 OK, the next one comes from my friend Billy, who once he wanted and found a way to store his music library in the cloud. So similar to what Apple Music subscribers can do with iCloud Music Library, but he is not an Apple Music subscriber. And Google changed the way they were doing things, which is where he stored it in the past. YouTube and the cost structure wasn't attractive to him because he's just got tons and tons of his own music that he's ripped. And he found this thing, John, called iBroadcast at iBroadcast.com. You can if you've got a project iBroadcast.com, that's the link I'll put in the show notes that kind of explains a little bit of it. But it is it is your music library. You upload it, right? So it's not like it's not a streaming service in the sense that, you know, they have all the songs and and you just, you know, pay to do it. In fact, you don't have to pay them anything. You upload all your stuff. If you use the free account, you get their they will stream or download and they do have iOS clients and they've got a Mac client for uploading and all of that good stuff and a Windows client and a Linux client. And the free version gets you streaming and downloading at 128 K. And then the premium version increases that substantially. And I think it's four bucks a month, three ninety nine a month for that. It's a relatively new service. It's growing. They're privately funded currently. So but it's a pretty cool, like great little thing to find. Of course, the other alternative, if one other alternative, not the is if you have a Synology disk station, you can put it all there and then use audio station or even Plex or to play your music, you know, on your devices when you're when you're not around. So if you've already got a Synology disk station, that's the way I would do it. In fact, that is the way I do it. But if you want to put it in the cloud, then Project I broadcast is a great option. Yeah. So, yeah. That's fine. I like it.