 I need to repurpose my M1 Air for my daughter. It's time for her to get a new computer. She's got a 2015 MacBook Pro that she has loved and has used. But it's time for to upgrade things. And she's heading off on a trip to Europe in December. And so to Italy. And so we figured we should do that before. So I thought, well, OK, my M1 Air, like it's less than a year old. That's your new machine. Perfect. We've got it in the house. We don't have to wait for anything to arrive. We'll migrate it over. So I, of course, migrated everything from my M1 Air to my M1 MacBook Pro and my M1 Pro MacBook Pro are going to make this difficult on us. And and then I needed to do the whole wipe the machine, nuke and pave, get it ready for a new user. And then I remembered that Mac OS Monterey has an erase all contents and settings option. And it's sort of hidden in system preferences. In fact, I had to go look up the knowledge base article to remember where to find it. But in Monterey, if you go into system preferences and you go to the system preferences menu at the top of the screen, the one to the very right of the Apple menu, you will then see erase all contents and settings. And this is available in Monterey on all Macs that either have an M1 style chip and or or a T2 security chip in there. Right. So it's not in everything, but I will tell you this made life so super simple. And it acted just like iOS does when you do the same thing. When you go to, you know, settings, general reset, erase all contents and settings. And it wiped it out. It rebooted the machine. It took all of about four minutes. And then, you know, it's at the startup screen showing me hello in all the different languages. And presumably I'll be able to just, you know, plow through. I will follow up if there's any surprises when we migrate my daughter's MacBook Pro over to this with migration system, which is I think how we'll do it just in the interest of time. But but yeah, so that's my first quick tip of the day.