 Let's go to, let's go to Kiwi Graham. He's got, this is a, it's one of these things that's helpful for all of us, especially those of us that support multiple people, but really just for ourselves too. Kiwi Graham says, I don't recall hearing this on the show, this particular tip from Howard Oakley about kernel underscore task, the process, kernel task on your Mac and thermal management. He says, I came across it when doing some research on why a client's 2019 MacBook Pro was running so horrendously slow, we're in the middle of the Australian summer and my client was running his laptop at home connected to a monitor in clamshell mode. Performance was fine for four to five minutes after a reboot, but then would become almost unusable. Activity monitor showed kernel task, which is notoriously unwilling to reveal any finer details using 80% of all CPU cores. Howard Oakley at Eclectic Light points out that Mac OS is using a fudge to prevent thermal overload by pretending that kernel task is using most of the available CPU to limit processes from actually using the CPU and heating it up further. So this definitely, if you see kernel task eating up a ton of the CPU, check to see, you know, is it hot? Is it sitting on your lap? Is it hot in the room? If your machine has fans, are the fans running it full tilt trying their best to, you know, cool things off? It's just a great reminder that, you know, I've certainly run into this before, but when Graham's email came in, it was like, oh, yeah, man, I forgot about that. And I wonder how much will run into this with Apple Silicon based Macs, hopefully not nearly as often, but certainly with Intel Macs, I remember running into this a lot and it was like, yeah, why is my machine so slow? It's like, oh, because, you know, it's summer. I don't have my AC on and I've got the machine on my lap, you know, on the couch or whatever. And it's like, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. So yes, yes, indeed.