 So, Audreus says, hi, can someone tell me if possible to create meeting for a year and other guest users who have the meeting link can be in the meeting without any registrations or organizer? So, that's interesting. And Teams? That is interesting. I mean, when we get into the mechanics of creating a meeting, there always has to be an organizer. There has to be something that initiates it. So, that's how it's going to be stored. There are different options inside of Teams, how you control the behavior of gaining entry into those teams. You might allow guest users to bypass the lobby, for example. But you can create a recurrence. You can allow people to join via link, and we see it in the wild where we have... And share it as well, share the link as well. So, you can have it completely open. So, you can lock it down. The organizer can say, like, hey, only I can invite people in or have to approve those. Or you can have it completely open. So, that it is just a link or afforded calendar invite that people can share. I think the tricky thing here is that when you're creating your meeting in Teams, or even an Outlook that supplies, you go through the normal dialog and it might be just a little checkbox saying, this is a Teams meeting, for example, if you're in the Outlook experience. Or in Teams, you get this dialog. But there is a link that says meeting options. And that's where the organizer needs to come in. It opens up a separate webpage. And then you have the granular controls that you can make this work the way you want. And so now, like Christian said, the distribution is an email of link. Whatever mechanism makes sense for you and your organization. Yeah, and yeah, so you can... It's not behind a registration page. So you can have it completely open and make it really simple. I know that there have been a number of questions that we've answered doing this for months and months now. Years, I guess, technically. Years, yeah. Do this, we've had a lot of questions around calendars and there's a lot of ways that you can do that. And so you really just have to know your requirements for what you need to have in place. Whether you need to have a forum, ask a bunch of qualifying questions, have an approver or not. So kind of a general workflow around it. Or if you want something that can just be a calendar link or a URL that you can point people to and add to their calendars or to join directly. So it's, yeah, if you're using Teams, it's generally you create that. There's a meeting link which you can share, put a shortener, put it into a URL shortener, and then there you go. Shorters are bad though, Christian. From a security aspect, shortners are not a good thing. So I don't know if I- There's some systems that block them as well. Yeah. Yes, exactly, exactly. I thought that Microsoft actually was gonna make their aka shortener available to the public at one point. I remember this about four, maybe five plus years ago, people had asked about making the aka engine that they have available to the public, but they never did. And I think it's because they had that big scare with Bit.ly and those other ones. So. Well, that topic came up at MS Build again this year. Oh, did it. There was a discussion and where people again said, yes, please build in a shortener into these things. So. They have it, aka, you know, you can put aka to whatever domain you want after it. The aka is the engine that generates the URL. So, yeah. So I guess the takeaway then as a user is, if someone sends you a shortened link and you don't know who they are or what that link might be for, you shouldn't click it. Yeah. But if it's from a trusted source, like our friend Christian, you know, click away. He tells everyone just to really nilly, just send your friends whatever you want. Or if it's somebody that is the Crown Prince of Wakanda and they're asking for help, doesn't matter if it looks suspicious. You need to help them. Be a human. Come on. Yes. Wakanda forever. Wakanda forever.