I've got kind of a fun example here that's going to kind of show you some advanced features of Excel. I have Office 365. I doubt this is available in previous versions, but it probably is available in Excel 2019. There's this tool in the newer versions of Excel, you can put in different countries or geographical locations. And if you go up here to the Data tab, there's this Geography command button in the data types. This is called Convert to Geography. What we can do is we can take various countries and we can have it automatically look up from a database a bunch of different things. I've got these different countries here. I've got a column for electric power consumption, GDP, gas price, life expectancy. You can even look up the national anthem, current population. And then, I've added in GDP per capita by dividing column C by column G. Whenever you open up this file, it automatically updates. We can then take that data, and there's a really cool way that you can plot geographical maps in Excel. Here, I've got the gas prices in dollars per liter for the countries in the table above. I've also got the GDP per capita, and you can kind of compare the GDP per capita of various countries. So this is what I'm going to be showing you how to do in this short screencast. So I've got a list of a bunch of countries that I've just kind of selected. What I'm going to do is I'm going to highlight those countries. You can go up here to the Data tab and Geography. It takes a minute, but what it does is it adds something known as a Card. And that's what this little thing to the left denotes. Up here, in the Data types, there's currently Stocks and Geography. Although, in the future, Microsoft anticipates that there's going to be a lot more of these different types of things. So this is a database, and I can go up here to this Insert Data, and we can select a bunch of different fields. So I'm just going to choose a couple of these. Let's do electric power consumption, so I can select that. I can go ahead, and let's do GDP. Make that a little bit bigger. I'm going to add in gasoline price, so you can get the actual current gasoline price, the average in dollars per liter. Let me go ahead and select a couple more. Let's do life expectancy and national anthem. So I've got those in there. I'm just going to add some column headings here. So I formatted the labels here. I'm also going to add in another column for population. If you want to add in another column, you can just highlight the data again, and go up here to this Insert Data. And I'm just going to do population. I'm also going to add a GDP per capita. And that we can obtain by simply dividing the GDP of that country divided by the population. And I can just double-click that down. And now, we've got our information. The nice thing about this is it automatically updates. So if you log on, you open up this file tomorrow or the next day or in a week from now or a year from now, it will automatically pull down the new information from the web. I can select the countries here. And I'm going to select gas prices by holding down the Ctrl key. If you go up here to Insert, in the charts, there's this Map type. Right now, there's only a single map type, so I'm just going to select the Filled Map. And it brings up this chart that is a filled map. And so, this is showing the gas price in dollars per liter. And so, you can kind of look at that and compared across the world. I'm going to add in another chart for GDP per capita, holding down the Ctrl key. And I can go up here to Insert > Maps, make another Filled Map. And that's GDP per capita. Just kind of a interesting and fun way to automatically get information from a database that's found online. And you can populate your Excel spreadsheets with that, and you can also make really nice geographical maps of that data. Thanks for watching.