 think it's time to let Michael share his thoughts about how to create a quick and dirty network attached storage solution. Maybe it's just quick. I don't think it's all that dirty. I think I heard Michael calling from Long Beach, California. I have a quick, cool stuff found, quick tip. You've discussed it before to some degree, but I've never heard it arranged this way. And it's a tip for people who are out there thinking about getting the NAS device for their home. Those are not inexpensive in terms of the price, obviously. But what I have is set up kind of a quick and dirty version. I have a TP-Link router that has a USB port that allows you to attach USB storage, which many routers today do, if not all. I've got a small one terabyte Western Digital USB notebook drive hookup that has all of my videos that I have ripped or whatever attached to the drive so it's available to anything on my network. I have two Roku TVs, one in my living room, a larger screen connected to a home theater, and then one in my office as well. It's a combination of, because I'm a geek, I also have an Amazon Fire TV in the living room and a Fire TV stick in my office. And via the Roku Media Player app, I can go in, select the drive, a couple clicks and I'm playing the stuff on the TVs. On the Fire TV front, I found that VLC has an app that works very well. You can click on it, click on the shared media, and there you're watching stuff with the NAS. It doesn't matter where you are. I can do it on my laptop as well, connect to the drive. I can do it on my phone or a tablet, whether it's an iPhone or not, via the VLC app. And it's a quick and dirty NAS that's probably only about $130 all-told between the router and the USB drive. Just a quick suggestion to everybody out there if they want to be able to get into that NAS type game and not have to spend several hundred dollars to get a NAS device. Yeah, you're welcome. Thank you for that. I like that.