True, all right. So yesterday on Twitter, Christian Cardozo asked me how I'm liking my new iPad Pro. He also asked if you can annotate PDFs on it. The answer is, I like the iPad Pro a lot and yes, you can annotate with the Apple Pencil. So, I'm going to show you the three apps that I have at my disposal and run through some of the features or lack thereof. I'm going to try to do this in under ten minutes, so bear with me from talking fast. So first things first, we'll open up. Now, right now I have it in landscape mode just for the sake of this video, but generally, I would have it in portrait mode. But, you can see I have the toolbar up here at the top. So, that's the toolbar. Generally, though, that's not there when you first open it up. You have to go to the menu here, you have to go to comments. You can close off that sidebar and then it pops up up here. So, let's get rid of those. Now, the pen tool works pretty well. You can adjust the thickness. One thing I'm not crazy about is that, you know, once I've written something, unless I exit out of that tool, any adjustment I make is made to what I just wrote. So, for example, I would have to go to the highlighter and then back to the pen, change the color, change the thickness, and now I could go back to writing. The writing itself is fairly smooth, no real complaints there. The highlighter, I'm trying to highlight the title right now and you're seeing nothing happening. That's because you have to put quite a bit of force into it and the amount of...