 So Amy says, I just discovered Microsoft to-do list. I think I love it. Does anyone use it? Please share any tips for best ways to get the most out of it. Are both of you to-do users? I am. It's something that I've been using for probably two or three years. It was previously, it was a product that Microsoft purchased. I forget the name of what it was. It was Wunderlist? Wunderlist. Wunderlist. I was addicted to Wunderlist and it used it to great effect for managing my personal to-do lists at home, my to-do at work, and just the basic stuff that instead of always scribbling things down, I would have it with me on my mobile device wherever I went and it was quite productive. I still use it today and I'm just going to caveat by saying it's for my personal productivity and what about you? How do you use to-do as well? Not as much as a lot of folks do. Unfortunately, I started off with Wunderlist. It didn't really fill what I needed done. They moved it to do and I just simply haven't exported as early as it needs to be. There's a lot of people that swear by it. It's one of those, yeah, I get sure, but out of gear and into gear and go check that out, but it's not a whole lot. It's not meant to be like a project management tool. Some people that need more complex than they'll go build things in Planner or over informal projects, that's not it. I think there's still a lot of work to be done, but Amy's asking like best practices for it. I have it on my phone, so I use to-do every day. I have it desktop and phone. I have different views, but I have links between things. For example, I use personally, like my shopping list is on here. My wife and I used to do the sticky by the back door, to the garage, anything for whoever goes to the grocery store. We both write it. I now have it in to-do and I say, it's a shared list, but my wife has never used it. But I'll go and capture everything there. But what I love about it in the desktop and I have, I can access it, so I have a work tasks and lists. So if I get assigned to any, this is the best thing about it. A lot of teams, a lot of organizations, groups within my company will use Planner. If they assign something to me anywhere, it will roll to my tasks assigned to me list in to-do. So I can access it on my phone, but I really use it more for, I use personal on my phone and I do everything work on the desktop version of to-do. What I love about that, I can go through all the various tasks that are assigned to me. Some have due dates, most do not. I will go and prioritize them based on what I'm working on. I will drag them over or mark them for my today, so I can log in or schedule it for tomorrow. So when I open up my today version of it and that next day, there's all the items that I know I need to do on that day. So it's great to do when you just, you need those reminders of what do I need to do on Friday before I am gone for the weekend on vacation and put that list together. But also having access to all of those links. I mean, other things to do syncs with, for example, any links from flagged emails, there's a flagged email report, any tasks that are assigned. So you can also, if you have tasks that you identify that you flag within one note, will roll to tasks in Outlook and then find their way to your to-do in the flagged emails. So there's multiple ways that you could leverage. I also have, I went on my Amazon-based voice assistant, whose name I won't say, so that she doesn't think I'm talking to her. You can switch by default the list application and you could have it go to to-do. So you can go to Siri or you can go to the Amazon device. I don't know, I've not tried it with Google, but I expect you can do the same thing with Google. Swap out the task tool and save to your list and it'll automatically appear on your phone. So really cool integration. Yeah, that's a great productivity hack to do this. I haven't done them. I wasn't aware that you could do that, but that's something very interesting. I think I did a blog post like two years ago about that. Yeah. So I'll take, I have to do- I have my entry on my mobile device. One note that I pretty much live and die by. Yeah. I have to do on my mobile list as the app and then on my desktop work computer, I'm using the PWA, progressive web app installation of to-do. So it gives me the little icon on my taskbar that I can interact with quickly. But the last whatever three or four months to do has been highly integrated into Outlook. So now it's just an option in the left rail of Outlook. So like I'm in there all the time. And so when we started talking about this, I said, I use it to great effect for my personal productivity. And so are you as well, Krish, and many others. So there is a point where the freedom of to-do for yourself is great. But if you try and roll that up to a team to manage a project like Krish was saying, this tool, you'll find its limits really quickly. And there are other solutions in that Microsoft 365 stack like Planner, if you outgrow Planner, you can move to something like Microsoft List and make something more of a spoke for your needs. And if your needs are even higher than that, then you're getting into Project or Azure DevOps or whatever is suitable for your organization. But as a productivity tool for yourself, it's great. There's nothing more rewarding than clicking done and hearing that little bell go off. And you start cranking those things off like your mobile device in the grocery store or the hardware store wherever you're at with your list on your mobile phone. You look like a person on a mission. So, oh good. So Amy, yes, you're not the only one who loves to-do. I'm a to-do fan, yep, for sure.