 But Eric says that there's a new update for ChronoSync. ChronoSync now goes to 11, and it has support for Sonoma, but also adds support, apparently, for Cloud services for your backup. So you can do, I guess, so people who don't know what ChronoSync is, it's a syncing and backup program. I'll kind of mention how I use it, because it relates to what we were talking about earlier. But apparently now it can sync files and backups to iCloud, Google Drive, OneDrive, Dropbox, Box, and other Cloud services. So that is a new feature that I'm going to have to check out. I didn't know that this update had come out, and I'm actually a ChronoSync user. There you go. But yeah, so I've used ChronoSync in my backup strategy to be the tool that is like, I call it my selective archive backup. And so at its root level, what ChronoSync can do is all kinds of things related to backup. But the primary thing is syncing folders or volumes or directories from one location to another. And it could be local on your Mac, it could be to a network drive, it could be however you want to set it up. It is an amazing tool, and you can set up schedules and all kinds of rules. It's very, very advanced. So I've always used it to do the safe delete thing for files on my desktop. And I'll give you one example, because I think it's the easiest to kind of grok. So doing my podcast, I have a Maccast folder and all of my crap and audio files and everything go into an individual folder for each episode. So my show notes, all that stuff. I wanna make sure that I archive that stuff. So I have ChronoSync set up to automatically on a schedule, sync that folder to multiple locations. I have it syncing to a local Drobo, I have it syncing to a network drive, and then those drives in turn are backed up to the cloud. So I have multiple backups. So ChronoSync is just always running in the background doing its thing. And so I know when I go back in, I've finished a show, it's been a week later or two weeks later, I can safely delete that entire show directory off my local drive, because I know ChronoSync has already moved it off to my other storage locations, my aircraft locations, and it's backed up to the cloud. So I have no anxiety about deleting that stuff. And I have multiple things set up like that through ChronoSync. That's just one example. I have it also for like movie files and my photo library and a bunch of things. And again, you can do whole volumes, you could do individual folders, you could do individual, you can set this up however you want. And it sounds like now I can go straight to the cloud, which is great. The only problem is I'm gonna have to upgrade to like the 12 terabyte. Yeah, right, yeah, exactly, right, right, right. But that's fine, I can. I mean, you could sync it to your own private cloud, like, you know, a Synology disk station or something like that too. I have a, to tie it all together, you mentioned your workflow and the last step was, and then you know, you can safely delete it because it is synced to all these other places. You could use Hazel to safely delete those things that are say a month old. That is, that's what I do here. In fact, I have Hazel set to move audio files and video files in the Mac eCab folder to my Synology disk station after a month and then they're just gone from my drive and it's all, it's like, it's life changing. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So yeah, this, the, we had a little conversation in our Discord about this and Nibsuk said, you know, because I asked people, what do you use ChronoSync for? Because I was trying to wrap my, I knew, I know what it is, but I, like, you need to explain what you're using it for so that it resonates with people. And I'm glad you did that, yeah. And he said, we use it for copying large amounts of data because unlike Finder, it can skip any bad files and carry on and then gives a report at the end of any files it skipped. Whereas iCloud Drive kind of gets hung up on these things and you don't really know what's going on. In a sense, ChronoSync is like iCloud Drive Pro, you know, where it adds a whole lot to it and lets you kind of do these things. So yeah, thank you. Another great feature of this, got to mention, is it has a checkbox that says, do not sync deleted items from your source. So if you've set up a source folder that is syncing, right, and you delete and that sync is still running, it will ignore those deleted files, keeping them on your destinations, which that's another feature I love. Because again, it means I can safely delete something. I think I use this for backing up, this is how I back up the movies I've downloaded from, you know, that I've purchased on the iTunes Store, whatever we call it now, the movie store, the TV app. From Apple, I bought movies from Apple. I want to make sure that I archive those because they can go away at any time and I want to always make sure I have a copy. But I don't maybe always want it stored where I have it stored or downloaded, yeah. So I can safely delete, knowing that sync says, even though I've deleted it here and it's still syncing the same folder, it will not delete it in my archive. It'll keep it. Right, oh, so yes, so very much, you know, iCloud Drive Pro where you actually do get to make these granular decisions about what's gonna happen with your data. So I looked and in addition to the cloud services you mentioned, ChronoSync will also sync to Amazon S3 compatible backup destinations. And, which we talked about last week, I talked about Arc backup syncing to S3 compatible destinations and how there were many of those. And including iDrive, which is super inexpensive right now. So like go, if you need, if you were gonna pay for larger iCloud storage for this, Adam, you might be better off just paying for iDrive.