 Let's talk about software, Mac OS Monterey, which is the name, assuming you've watched the Keynote or at least read some of the news folks. And I'm kind of jumping into the first thing that gave me a little pause, which was when they talked about automation. Shortcuts is the future of automation on the Mac. You can import automator workflows into shortcuts on day one, and the third quote, this begins a multi-year transition, which tells me very clearly that Apple script and automator are going away in favor of shortcuts. Well, a lot of people were surprised because they were like, you know, when they came out with shortcuts on iOS, they're like, well, where's the Mac version? Right. Shortcuts, I'm not a big shortcuts person. I'm aware of it. I've played with it. I've built a couple of shortcuts just because that's my nature, but is shortcuts built on that same Apple event model down to the, you know, how data is represented, the way Apple script is? No. Shortcuts, remember, shortcuts started as workflow, which was a third-party app. So they could only leverage public APIs and to have inter-app communication. What they did was they leveraged URLs, and it's that whole URL scheme. Now, now that it is, you know, acquired by and part of Apple, I'm presuming that they're using more than just URLs. And so maybe some of what we know to be automator features will actually become first-class features of shortcuts. I'm a little worried. My instinct here is that Apple script, it's just not an identical model, you know. There's so much. You can get so deep with Apple script into the way Apple models or data models are constructed. It just feels like they wouldn't just throw that all in the trash. And yet, remember, South Segoian doesn't work at Apple anymore. So we don't have that internal champion anymore. Yeah. Let's see. You mentioned, so while we're on the subject of Macros Monterey, Dave, you mentioned Safari. Talk a little bit more about what you like about the new tab groups and tab bar there. Okay. So for folks at home, the Safari stuff is, I mean, it's a real reinvention of the interface. Like they took all the, let's just talk about Monterey, the Mac version of Safari, but it's impacting every Safari iPad iPhone, right? But the Mac version, they basically said, look at all these things that are on the screen. If you look at, if folks at home, if you've got a Safari window up on your Mac and you look at it, there's a lot of wasted screen real estate there. And they're trying to push that out. It's like bezels on a display. They're trying to reduce it, reduce it, make your content be the thing that you're looking at rather than all the controls around it and the ways of magic things. So I like what they did. I think there's some things that confuse me. For example, there's a reload button that you see on your screen right now on your Safari window. There's that circle, you know, snake eating gets on tail kind of thing. And then there's the back and the forward buttons. Every Safari window has something along those lines. They're less than greater than signs, whatever. But it's, I think every browser, you use those things and they appear to be disappearing. There's, when I, it was, it was very quick in the video, you know, it's not like they said, here, well, let's walk you through every element of the interface. It was more, I'm going to show you a quick little example of using this thing, ba-ba-ba-ba. And then it was gone. But in that short amount of time, one thing I saw was there's no reload button and I asked about it. And someone, whether they were, I don't know who this person was who told me this. So I didn't vet it in any way. But they said it's, everything's converting to, they actually sent me a screen shot of something and I don't know what the screen shot was of. But it said, basically, we're moving to pull to refresh. John, what about you? What are your thoughts on Mac OS Monterey? Like I mentioned, the AirPlay feature. Yeah, I thought was really neat because it replaces the functionality of something you used to have to play for. Could you talk about that a little bit about what it is? Well, we had a listener right in a couple of weeks ago saying, how do I airplay to my Mac? And I'm like, can you even do that? I mean, obviously you can airplay from your iDevice to your Apple TV and stuff like that or from your Mac to your Apple TV. But the question was, can I airplay to my Mac? And normally you can't. But we found a third-party product. I can't remember it off the top of my head that allows both audio and video. You can make your Mac a host to allow AirPlay audio and video streaming. And so I was pleasantly surprised that Apple was like, hey, guess what? Now you get this for free. So because some people have a need for that. I mean, hey, you got this, you know, fancy computer here. Why can't you stream audio and video to it? Well, now you can. Now you can. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, they released easier than you could in the past. That's it. They make it easier. Yeah. Before we leave Mac OS Monterey, though, I want to note something. They during the keynote, they at the end of each segment, they will throw up a graphic that that sort of lists, not lists, but highlights many of the features of whatever it is. Mac OS 15 or Mac OS Monterey. Sorry, not 15 iOS 15, those sorts of things. Looking at those graphics, there's almost always something on there that they did not talk about. And one of the things for the Mac that they did not talk about is something called low power mode. Now, to your point, John, this is something we've seen on iOS, but now it is part of Mac OS Monterey. I don't have any details about what low power mode means, but it's definitely a feature of Mac OS Monterey as announced by Apple today in that graphic. So we'll have to find out more, but that's kind of an interesting thing, don't you think? That's that is interesting. I like because then there's always been some form of low power mode, like power nap or whatever. I don't even remember all the things. Yeah, no, I think this is going to be my guess is it. And this is truly a guess, folks. My guess is that it is mainly focused on M one Macs, where they can turn off the high power cores or shift more things to the low power cores, depending on what you're doing. They could, you know, maybe turn off. I don't I don't know what they would turn off, but they could certainly turn off background operations like checking mail in the background, which is what they do on iOS, right? Like there's there's different things that they could do, and we will get to find out, but it is there. So we will get to find out. Yeah, thanks. Yeah.