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From YouTube: 99th Mass Innovation Night
Description
Greater Grove Hall Main Streets hosted it's 99th Mass Innovation Night event in Dorchester. Mayor Walsh checked out innovative startup ideas created by African-Americans in the tech industry, reinforcing Boston's goal to support it's women and minority-owned businesses.
A
B
A
Going
to
give
some
attention
to
the
people
on
stage
if
I
haven't
met
you
before
my
name
is
Bobby
Carlton
I'm,
one
of
the
founders
of
masturbation
nights,
and
this
is
mass
innovation.
Night
number
99
I
want
to
thank
everybody
who
is
here
tonight.
You
are
here
to
support
local
startups
and
local
entrepreneurs.
So
if
you
are
tweeting
use
the
hashtag
mid,
99
masturbation
ice
has
helped
launch
over
a
thousand
new
products
and
that's
entirely
for
free.
A
A
C
C
It
they're
here
I
also
want
to
recognize
our
motion,
chair
of
the
board
that
you
probably
have
here
for
16
years
of
leadership
way
in
the
back
and
when
you
came
into
saw
a
woman
quilting
with
a
computerized
analogy
analysis,
her
mother,
it's
a
total
world,
recognized
for
the
work,
we're
just
showing
even
things
as
a
storage
of
traditional
as
clothing
have
now
the
computerized
and
rental
eyes,
and
now
they
are
also
part
of
technology.
I
need
to
get
a
special
thanks,
a
lot
of
people.
C
When
you
came
here,
you
might
have
seen
a
Brigid
back,
there
see
Bridget
and
she
was
the
one
who
took
your
name
or
information,
but
if
she
did
get
it,
please
give
it
to
us.
So
we
can
stay
in
contact
with
you,
but
this
was
extremely.
She
was
really
helpful
and
with
me
attentively,
the
investor,
but
I
also
want
to
recognize
the
Arab
sources.
Our
partners
are
taking
it
very
quickly.
C
I'll
be
brief,
but
I
have
to
recognize
going
to
Bridgette
and
Skylab
aspirating
Africa,
the
abuser
community,
electro
Innovation,
Centre,
smarter,
the
story
from
our
innovation
lab
without
a
partner
on
the
Box
agency.
Again,
I
appreciate
the
fact
is:
everybody
came
together
and
make
this
event
a
success,
so
I
can
make
a
few
changes,
and
what
do
you
say
everybody
to
who
tweeted
post
read,
shared
and
invited
their
friends,
which
is
why
we
have
the
people
that
we
have
here
tonight.
C
I
want
to
give
a
shout
out
the
basic
banner
media
partner,
but
also
other
child
on
touch
106.
He
also
using
for
BNN.
Some
people
saw
a
path
recruits
wall
if
restore
quit,
Boston
phrase
really
off
guard
and
Supreme
I've
done
during
your
RVD
Kalon,
very
the
sorting,
a
big
city.
So
again,
all
these
people
helped
to
promote
this
I
appreciate
it.
You
notice
that
Luther
was
here.
So
if
you
end
up
just
going
to
one
caterer,
we
can
support
the
small
business
in
a
part
of
the
Commonwealth
kitchen.
C
And
hardly
honestly,
we
should
I
think
the
sponsors
they
were
great
of
is
absolutely
crazy.
To
raise
money
is
how
much
the
event
asking
out
recovery,
and
so
one
of
the
first
people
that
got
better
is
Carrie
Williams
from
what
United
and
I
have
this
great.
She
invited
me
to
come
in
and
talk
to
her
without
having
event
recording
anybody.
That
kind
of
talked
also
run
up
so
one
United
Eastern
Austin,
cyberspace,
Watson
foundation,
where's
Quinn,
Geneva,
Dorchester
Bay.
So
thank
you
all.
C
The
sponsors
that
help
Nick,
Hagen
and
I
have
one
new
story,
and
this
is
what
the
context
of
one
day
a
little
icicles
here,
and
it
was
a
class
where
the
kids
were
learning.
