 Daniel, today we have a meeting room set up as a resource and outlook. Users can invite the room as a resource and outlook when they book a meeting and it will auto reply based on its availability. I would like to display the calendar for the meeting space in our SharePoint site. Any thoughts? Like this is something, you know, so I don't know the answer, Daniel, like personally, hopefully one of these people know, but the, I don't, it's a thing because in every meeting space in a Microsoft building, a lot of enterprise spaces, they've got the calendar for that space. So how do we access that? Do either of you have experiences with that? Well, they used to have the calendar overlays and I totally miss those again, one of those things that they didn't bring forward into the modern of views of SharePoint. The only thing I can think of is when you share a calendar, you can publish a calendar on the web and then that's a web view of the calendar and then in, you can put a web view web part onto a SharePoint page or on a Teams tab and that's the only thing that I could potentially think of because it is a web-based view of that calendar, but I'd have to play with that a little bit. Yeah, it would be. Yeah, look, see the thing is because it's the web part, can you bring it in with the URL? Is there not going to be the interactive component coming into it? I think you're going to need a third-party web part to be able to display it. And there is one out there. I don't have any association with it, but it's called SharePoint. They seem to have an add-in for that, but you know, there are things. We've got in here in our links, we've got quiz as well to display the calendar. Yeah, and the thing is it's like, you know, what's free, what's not? Do you have Teams rooms? Because then that can actually be displayed on any device. Yeah, there's all sorts of other, you know, setups that you could potentially have, but if you're keeping it in a simple form, then it's not quite as simple as it seems, but you're going to have to use a third-party web part. So I found a link and I'll include the link. It's a conversation, somebody asked the question, the conversation over in Microsoft Tech Community. But one of the, something else that I looked at, I thought the old way, I wasn't sure if it updated, but you actually need to create for each of those resources. So I believe it's still the same, that you need to essentially create a room or equipment mailbox in Microsoft 365. Yeah, very specifically. For each resource. So then it's a person, it has an identity, and then it can have that room or equipment mailbox. It'll have then its own calendar for meetings, everything that's visible. So admins will go in and access that, you know, directly. You could have people that are delegates and manage it on behalf. And that's usually how it's done. You know, there's a meeting room and there's an admin who, somebody who ultimately can bump you from that. They control that calendar, but you set up that profile, then it's available. Then you have the SharePoint half of the equation of showing that if you're talking about SharePoint online, there's the calendar tab. I think, can you point that to a specific resource, a specific calendar versus calendar? No. No, but there's a, they all have a web view. So you could use that, you know, one size fits all little tab option of a web view of anything, but you can, as a workaround, you can open any resource calendar in Outlook and then overlay that. So you may not need SharePoint, but then you'd have to teach each person how to open that and display that in their own Outlook so they could see them. I'm assuming they want to see the availability of that room at any given time, as that's what I'm assuming. But without more information, I couldn't say for sure. Yeah. Yeah, it's being able to view it, but not necessarily book it because you wouldn't be able to interact with it that way. It'll only be the owner that can, because otherwise you wouldn't be able to have that auto decline or, you know, those sorts of things. People could go in and start bumping around, which is not what you want to do. You don't want people moving anything on said calendar. Correct. Yeah, but I think you can get read-only. Like I can have read-only access. Kirstie, like you could make me a delegate. I could just see your calendar or not. You know, you can block that. And I believe the same features can be applied to those resource calendars, because it's just an active directory account where the calendar tied to it. Same thing, which is not a human. It's a resource. It could be a projector. It could be, you know, whatever that resource might be. In this case, it just happens to be a room.