 All right, one last question before we, well, before we share just a couple of cool stuff found and then get out of here. Listener Jeff says, I've got a DS918 plus that I'm getting better at utilizing and starting to have significant items stored here. Being a network drive, it is not backing up to my backblaze account. I'm curious about which types of backup I should be using to protect this data from loss. I know there are solutions that involve AWS. Backblaze does have a solution. I believe Synology has their own cloud backup solution. I'm normally a path of least resistance type of guy and default to integrated solutions when I can, but I'm not sure what the best option of this is. John, do you want to take the answer? Are you backing up your Synology? I know you're backing up your Synology. So tell people what you're doing. Yeah, so I'm not doing it to the cloud though. I understood. What I do is I use HyperBackup and take the contents of one NAS and copy it to the other because I have enough space to do that. No, in HyperBackup, in terms of path of least resistance, I would agree that wherever you're going to back it up to, that's the place to start is HyperBackup because it's built to do this. No, I'm with you, man. Yep. I'm not doing that though. You're not using HyperBackup. Well, yeah, I'm using HyperBackup with my own drives. You own your own cloud storage, right? Yeah, no, that makes sense. Yeah, yeah. If you don't own your own cloud storage, my advice, again, based on path of least resistance would be to go with Synology's C2 storage, which Jeff alluded to there. I do both. I do what John does because I have an extra NAS and then there is a subset of my data that I back up to a one terabyte store that I purchased at Synology C2. Again, just for, you know, just to have it not here. But like my, you know, whatever, 12 terabyte Plex library, I'm not paying for cloud storage for that, but I definitely don't want to lose it, so. But if we were, you know, Pete, you and I did this a long time ago with Crashplan and we certainly could do it now, HyperBackup using your solution, John, from one disk station to another does not require those two disk stations to be on the same local network. So, you know, you could take that other disk station and put it at my house or at Pete's house. And now you have an offsite backup that you're not paying monthly or annual fees for, unless Pete or I charge you monthly or annual fees. There's that, right? There's that, yeah. Okay, there's income here, you're free. I'm very eager to do something like that because, yeah, we were doing that before with our Drobo boxes and then Crashplan went to a money-based in order to keep doing that or something. It just, it stopped being the right solution for us for that. It was too bad. Yeah, and then it stopped being a solution. And then, sorry, Jeff, what was that? And then it stopped being a solution. And then it stopped being a solution. I do have an answer, though, that I'm gonna bring us into our cool stuff found segment where there are only two things. I promise, we're almost finished here, folks, or at least we almost finished this. Before you jump into that. Yeah. AWS was one of the options that was tossed out. I'm gonna say don't with the AWS because for most people, it turns into a brain damage situation. And I would say that's a much better solution if you're at a much higher level in the business food chain. Got it. Yeah, pick some other solution. And there are lots. You can backup using Hyperbackup, I think, to Dropbox. You can backup to Google Drive. Just run Hyperbackup and you will see all of the options, the ones we've mentioned, and lots, lots more. So check them. They change, not all too frequently, but they do that list evolves. And I've found over the years, I've found some free solutions on there where it's like, oh, you get 10 gigs free. It's like, okay, I'll pick 10 gigs of data and send it over there, perfect. And you can do it securely and all that good stuff.