How
to
write
code
for
computer
games
and
I
had
a
chance
to
a
burn
student
demonstrate
your
game
for
me
and
it's
in
your
integral
demonstration.
I
got
each
ice,
Tyler
kid
having
ever
thought
of
having
their
own
video
game
company
and,
unfortunately
every
student
said
no.
C
So
it's
hardly
that
while
they
might
have
the
skill
sets
like
understanding
things
like
that,
but
they
didn't
have
a
mindset
for
coding
of
its
growth
entrepreneurship.
So
what
we
do
is
we
try
to
reach
out
to
various
groups
of
the
area
of
schools,
so
they
could
come
to
an
event
like
this
and
see
all
these
role
models.
All
of
you
here,
people
of
color
view
over
community
and
we
have
to
be
great
models.
They
example
for
young
people.
C
So
again
that
was
that
was
important
to
us
and
so
for
going
to
deal
with
pieces
of
justification
and
whatnot,
we
have
to
have
higher
paid
jobs
and
living
wage
jobs.
We
have
had
jobs,
they
pay
a
lot
more.
That
means
have
opportunities
for
wealth
creation,
we're
not
to
be
able
to
convince
the
wealth
gap
between
communities.
C
If
you
don't
provide
these
kind
of
opportunities
and
so
I
think
if
you
hire
business
you're
thinking
about
having
a
business,
you
know
that
I'm
thinking
of
having
a
purpose,
how
many
is
greater,
go
home
in
streets
for
people
that
you
need
to
know
are
in
this
room
and
if
they
not
know
somebody's
know
them,
there's
all
kinds
of
services
we
can
get
you
connected
I'm,
assuming
Church
reveals
we
get
you
connected
some
stay
connected,
so
I'm
eager
to
sign
up.
So
we
can
stay
in
contact
with
you.
We
can.
D
C
C
I'm
not
going
to
stay
on
simple
commands,
I
already
know,
but
I
can
only
talk
about
it
for
my
own
personal
experience,
so
the
mayor
and
I
started
at
roughly
the
same
time.
I
get
air
loss
at
Reverend,
innocents,
church
and
so
I
invited
him
to
come
to
Hall,
because
you're
going
to
have
some
renovations
take
place
or
again,
it's
very
easy
to
show
when
things
aren't
working,
but
it's
a
lot
harder
to
show
when
things
are
looking.
C
So
we
wanted
to
do
the
before
sort
of
before
and
after
pictures,
so
I
didn't
know,
because
I
was
here
to
this
realm
it.
What
Amer
does
is
first
100
days
if
a
signal
or
is
it
just.
This
is
important,
so
within
his
first
100
days
of
awkward
came
to
grow,
fall
order,
the
photo
which
I
appreciated.
We
also
his
first
State
of
the
City
address.
He
included,
grow
tall.
He
said
growth,
Hall
and
voting
taneema
are
hard
to
get
Adrienne
free
makeovers.
C
So
we
appreciated
the
fact
that
we
got
called
out
to
that
and
again
we
should
before
before
and
after
pictures,
because
we've
done
a
lot
for
a
five
walk
street
light
on
the
onion.
Some
talk
about
improvements
to
roads
and
things
like
that
fever
Columbia.
So
here's
the
lady.
They
know
whenever
all
done
look
what
I've
done,
but
certainly
we
have
a
lot
of
things
that
you
can
see
their
little
proving
a
dozen
like
you
say,
career
fours
if
he
helped
raise
money
for
the
nation
and
that's
what
made
the
possible
view.
C
People
seen
from
the
banners
of
sweet,
Hall
or
you've
seen
some
the
public
art
like
a
like
an
automaton,
a
or
the
prince
art
until
the
utility
boxes.
Those
are
all
people
for
grants
that
we
get
from
the
foundation
so
I
like
to
have
to
marry,
according
to
support
innovation,
that
ever
heard
where
first
I
read
a
copy
things
going
to
target
the
Seaport
District.
