 Elliot asks very timely, he says, I recall a discussion in an MGG a few years ago about getting an international calling plan on my eSIM of my iPhone. I'm traveling to Croatia for 10 days and using my iPhone 12 Pro, the bulk of my time will be in Montenegro, which because it is not part of the EU, maybe less well served by cellular carriers, my carrier is Verizon. Should I just go with them and get some kind of international plan for those 10 days? Or would the free trial offer that T-Mobile has, the T-Mobile test drive, help me in any way? Or should I get a physical SIM card from a Montenegro carrier? Being accessible by my usual cellular number for those 10 days is not of high importance. Or should I just rely on Wi-Fi calling? That wouldn't solve the question of GPS for driving in the mountain roads. Yeah, so this was Makikab 760, which I will put a link to in the show notes of course. If it were me, which is how I generally have to approach answering all of these questions, I would try using the T-Mobile test drive first, because you get 30 days and 30 gigs for free every six months, that you can re-up every six months, you can redo the test every six months, at least as their current policies. So I would try that, but I would also look to see if the places I was going were served by T-Mobile and that particular plan. If not, then I, in fact, before I left, I would certainly get that rolling if it looked like that was gonna work for wherever I was going. But I would also download the apps for GigSky, TruPhone, the T-Mobile thing, the My Verizon thing, right? All of those so that when you are in the moment, you can use those apps to add service to your eSIM. If you don't have the apps ahead of time, it gets a little more tricky to do it. So just make sure you have those apps on your phone and make sure that they are actually on your phone and not in some sort of, we offloaded them because you didn't use them in a while mode, but make sure you've got them and then you should be good to go.