Okay, my mistake. Here is another attempt -- questions for December 2, 2025: 1. Please continue the discussion of advice to use separate domains for Buildy projects that contain different kinds of code than just coding for website pages—separate domains instead of building multiple assets under one domain as subdomains or subdirectories. Explain why separate domains are advantageous. 2. Is it necessary or advisable to build projects in Buildy in stages? -- a basic structure and then enhancements, a simple form and then incremental advanced features? Or, can I get good results building everything through one message, like I have seen in some demonstrations? For examples, with one message, build an ecommerce site with checkout and payment integrations? Or, a mortgage calculator with promotional pages and a funnel? Or, a coaching app that is coded to download onto mobile phones as a progressive web app? 3. Does anyone have experience with the “MVP” process that software developers use to create and test a product before they have invested too much time and money without knowing how it is performing and gaining traction in a market? Do we need to follow that process with our Buildy projects, or will Buildy somehow make successful projects that need less testing? 4. If I buy a domain name in Profit Platform, can a later transfer the registration to a different registrar? 5. How do Buildy’s websites/web pages and its hosting perform on site loading speeds and other Google Core Web Vitals? 6. Is the Jobcrusher team compiling a list of project types that Buildy is capable of making? Examples: websites, web pages, funnels, progressive web apps (PWA’s), calculators, push notifications, two-way communications between coaches and groups. 7. Can Buildy’s hosting handle dynamic web content / dynamic websites? 8. Does anyone have experience enough with API’s to advise more about the cost of operations integrated with Buildy? I know about subscription costs charged by companies that issue API’s, but are there other factors that affect the cost—number of users, data consumption, time users are connected to servers, etc.