C
C
Let's
get
it,
and
so
I
really
appreciate
that
again,
just
like
a
surprise
coming
soon,
the
as
a
of
a
new
part
where
your
parking
lot
coming
here,
psych
I,
have
to
bring
the
dollar
project
and
give
all
these
kinds
of
programs
that
come
into
the
query
or
making
a
difference.
I
identify
a
clear
identity.
Problems
gave
security
cameras
for
the
part,
but
but
but
I
haven't
gotten
to
yet.
We
are
still
working
my
way
through
I'm
working
my
way
through
the
process.
C
So
anyway,
I
just
might
in
fact
was
very
chic
and
of
hearing
and
smiling
I
would
say
fair
isle
I.
Never
would
you
would
see
major
Bobby
said
you'd
like
to
have
something
like
that
in
the
area
and
I
told
you
I
said
we
are
going
to
that
happened
and
so
make
your
buddies.
You
know
came
from
MIT,
so
the
new
strategy
life
completed
here
and
in
gang
the
statute
someplace
else.
Why
can't
recreate
it
here
and
there?
C
You
document
in
this
community
will
bring
high
higher
paying
jobs
better
wages
and
I
have
to
have
people
take
two
months
ago,
train
you
get
to
a
job
someplace
else
on
the
other
side
of
town,
so
I
believe
that
we
can
make
this
happen.
Always
the
people
in
a
room
can
help
me
from
Agra
hat,
and
we
want
to
work
with
you.
E
Thank
you
and
I
want
to
thank
you
to
the
discussion
and
thank
you
for
calling
up
in
front
of
the
whole
room
above
the
camera,
so
I
think
I
have
no
choice
now,
but
I
want
to
take
it.
I
want
to
thank
that
the
board
has
a
greater
growth,
Hall
maintenance
program
for
the
great
work
they
do.
All
of
you
that
are
here
today.
Thank
you
for
your
great
work.
I
want
to
thank
Fabien
mass
innovations
for
their
great
work
as
well.
E
E
We
are
state
representative
of
all
that
I
think
you
represented
growl
Oh
stainless
signing
change
the
ads
without
stating
state
council
can
be
and
I
think
representative
Tyler
might
be
on
our
way.
So
I
want
to
thank
her
as
well
innovation.
A
couple
years
ago,
when
we
did
the
Boeing
building
we
put
in
there
an
Innovation
Lab
people
said:
why
are
you
putting
Innovation
Lab
at
the
Boland
building
and
we
said
because
we
have
innovation
on
the
sub
Lawson
waterfront.
We
have
innovation
all
over
the
city
of
Boston.
E
We
need
to
bring
innovation
or
entrepreneurship
or
that
lab
in
there.
We've
really
decided
to
see
more
more
people
over
there.
When
you
look
around
this
room,
you
think
of
innovation.
Look
around
the
shown
here
tonight
in
this
innovation,
in
Roxbury
and
in
Boston,
and
other
parts
of
our
city
is
alive
and
well
so
it's
great
to
see
everyone
here
tonight.
E
Crowfall
is
a
great
neighborhood
to
live
work,
playing
we're
going
to
continue
to
fight
to
make
sure
that
happened.
The
city
is
investing
in
growth
Hall,
as
ed
said,
to
continue
to
thrive
and
grow.
When
you
think
about
what's
happening
and
enable,
is
you
think
about
income
inequality,
you
think
about
all
the
things
that
we
have.
The
two
things
that
we
have
to
do
is
create
job
opportunity
and
create
wealth
for
folks
and
create
more
housing.
E
A
better
job
of
in
the
city
of
Austin
is
networking
and
make
sure
you,
if
you
have
a
business,
guys
count
on
if
you
don't
patch
your
name
along
because
that's
how
it's
done.
That's
how
it's
done
at
GE!
That's
how
it's
done
at
Apple.
