 Daniel says, I'm wondering if I should buy Office 365 or not. My current school only uses G Suite. This past year, I've been doing or creating assignments and assessments on Canvas. I do enjoy Outlook for home use, so personal AOL e-mail account. Gmail accounts and an Outlook e-mail account. I can't use the desktop Outlook app at work on work device. Does G Drive handle Office files well? No. Isn't PowerPoint better than Google Slides, especially in terms of embedding, video, and audio? I haven't used much Office applications the past year due to working with Canvas, and I have little experience using G Suite products. Should I buy Office 365 or not? No, you should trial it first. Trial it, yeah. Yeah, well, let's exactly get to it. That is fantastic advice, John. Fantastic. I'm done. No, I really agree with you. I think it is great advice to trial it first. Does he need it? Yeah. Probably not. Honestly, the things that have been brought up in the scope of this particular question are, I literally don't know anything about software and I have an AOL account. If you read into this question, I mean, I don't know, right? I mean, if all you're trying to do is store some files, put some stuff in some slide decks, and honestly, if your school is providing you with G Suite for no cost and you don't know any more than that, do you have enough money? It's if the bulk of the activities are working with people that are using G Suite, you should use what everybody else is. Whether the Office Suite is superior in certain areas is irrelevant if everybody else is using the other thing. It'll be in Rome. It'll be easier to work with because you're all in the same class. The only thing I can go, the PowerPoint better than Google Slides in terms of embedding video and audio means he's having some challenges with it. So that could be the tipping factor. What is the extras that you are needing to help and support you? But then you've got a new product that you're going to need to learn as part of that particular process. But if Canva is already doing a lot of that for you, for example, and you are in Canva and very popular and especially being used and depending on what career you want to go into is another really big one. Is it something that you need to pick up as a skill now? As a student before you hit the market, is another question, it's like, where are you on your journey? Right. Well, that's the other thing is that there are enough differences and nuances between the products. If you're not using the Office Suite for work and with other groups of people, then getting up to speed and enough for the differences and knowing how to navigate between the two, like every time I interact with education customers or I've leveraged grad students for research projects and they insist on using Google products and then there's compatibility issues, like the calendaring is all messed up in between. They won't talk properly between those things. So if you are using both enough that you're aware of the differences and can kind of navigate around them, fine. But if the majority of what you're doing is in one, stick with the one where the majority of folks are. I mean, look, long-term, I said once you, all these students are, the majority of these students are gonna have an impact when they leave school and find that most companies use the Microsoft Suite and they'll struggle with some of those differences. Are they more powerful across the board? They are. There's more features, they're more compatible across the board in every category. Yep. Except with working with Google Suite. Yeah, because the fact that it's got there, I have little experience using G Suite products and asking those questions. It's like, is that fork of the road? Do I go diving down into the G Suite and really kind of get used to diving down into office? And it's just like, well, if you need extra features and you want the full power, then dive down office. Right. Yeah. I think that's the big thing is what is your need at the time and it's good to learn things for the future, but do you change just for the sake of change or do you take change because you're having a pain point? And when you're a student, if you can't afford that extra money, use what you have, but I do think, to Sean's point, you can, there are plenty of opportunities out there to trial or to get free copies and go check it out and see what it is and see what the options are and see if it really is something that you need or not. Yeah. I've got to use the G Suite on a regular basis. I go teach a class through TEALS up in Cleveland and for the last couple of years, I've been using G Suite to interact with them because that's what they use. That's what they get for free. That's what they have the students using. Most of the students are on Chromebooks. They're not on desktops. So that's what works best for them. And you know what? It's good enough. I would also, I'll just kind of throw in at the end because there are a bunch of ex-Microsoft people that got hired with that Google Workspace team. Yeah. It's gonna be interesting over the next couple of years to see what happens. I have a single Google Workspace license myself for my blog domain. Yep. Hashtag, just saying. What a place.