 Joy has a question. I customized my SharePoint list using PowerApps. However, a user was asked for a free trial to view the form. Do end users need a license to view the form? End users will not create an app, so I don't understand why PowerApps is asking for a license. I actually had to think twice about this one, because your first answer is if you create something that has a certain license, then you probably need the same license to consume it. This is SharePoint. I thought the one deal with PowerApps in SharePoint, excuse me, is that you would never need an elevated license to use PowerApps on a SharePoint list. That's just part of the value proposition when they retired InfoPath and all those other things. I was a little confused by this, so I'm not sure what would have been creating that prompt to get a license. It is a true statement. So PowerApps, so if you use any of the Power features, so PowerApps or Power Automate within the M365 ecosystem, it is included in your license, if it's an M365 license. However, there's this fun little thing that happens occasionally, is if for whatever reason on the back end, the user is not credentialed against something for Power Platform, and that depends on how it's configured in the Power Platform Administration Center. So in the Power Platform Administration Center, you can basically define whether or not users can interact with PowerApps and Power Automate, and whether or not how it's set up, whether they can use the free per usage stuff. And so there's these check gates that it goes through to look to see, has this person been flagged as somebody who can or cannot use something? If that's never been set up, what ends up happening is that the system decides to ask the question itself. And basically what happens is it prompts you for a license, not because it truly needs a license, but because it doesn't know whether you're supposed to be licensed or not. So I've seen this happen. I don't, it kind of seems to come and go, so I'm not even gonna say it's 100% true, but I've noticed that if you've never decided at the Power Admin or at the Power App or Power Automate Admin Center, if they're supposed to be licensed or not, and they've never had any licensing applied to them, then it will force that prompt to basically say, we don't know who you are in our system, click the trial to start it, and when it does that, it applies a license to them, because the Power App in M365 is covered under the license, it'll never actually charge them anything for that license. It's like the goofiest thing. Is that, and Sharon, does that apply to the F-type licenses as well? I was thinking, we were saying, talk about user, we don't know what user is defined, what license type that might be. So for an F-type license, typically you're going to be presenting it like on a mobile device or on a kiosk device, and so nine times out of 10, you don't see that same thing pop up because they're not accessing the Office 360 environment the same way. I don't do a lot of work with that, my husband does, and he said he's never run into this happening with his F-license people, but I have seen it happen, and I'm not even going to say frequently, but I have seen it happen occasionally with my office people that are 100% licensed for it, but because they never made that decision on the backend, it forces them the very first time. After the very first time, they never see it again. So what Sharon is saying, that if you run into the prompt, click okay on the trial, if you get charged, call her. Well, I mean, the great part is you say yes to the trial, what's going to end up happening on the backend is it's not going to engage that license because there's no credit card behind it. So you're starting that trial, but there's no credit card behind the license to start the trial. So it technically will just age out. The worst case scenario is that that trial license will just kind of go defunct, but the funny thing is, is that you didn't need it in the first place, so yeah. All courtesy of Microsoft Licensing. Yeah, I could talk licensing all day long. I think licensing is so much fun. You would have such a huge audience, not. I, you know, here's the truth, and I love talking licensing. I'm scared to death that I'm going to say the wrong thing. So just take it with a grain of salt every day. Yeah, not since spending time in Microsoft offices watching three licensing experts come up with four solutions and ways to license the same solution. It's like no way. You guys can't even get consistency on your own. I'm not going to talk licensing. You know, there is, I'm going to give you guys a fun link. There is a licensing, it's getlicensingready.com. And so if you're in the Microsoft community and you want to know more about licensing and you want to take licensing training, there you go. Do they have training? Yes, they do. They used to have licensing bootcamps too, and I actually had signed up for them and then they got canceled. Also, that was one of the most popular areas of sessions at the Inspire events, the partner events. Partners trying to go and understand the licensing and just a joke that you have to have a PhD to understand Microsoft Licensing and the fact that it changes every year, something changes within, but it's... Every year, I actually did it every month. Yeah, right. So I know what I need to know out of this, call Sharon. I'll Google it for you. You know, I would trust your Google results better than my own. Ask chat GBT. Right? Oh yeah, oh jeez.