 I am eager to get to our quick tips, John, because Ben has one that solves a long-standing problem that I've had. And Ben says, on a couple of occasions, including this past week's show, you commented that do not disturb is permanent in Big Sur. When you option click the clock to turn it on, in prior OSs, it was not permanent. It was semi-permanent. It would last for 24 hours and then turn itself off. That's not the case in Big Sur. And so I found myself, Ben's right, you know, with it on for days. He says, however, if you have do not disturb scheduled during certain hours, this will cause it to expire at the end of the next scheduled period. For example, Ben says, I have D&D scheduled for 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. So if I option click the clock, do not disturb gets enabled immediately, but only until the next occurrence of 7 a.m. at which point it gets disabled. He's totally right. And this follows the same sort of logical flow that you get in iOS and iPadOS with do not disturb. So I get why Apple did this. I wish they had, I don't know, I wish they'd communicated. But that's why we do this show, right? So we can learn these things. But you do this in system preferences notifications. Do not disturb is the first thing at the top of that list. And you can, of course, have it turn on do not disturb. Now, I don't necessarily want do not disturb on in the middle of the night if I'm here working or tracking things in the studio or whatever. So I don't want it on from 11 to 7. But I took this and made one more step. I set it to turn on at 6.59 a.m. and turn off at 7 a.m. So it really is never on automatically, but it then also turns itself off. You can't have it turn off automatically without turning it on. So you have to set it on time. But if you want to do that to just one minute, it works great. So finally, I can have do not disturb. It's weird. I don't know why I didn't think about this.