That's
that's
how
it's
done
in
Microsoft
and
that's
how
it's
done
instead
and
that's
how
it's
done
a
roster.
F
E
You
just
need
to
continue
to
reach
out
to
work
with
each
other
and
how
do
we
help
network?
We
have
people
here
from
the
city
that
wants
to
help.
You
I
was
happy
to
be
at
one
of
the
lashes
support
that
we
had
focus
on
women
entrepreneurs,
and
this
is
something
interesting
numbers
I
want
to
just
shout.
B
E
The
City
of
Austin
last
year
it
helps
women,
especially
minority
women,
get
one-on-one
coaching
for
networking
opportunities,
people
of
color
own
businesses.
Ownership
is
growing,
for
example,
I,
don't
know
if
many
people
know
this,
but
when
I
saw
this
number
I
jumped
out
of
me.
The
number
of
businesses.
E
Making
that
group
of
people
the
fastest
growing
group
of
entrepreneurs
in
our
country,
people
are
talking
about
that.
Other
people
are
talking
about
their
talk
about
the
beds
done,
but
they're
not
talking
about
that
number.
That's
a
real
number!
That's
a
real
opportunity
to
build
off
of
that
momentum.
Tonight.
The
theme
of
tonight's
african-american
founders
of
tech
business
there's
an
opportunity
here
that
we
need
to
continue
to
move
forward
on
that
opportunity
and
that's
something
that
we
think
of
what's
happening
in
our
city.
It's
so
important.
E
The
focus
is
great,
highlighting
the
diverse
talent
that
we
have
in
our
city.
It's
an
inspiration
for
our
young
people,
interested
in
starting
their
own
businesses,
pursuing
STEM
careers
as
well
as
exciting
potentials
in
these
fields
in
City
Hall.
We
value
the
creativity
in
these
areas
and
we
also
have
people
that
work
for
us
in
City
Hall
that
are
there
to
help
you
we
have
folks
and
small
business.
Carolyn
Clark
is
here
from
economic
development.
This
is
here
to
help
you
create
opportunities,
we're
moving
forward
in
a
whole
bunch
of
different
ways.
E
E
We
think
about
opportunities
that
our
neighborhood
we're
not
thinking
about
opportunities
in
one
part
of
my
neighborhood,
what
they
have
opportunities
across
our
neighborhoods
and
I.
Look
a
lot
in
a
lot
of
Millennials,
it's
in
front
of
me
in
tonight
that
are
exciting.
It
ready
to
go,
but
when
you
leave
it
only
here
to
you,
connect
with
somebody
from
our
city
make
to
make
sure
that
how
we
can
help
you
technology
has
the
power
to
help
solve
the
biggest
challenges
that
we
face
as
a
city
in
areas
like
education,
Public,
Safety
and
economic
opportunity.
E
Inclusion
and
equality-
something
that's
really
important-
that
city
it
can
help
us
bridge
the
wage
gap.
We
hear
a
lot
about
wage
disparities.
We
hear
a
lot
about.
We
hear
a
lot
about
income
inequality
and
we
hear
a
lot
about
racism
quite
honestly,
and
this
is
an
opportunity
to
be
able
to
really
focus
on
opportunities
for
employment
and
really
close
that
those
gender
divides
and
those
those
those
ethnic
divides.
Those
opposed
every
divide
that
we
have
to
close
it's
important
for
us
to
do
that.
E
What
commend
and
embossed
into
creating
the
increase
in
opportunities
for
entrepreneurship,
to
our
small
business
plan,
to
our
wee
boss,
throughout
stout
hub
initiatives
by
the
way
I
next,
we've
last
week,
is
going
to
be
October
16th
or
the
20th
and
the
Charis
Charis
plain:
that's
what
actually
will
talk
to
her
I
want
to
end
what
I
want
to
thank
the
groups
that
came
in
tonight
to
make
this
happen
in
grow
fall.
Thank
you
for
that.
