 All right, I know we have very limited time because of some scheduling stuff here, but I do want to share a note that, or a Discord chat that happened, DarthSapulba, sorry, asked and said, I have an old Intel MacBook Pro that starts having graphics issues for a few hours after running games. Has anyone, I suspect it's a heat issue, has anyone found a good free piece of software for showing the internal temps of the graphics and CPU. And of course, you know, I think iStat menus because that's what I use, but that's not free. It is included in set app if you have it. But the chat from this evolved and told me about some apps that I had no idea existed. The first one, if you like the way iStat menus looks, you might even like this first one better. It's available on GitHub and it's called Stats. It's from Excelban, E-X-E-L-B-A-N on GitHub. And we'll of course put a link in the show notes, but it looks a lot like iStat menus and in fact is a little more compressed in its view. I'm thinking of switching to this on my laptop at least to test for a little while, but it very much inspired by iStat menus, which of course was inspired by a free app, which was our very first cool stuff found years and years ago called menu meters. Remember that blast from the past. So that's this one. That's Excelban's stats, which is of course linked in the show notes. And then there's one called Fanny, which is at fannywidget.com, which will show you just the temperatures of your GPU and CPU as well as the speed of your fans. And I think you can do some control of the fan speed. And then there's a third one called Hot, which is available on GitHub. We've talked about this one on the show before where it shows you, it's really focused on the temperatures and the speeds of the fans and that sort of thing, the CPU sensors. So we'll put all three of those out there, but I'm excited about this stats thing. I never heard about that one before.