no. And and I think one of the questions and this kind of goes back to my time, it all covered when I was the CIO for all covered and served SMEs, there's a real question as to how much nsmb should really get involved into that low layer of depth? I mean, should they really be developing applications on AWS? Again, I think the the answer that holds true as an enterprise, which is if it's incredibly differentiating, and they can't leverage a service to be able to do it, and it is core to their IP, then maybe, but short of that, if they can buy a service, and that's more efficient for them, so they can focus their energy and other spaces. I mean, Keith, go back to, you know, what, many of us on this call, just kind of looking around the pictures many of us would be doing? I mean, do we run our own email servers still? Do we run a lot of our own, you know, web servers and infrastructure? Why not? We can we probably still have the technical astuteness to be able to do so. I know, I'll speak for myself. I've probably lost that in in recent years. But my point is, at some point, you have to ask yourself, what's the most valuable use of your time and as a business owner, whether you're an enterprise or an SMB, you should be asking that same question. And what where does technology fit into that answer? And that should be the guidance that we're providing to folks. But getting back to what Shawn was saying about maybe it's too far afield and government legislation. I'm a strong believer when it comes to technology legislation should be as far out as possible that we need to take more ownership from a business standpoint around how we manage it, and how we manage data and doing the right thing. If legislation does come into play, and this is actually where a number of vendors are playing because I'm involved in a number of vendors, legislative educational efforts, where they're educating folks on the hill, and I'll say that they are trying to take a similar stance where they're trying to avoid legislation coming in partly because self serving Lee it, it hurts their business, right, it constrains them. But the other piece is if we can leave it and legislated and let the free market actually take it forward and do the right thing when it comes to data. That's better for everybody all around. But if the goes too far afield. And I think social media is prime a prime example of where I think we're going to see some more legislation conversation come into play, especially after the recent events, there's going to be a real question about where it comes in and how it comes in. And those should be two different conversations.