 the first listener, John, of the day, I believe? Sure. So John says, I was asked to set something up on my work mac that I thought I would share. There are hidden settings that change how Wi-Fi connects. I was asked to run this, and we'll paste it in. I'm not going to read the whole darn thing here. The default, but it's a Wi-Fi configuration or airport configuration utility very deep within the system. And the default setting, so they have one parameter called join mode. And normally, it's set to something called automatic. I wonder if it would help some people to force the Wi-Fi. You could also say join mode. So what he's suggesting is join mode equals strongest. So if you're having problems with your Wi-Fi, maybe running this will help. Yeah, that's interesting. Yeah, it's a big long convoluted command that's just buried in private frameworks or something on the Mac. But yeah, I remember being at like a Mac tech event and hearing and talking with a Wi-Fi person about, I don't know, it was something we were talking on the show about. And this was like 10 years ago about how you could tweak the Broadcom chips in certain devices. And he's like, you know, you can do it in Apple devices too. There's just no GUI for it. You've got to know what to do. And I think this is what he was referring to, where you can really kind of dig in and control exactly how your Mac is going to choose to interact with a Wi-Fi network. Yeah, because, oh wait, like so does this mean that instead of joining the Wi-Fi network that's at the top of your Wi-Fi list in the thing, it's going to join whatever it finds to be the strongest network? Because that's been a problem in the past, right? Where if you've got, if it can see three networks and one is super weak, but it's at the top of your list, that's what it's going to join. And we've always kind of lamented that. So, oh, now I, huh. Okay, this might be a really good thing to say. I'm curious to hear, yeah. So, Brian Monroe found what we were looking for, I believe. He found an article at OS 10 Daily, OS X Daily, I should say, that is Airport, the little-known command line wireless utility for the Mac. And it seems like it has at least some of these commands in the article. So, yeah, it's telling us to use that same private frameworks thing, and then you can do airport-s, oh, and get all the SSIDs from things. You can do dash I to get information. And then it looks like, yeah, here you go. So, on the join mode, you get automatic preferred, ranked, recent, strongest. And then you've got join mode fallback. So, yes, tons of these commands are there. Oh, amazing. Thank you, Brian Monroe. I love this. Love it. I love the real-time feedback, too. This is great. This is great. I knew it was out there. Had to be out there.