 This is an anonymous question. Is there a, we'll see why it might be. So, is there a way to allow my users to view events in SharePoint that come from an exchange calendar, and then allow them to add themselves to the meeting or add it to their calendar directly and stay updated with changes. Essentially, be registered through a click of a button on SharePoint. So, it's a registration process in SharePoint. Correct. Custom development opportunity. Other than custom development. I don't know of a way out of the box, but I'm not necessarily one who would know. So, going back to my previous point, exchange. You mean in that other video that the people watching this one have no idea about Max? Oh, yeah. Perhaps you should recap Max. Maybe I should recap. Exchange calendars do not play well with SharePoint. That is just a fact. It's due to a myriad of reasons, mainly authentication, authorization, and permissions that SharePoint just can't pass that along to exchange and get it back, and it's not meant to work that way. I think that builds a McCoy's. SharePoint has SharePoint calendars, which can be viewed in exchange in Outlook, because Outlook has the capability to go pull those. On a PC, but not on a Mac? That is actually a really good disclaimer, not on Mac. Firstly, I don't care about those people, but I realize there are people that use those. For the sake of this anonymous question, assume that 60 percent of their user base is Mac. That's a strange look for a slice of paper. The answer to this out of the box is no. So what about custom? Sean, I'd love to hear your couple of minutes of talking through this at a custom level. I would build a web part that taps into graph, and if the event is public, take a look at what you can get out of exchange. Then you want to add the person to it. Instead of a get, that's a post. That would have to be a group or a shared calendar as well. It can be like an individuals, then have access to be able to add yourself to it, register for it. So there's that layer as well on the exchange side, that there'd have to be the permissions to get into it. So it's going to depend on how you do your Azure AD app registration if you do it as an app or user token authentication. If you do it as an app, you can grant access to the entire organization's exchange information, which is a dangerous thing to do. A lot of security people probably wouldn't do that. I don't recommend it from a security standpoint. But yes, then you could, as Sean was saying, hit post events. You grab the event ID of the exchange event, and you do a post call to add users to the invite field and it would add it on their calendars. I was going to say for those who are security conscious, you may want to actually consider this as a provider hosted add-in in SharePoint if we're talking the Cloud. Do your interactions with the exchange server through the app-only context, and take your business rules and security concerns, and build those into the provider hosted add-in, and then give you users access to the provider hosted add-in where the stuff, that you're trying to share with them can be shown in a window and an entire page, whatever. But that becomes the layer that gives you control on top of that to make sure your business rules and security are enforced, the provider hosted add-in. Sorry. I have one other thought. I don't know what the reason why there may be a reason from this person that the events have to come from an exchange calendar. But let's presume for a moment, they don't have to come from an exchange calendar. Maybe it's a SharePoint calendar, and that again, you can, on Windows have a SharePoint calendar, not look, and on Mac, you can view it in SharePoint on your SharePoint site. You don't have to go to the extent that Sean and I were talking about to get it on the individual's calendar. If you don't need it to all be one big calendar invite, you could just, through a simple Power Automate flow, hit a Register button, and it goes and it adds an event to your calendar. It wouldn't be linked back to the main event, but it just adds it to your calendar. If there's a Teams meeting join link, it can throw the Teams meeting join link in there. I'm not going to say this is a full-fledged registration system, but if you want a full-fledged registration system, you either have to build it or buy it. This has been an interesting discussion. Let's see what happens. Let's just mix it up. Let's go crazy, kids.