 Becca has a great question. I use stream videos and forums for my flipped lessons. So she's in the EDU sector. I'm working through some Microsoft Learn modules and just read this. Here's the quote, record one video, upload it to stream, and use forums to insert questions into the video. This procedure allows students to pause and reflect on what they're learning before they watch more. I've used this, I've done this, it's been around for a long time. She says, I do the opposite. She doesn't want people to learn and to reflect, apparently. I do the opposite where I create a forum and upload short videos into each section. My method gives me one forum with all the answers in one place, and I would like to know if you add forms to a stream video in different places, do you end up with many different forms? If this is the case, is there a way to consolidate the forms data into one document? So I can answer this. One, to separate it, yes, you would have to have multiple forms. Unfortunately, no way around that, right? However, can you consolidate the data into one place? Yes, because as when you fill out a form, you can actually connect, you can create a list instead of just getting it through the Excel format behind the form, right? So you can create a SharePoint list with all of the fields of the information that you're wanting to fill out, and then you can use Power Automate to map those fields to that SharePoint list. So your first form, whatever questions they are, you map them to that SharePoint list. The second form, you map them to the same list to those columns and so on and so forth, so that all the answers end up in one SharePoint list. So that works great. I did a ton of workshops, you name it, on that type of scenario. However, however. However. However. That does change. However. However. Works great, as it is, but we all know that there's a big stream migration going on from OneDrive and whatnot to SharePoint. One of the things that is not fully baked and Sherry, you can back me up on this, add some information to it. One of the things that is not fully baked is how the forms integrate into that right now. Okay, Sherry, yeah. Yeah, there's a lot of feedback. There's a lot of feedback that's been shared with Microsoft about exactly this scenario. Yeah, because people want to be able to do this and this is a real world thing. And the biggest frustration for me is that when you have a multi-select item in your form, it populates into the Excel spreadsheet as a common delimited value and it does the same thing in a SharePoint list. So it's really hard to get a roll-up view when you have multi-select. You have to break it apart, put it back together, just using layman's terms and that's no joke. So there's, if you have any kind of multi-choice, it makes it a little bit more difficult to capture that in a list. But I'm hoping, going forward, they find a better way to improve that process and the whole thing, the whole process in general, because it is a little clunky, I'm with you. I do flip training as well, flip classroom training and I want them to be able to, here is the form, here's a little video. Now, here's a form, a little video. Now, if you could put the video in the form so that they're watching the video as they're going through it, now that would be cool, but that's not an option yet. So we'll see what happens. Yeah, and I don't care how they do it. Form, video, video, form, it comes to the same output. Just my perspective. My issue is the fact that they're changing how it works from, it was embedded into stream, then it went to one drive and now it's all going to share form and our connections are gonna be broke for anything we built previously around that. Yep, yep. And there's gonna be a lot of work for us in the next year or so. Yeah, and we all know the migration tool is not 100% as it is and hasn't been and they don't project that the migration tool is gonna be 100% until almost May, but yet, you know, drop dead dates about October or whatever. I mean, something crazy when they don't even have a fully built functional tool. Has anybody used leveraged sway and done integrations with forms and the videos content? Because I believe you have the same problem. Yeah, I haven't, but I think it would be exact. Yeah, yeah, exact same problem, Christian. 100%. Yeah. So, but that's a, I always like to bring up because nobody talks about sway. It is a full-fledged member of the office suite people. Well, and I always promote that as like digital brochures, you know, make them and I've seen it used well and I was looking at one yesterday, I'm like, who did this? This is terrible. There's a lot of dead space in it. So, yeah, you gotta know what you're doing in order to- So, I promoted a lot to my clients that use newsletters and they use third-party utilities for newsletters. I'm like, you know, you already pay for it and sway and they're like, well, how do I use it? And I give them a quick tour because I don't use sway myself, right? Because I don't have a function for it in my day-to-day, right? But I was like, hey, here's the things you can do. I know enough to write my A disease series, right? And so, you know, I'm like showing them getting the brief overview, whatnot. And then they're like, oh my God, this solves the problems that I've been having with this other tool. It comes down to they just don't know what it's fully capable of, but yeah, you just have to introduce it. I think once you introduce it in the right way, people find it more beneficial to the right people. I know it's a separate topic, Becca, but just in case, just wanted to throw it in there for a little, you know, color commentary on other products that we never talk about, but it's kind of a, it's the same problem, same non-answer to your questions. Yeah, I mean, yeah. I mean, it's a great tool. I love it for what it does, but it only caters to a very small portion of most companies.