 Tim has a question about using the Teams channel calendar app. Is there a way to have more than one calendar per channel? It looks like it will add another, but it duplicates the information from the original calendar I set up. We have one main channel, one team uses for communicating. We have a calendar to keep track on everyone's time off, and wanted a separate calendar for other things that did not include the time off, but we wanted it to live in the same channel. Yeah, there's only one calendar per channel, but SharePoint behind the scenes, you can create as many calendars you want, and if it's a SharePoint-based calendar, I think the overlays aren't supported in modern, but it used to be a cool thing, and it's on my wish list for them to add it to modern, have the overlay so you can create different views of the calendar and color code things, and that's my wish list. You can add a link to the overlay calendar, the 30-day calendar, but you can't view it as a link to it, take you to the 30-day calendar with the overlays. As long as we're talking about things that we wish for, I want to clap my hands twice, and the calendar just to appear, and through the psychic interface, pull all of the information out of my brain, and post it to the calendar. I would click on that voice thing for that too. I'm with you, right there. Put on your ruby slippers and click your heels three times. The best-kept secret is that there's a whole SharePoint site behind the scenes. You can create as many calendars as you want. I'm not going to say as many as you want because people will go crazy, but being able to use them for different things, and if you go back to Classic, you can sync it out, look, and you can see them all overlaid, or they show up in your calendar view on the web, so one or the other. You can add it as a tab to the channel and so you can have it all like they're inaccessible. Yeah, in the SharePoint site, you can still see the overlays, but you just can't see that over. You can't put that 30-day calendar on a modern view, but you can do a quick link to that, right? And then it'll open that, so I will. I saw some of the people complained about some of the limitations in Teams out of the box around that, and I just reminded, like one of the core superpowers of Teams is the ability to go and add those tabs and add whatever you want, whatever you need there. Exactly. So that it can become a one-stop shop for all those different pieces. You just have to understand the rules and go draw from and create the calendar elsewhere, bring it in as a tab. So I've seen organizations that have gone and used third-party tools and scheduling apps and other things, but they surface all of that via tabs. And one thing that people tend to forget on calendars is calendars just a list behind the scenes. Yeah. Yep. Well, the other thing you have to keep in mind is you can add anything to a tab, but if the person that is accessing it through the Teams tab doesn't have permissions in this source, it's going to display an error on the page. So you just wanna make sure permissions are squared away too. And it's not very clear that it's a permission error in Teams a lot of the time, so just beware of that too, unfortunately. The error's not so descriptive. And the wonder tool for Teams is the Teams tab is the web site, because everything in Office 365 has a web address. So even if you can't add it, you can't see it, capture the URL, put that on the tab, again, permissioning-based permission trimmed. And that's how I do the calendar all the time, the overlay calendar. Yep. Great. And then you just have the fund. Somebody new joins the organization and you have to go remember to add them to the 20 different things that you've linked to a tab within that team. Yep. You know, permission groups work wonders. Just saying. Yep, there you go. Same. There you go.