 Ian starts out by saying, help please. So is it correct to say that whether the user, the client has Microsoft Teams or an external user, he, she can still have access to the chat before, during and after the meeting? This is that lovely answer of it depends, right? All right. Thank you for that help, all right. Yes, they can, but do they? Yeah. It's up to the settings by the administrator, whether they have that or not. And then I think even now isn't it setting on the meeting itself or is it just a server or tenant level setting? For me, the thing that has been noticeable in that case is if I am a member of the tenant, I am a guest member, the chats will go on and on to generally they have a preset limit, they go back to some extent and then they stop. But if I come in as someone who has just invited and not a member of the tenant, well, that's the time when your chat doesn't work. And if you do get something going, the chat completely disappears and is no longer available. Well, for example, the meetings that I used to have when we, this thing first started, my login or something would go away and I would lose the chat every week. You were able to chat either, there was times where you didn't have the chat available to you either, so. Yeah. I remember that. Or poor Hal couldn't chat with us. We've all experienced that with some of the earlier days and it's something that as the lines of demarcation between the roles and the tenants was different. So you'd realize nothing's working. Oh, I logged into that meeting under my work profile instead of my community profile. And so you'd be like, hey, I'll be right back, you go, switch tenants and over. So they're adding more intelligence. I know Microsoft is looking at solving a lot of these problems long term. So these issues should go away. So whether you are a member of that tenant or not, it's almost like permission should be based around. Like I was invited, let me participate in the thing that I was invited to, regardless of that. And the system should know that it's still me. And what we need is the multi-login, the multi-profiles where it knows my company login, my Microsoft community login, and it knows that both of them are me and treats me the same no matter which one I'm logged into when I joined a meeting that I was invited to. Unless they've turned the feature off on the meeting itself because there's disabled a camera and all of that in the meeting itself. Yeah, for sure. And cause otherwise, it's the TML syndrome, too many logins. Multiple personality. Exactly. I'm already used to that. Psychological answers for this, the multi-profiles. Which I actually had to do on a couple of Teams meetings when they are so continuously playing with this Teams client. And there have been, oh, it's been about a month or so ago. A couple of occasions when I could actually start up the Teams meeting, get the meeting set up, get ready to join and then press the join button and it would just go off into never left behind. And I couldn't get it to come back from that. I found that if I went off and joined it through a web browser, same meeting, it's just bizarre. Yeah. But it wouldn't be Teams if it were bizarre. Yeah. Right, that's right. So I was gonna go with my joke around that they've not yet addressed the issues of someone with multiple logins and multiple tendencies and multiple personalities. To get another wrinkle, another layer to go and solve around that, you know. That's true. And more logins, too, for that matter. I mean, I've got two, I've got a business login and I've got a personal login. And that's all this thing will recognize. In the business login, I've got four tenants divine. In the personal login, because there are like two or three, I use the personal login mostly for anything Microsoft, just to keep the business stuff and the MVP stuff kind of separated. And I got like five down there. And then there's one other, there's a third login I would use and that's what's gonna be used for the Chicago users group. They're putting on a big winging next month. And I'm gonna be in there helping doing the moderating stuff and that kind of back in the, you know, emptying the water baths, the waste cans and refilling the water bottles and that kind of stuff as well as I can virtually. But, so there's a third user that could go in there and it's... Yeah. The thing being great is that at least if you're in the same, if at least you're in the same tenant and you're gonna do something, you can put the teams, the client itself, like I'll have three PGI more, pretty much PGI's in the same time on a given morning. But the rest of us don't know what we're talking about. The PGI's are like the Microsoft, MVP, you know, that NDA really calls. And so, yeah, we get sucked into a lot of those. And so some of them overlap. And I think most of us here have all tried to log into one of them on the desktop, had a second one running on the browser. Yeah, or on your phone. You can actually wrap the two of them in the browser. Yeah, right. Or multiple browser. That's about my limit. Three concurrent meetings is at the stage I have issues trying to take care of it. But Sherry, I just pulled up the an individual meeting form. And I didn't have the ability to say yes or no to the persistent chat after a meeting wrap. So that is still gonna be at the teams admin setting level. So does anyone know if you are in a meeting and you disconnect from the actual meeting, but the chat is still available in your teams client, you have the option to mute, or sorry, to leave the meeting chat. If people came back to that and started chatting in there, do you know if you would be able to return to that chat and see those messages? Yes, yes, I'll let you time. Yeah, you can. Oh yeah, these meetings that I attend in the daytime, they'll be one on some Office 365 subject. And the meeting is running. Basically what I'll do is I'll take my log into the Microsoft tenant and do all my meeting work in there. Basically, because I got the most access to the various teams in there. But I mean, unless I change back to the business tenant, as long as I keep the Microsoft tenant open, I mean, a meeting that could have ended a day ago with its chat still open, somebody will come back in, hey, where is the recording? Well, that's the difference though. So I don't think there's a question about that. If you've not left it like, you're still a member of that. You still have access to that. So we've got that with some of these calls where the chat could go on for days, you can see other things. But if you intentionally leave that group, like if you go, can you rejoin that and go see it? Like, or once you depart it. I think you can. I don't think you can. I don't think you can. I think that's the difference between leave and hide, because you can hide it and it will reactivate unless it's a persistent meeting and you join that meeting again, then it'll come back, right? Yeah. You have effectively rejoined because you joined the meeting. Yeah. Yeah, that's an important point. If it's a one-off, no, you leave it, you've left it. So you can't rejoin it. But if it's a recurring. That would be the case with the meetings that you use to run. Yeah. Well, that's what I would leave those going. But that's why for those, what I, my option is I mute them. So I can go back and find the conversation. So I will mute almost all of those. So I'm not getting the notifications and things around it. But when I need it, it's there and it's searchable and it's, you know, everything else that I can, and I'll usually, I'll go back, especially on these, like these MVP calls that, you know, is, and I'll go back and say, what have people been talking about the last couple of days around that? So it's a, yeah, it remains searchable. But I think that's an important bonus feature to highlight too. You can be in a meeting because in those MVP calls, you cannot hide the chat. There's too much good stuff going on in the chat, but you get those little toasts popping up all the time. So if you're in a meeting like that, go mute the chat in your chat pane and Teams and just stay there. And that'll keep it from being quite so chaotic. Blows up my phone too. Right. Get from three different things, you know. Yeah, too much. Tamo. By default, I mute just about everyone that I'm in. Yeah. Totally.