 All right, let's talk about the Synology Mail Server, because that with many of us losing free access to Google's mail, it is tempting to set up a Synology Mail Server. So tempting that I did it, Jeff, even though I swore that I would never do it. And so I set up the standard Synology Mail Server. Now, one difference between Mail Server and Mail Server Plus is that you have to pay for more than five accounts on Synology Mail Server Plus. The other difference is that it will import directly from your Google workspace, so you can just solar up all your mail in. I figured I'd start with Mail Server and then move up to Mail Server Plus. Mail Server, it was very simple to set up. I set up, I said, yeah, I'm going to, I have this whole domain called skinnychameleon.com that I never used for anything. And so I figured this is a perfect opportunity to do that. And so I set up the account, I set it up, I enabled pop and IMAP, I turned on spam assassin, the DNS black holes I could turn on, but they started getting weird. There is anti, yeah, there's an antivirus thing for it. You can put an allow and a block list in. You can have it doing content scans, so it'll find things that it thinks has, you know, terrible stuff in them. You can use the SPIF and DKIM, which are all the Mail Server authentications. And then once you turn it on, assuming you can receive and send mail from your home disk station, you're good to go. Now, I would not recommend trying to send mail from your home disk station. It turns out that mine will. However, any mail server worth its salt out there will block mail from a home IP address, which mine is in a known list of home IP addresses. Oh, right, of course. Right. I mean, and it should block mail from me. So what I have done, and I'm not going to open it up here because it would show you the username and password for my SMTP relay. Well, hold on. Let me get ready to take a screenshot. Go ahead, Dave. Yeah, of the thing that I'm going to be sharing to YouTube. So you just come in here to Mail Server SMTP and go to SMTP relay, and you can put in any relay you want that is allowed to send mail from your domain. Now, there are services out there that let you do this PO box was one of them, right? But, you know, this seemed like a perfect match for if you needed mail to come into you, you could forward the mail from your domain using something like mail route, right? And let that just be the front door for your domain so that the world isn't trying to connect to your disk station because I've had this set up for like a week, maybe less and already I'm daily getting notices about, you know, this thing was rejected for trying to hack into your, you know, your IMAP server, this thing's trying to hack into your pop server. And it's like, of course it is. It's a publicly accessible mail server now. Like, there are reasons you don't want to do this at home. But it makes it super easy. And then you could tell mail route, okay, good, you be the front door for my mail, but I'm going to be the pop server and the storage for my mail. And then you can store all your mail and you just tell them to point here and it'll send all your mail along and you're good to go. It, it was a very simple thing. There is a web mail client that you can connect with IMAP or pop with your phone and all of that stuff. And I'm able to connect from everywhere in the, you know, that I've tried, which would presumably be everywhere in the world that lets you check your email. And you can see your emails and it says, okay, yeah, these were sent. And I had some that failed because I set it up wrong when I did it. And, you know, there you go. I signed up for some mailing lists for this so that you can, like I signed up for the left sets letter and things like that. So you can see that mail came in and it just works. It's super simple. So, yes, Jeff, I am now running a mail server again, although in very limited capacity, only for testing. Only for testing, famous last words. You got it.