So if it's updated and it's flagged and it's this, then go and find the matching one and update those. And you've got to figure out what between the two is there an idea or something. So it's like, when this matches this, then update it. And so we go from more East technical question, like how can we achieve something? And we're starting to like get into this territory of, you know, should you have more than one source of truth and understanding business requirements and customization? And that's, those are suitable conversations to have when it is a, you know, a large endeavor. But for something where it's just like informal working groups, just trying to get the job done, then using simply like Power Automate to get it over with the least amount of effort is probably the best foot forward. Yep. Great question. Maury. Maury. So we were joking, Jay, about this question that like, that was a sounds like, I don't want to say her name, but sounds like Pory Lottmeyer. So sounds like that.