 Min says, hi, all. I have a question about Azure. Can external users, a guest user, log in to the Azure portal? I mean, I'm assuming you're my Azure portal. How can we enable guest users to log into Azure portal or is it not possible? Thanks a lot. Was that for me? I'm sorry. I fell asleep. We were answering so many PowerPoint questions. I did add your name to this, but just goes off a little bit. Yes, absolutely. There's this thing called Lighthouse, and it actually allows from a management perspective, because I'm assuming if you want to give somebody access to your Azure portal, you want to do it from an administrative or management perspective. Why you would give the average user access to your portal? I do not know. But you can do that as well, because you can give them access to the portal as depending on what role you assign, and they will have limited visibility depending on what their role is in Entra or Azure AD as the new Entra. So if you're looking at from a management point of view, or you want to manage it for multiple groups or something like that, I would take a look at Lighthouse, but also if you want to, you could do it directly from Entra as well. The one other scenario, again, a question for men on this is that, like what are you trying to do? What are you trying to accomplish? Like I just did this with another hoster was doing a migration, needing to give them access, and so there's actually a- Well, they have an avenue then. If they're an actual MSP, then they have an avenue to get to you, add them into your account, and they have an avenue to do that. If they're an actual Microsoft MSP, that's going through the Lighthouse scenario. So that's another scenario. I was going to say like, and what I did, which was see, there's actually a button on there for my database, which could generate the permissions, the access to like I shared FTP access. Yeah, but that's not true for all of Azure. So depending on what they want to ask. That's what I said. Depending on what you're trying to do, there are different ways of providing that level of access. Yeah, and I would go so far as to say that, do they actually need access to the portal? Because I would want to know what they're doing. You could give them a shell, you can give them a Cloud Shell, you can give them something else that has, you have more control over. You even have the Azure desktop app. Do you actually want them inside of that? So we need more information, depending on what their intention is and what they want to do. Yeah, I'd absolutely build a max comments there. Azure, I think as a portal and as a platform, is probably the most mature Microsoft product that has role-based access control. I'd agree with that. Yeah. That's Entra. Yeah. That's Entra and access to all of the functionality that so to Mike's point, what are they trying to do? What are they trying to manage? If you're going to give some access to your portal, there's obviously an intent behind that reason. So what are they trying to achieve? Typically with Entra, role-based access control is the right way to do it. Then you can build on top of that and even include things like time-based access just in time access. There's a whole bunch of things you can do. But I think it's fundamental for this particular question. What is the objective? What is the intent for the user that they're trying to grant access to the portal? Yeah. As a Microsoft employee, I can go to our Microsoft portal, but there's a million things I cannot do. Right. I don't have the right role. One other option I need to point out though is also something they call B2B and B2C. So there are options there as well. So if it is a business partner that you're talking about, that you want to give access to certain aspects of your Azure infrastructure, they have inside of Entra, they have B2B and B2C options, which you should really consider.