 I have a question from GoalRays. I think that's how you pronounce that. Dear colleagues, what is the best way for me to test site VPN from home to an Azure site? I have ordinary FTP internet to my FTP? Yeah. No. Okay. Go ahead. FTP or HTTP. All right. Internet to my place with Dynamic IP, an ordinary router hub which is non-customizable without spending money. Do you think I can download Microsoft Server and enable RAS to create site-to-site VPN to Azure Cloud? Yeah. You could. You could also download a free router software to run on Microsoft Server rather than using our RAS. You could use a Raspberry Pi as a router, a little device and make it into a aviator router and be able to do site-to-site VPNs. It's really not. The VPN itself can be handled a hundred different ways. It really doesn't matter what site you're going to. If you're going to Azure, if you're going to AWS, if you're going to some other site you might have on like Rackspace or DigitalOcean or whatever, the VPN is going to handle that. It just has to be able to support the methods that Azure supports which is all the normal ones. To be honest with you, I would spend the 50 bucks to get a router that supports VPN natively because it'll be a lot more efficient and a lot less resource than putting up a server and throwing software on it and all that fun stuff. It's really much easier to set up and configure. You go out and search for Azure site-to-site VPN and the router that you get and you're going to come up with somebody who's already configured it. What's like these answers that are like, could you do it? You can. Yes, you could. Oh, why? Should you? Yeah. There's a value in sometimes in buying devices and using software that was made for that purpose. Well, they're incredibly inexpensive now. Like I said, you can get a Viata router, which is open source based off of the old open source routing. You can go out and buy them for 40, 50 bucks. It's not that expensive and I know that technically, when he's talking about FDTP and with Dynamic IP and an ordinary router hub, there's no such thing as a hub for router. But anyways, you want to make it as simple as possible. If you're not really deep into networking and figuring out how to do routing tables and all that kind of fun stuff, just have a wizard with a couple clicks that comes with these devices and sets it all up for you. Well, you know, I'm all about the networking, so. Yeah. Yeah. Social networking, but you know, whatever, it's pretty much the same thing, you know? Yeah. Because Christian never answers any questions. He just gets... What are you talking about? He answers. What are you talking about? I add flavor to the discussions. He's a supervisor. Yeah, there he is.