E
I
want
to
thank
Skylab
I,
want
to
thank
of
Roxbury
Innovation
Center
I
want
to
thank
smarter
in
the
city.
I
want
to
thank
epicenter
community
I
want
to
thank
Masada
partners.
I
want
to
take
the
family
lab
using
Innovation,
Lab
and
I
want
to
thank
all
the
folks
in
here
tonight,
because
that's
why
we're
here
we're
here
really
to
create
opportunities.
E
We
want
if
we
want
to
be
an
inclusive,
global
city
which
we
are,
and
we
want
to
continue
to
be
that
we
have
to
make
sure
that
that
opportunity
for
innovation
and
technology
is
not
just
happening.
One
part
of
my
see
what
happening
in
all
the
corners
of
our
city
thank
you
and
enjoy
the
rest
of
the
night.
A
D
A
B
H
B
D
H
Can
lend
you
money?
The
state
can
provide
you
technical
system.
The
state
can
also
invest
in
you,
so
I
would
encourage
all
of
you
to
contact
us.
Just
look
up
Massachusetts
office
of
business
development,
every
big
business
one
was
a
small
business
and
every
small
business
was
started
with
an
idea
of
one
person.
So
I
like
to
congratulate
all
of
you
and
bring.
D
D
A
I
B
I
Know
bringing
this
to
Roxbury,
but
someone
said
not
just
run
with
a
girl
halt
Roxbury.
So
it's
great
to
see
all
this
beautiful
talent
in
my
neighborhood,
I'll,
say
and
I
just
want
to
quickly
say
folks,
know
me
as
an
Austin
or
but
for
the
last
ten
months,
I've
been
positioned
myself
in
a
banking
world,
so
I'm
actually
at
Eastern
Bank
helping
them
spend
their
profits
and
we're
starting
a
new
foundation
called
the
foundation
for
business
equity
and
our
first
objective
out
of
the
gate
is
to
help
black
and
Latino
businesses
grow.
I
So
that's
a
big
general
announcement.
There's
a
website
called
the
business
equity
initiatives.
If
you
just
google,
it
you'll
find
out
more
we're
doing
everything
so
in
the
kitchen
sink
at
we
started
with
established
businesses
and
really
helping
them
grow,
and
then
we
want
to
set
looking
into
the
emerging
businesses.
So
you.
J
I
B
K
L
M
M
N
Of
the
greatest
pleasures
in
life
is
doing
the
things
that
people
say
you
cannot
do
three
and
a
half
years
ago,
I
found
it
with
two
partners,
one
of
the
few
technology
for-profit
accelerators,
targeting
specifically
underrepresented
entrepreneurs.
In
the
past
three
and
a
half
years,
we've
funded
11
companies
have
a
which
now
have
patents
or
patent
pending.
One
of
our
most
recent
investments
just
finished
the
tech
stars,
New
York,
City
winter
program
and
we've
recently
raised
one
and
a
half
million
dollars
for
in
seed
investment.
O
O
B
P
You
thank
us
good
evening
when
the
amends
I'm
with
awesome
using
the
project
we
are
creating
a
new,
hopefully
governed
economy
in
Boston
focused
on
communities
of
color
and
working-class
entities.
We
are
doing
that
by
creating
a
community
controlled
capital
investment
fund
and
tying
that
was
a
business
alliances,
business
certification,
anchor
institution
strategy,
time
making
alternative
currently
in
consumer
organ.
Q
Good
evening,
Sheena
Collier
director
of
strategy
at
the
Boston
Chamber
of
Commerce,
so
the
chamber
is
a
business
organization,
membership
organization-
it's
not
sector
specific,
but
we
do
realize
as
the
particularly
this
growing
tech
and
innovation
as
economy
and
Laughton
that
the
chamber
has
to
really
change
to
meet
the
needs
of
the
city.
I
heard
a
phrase
today
that
little
chambers
are
fail.
Plm
ale
is
so
we're
trying
to
change
that
with
the
leadership
of
our
with
the
leadership
of
our
presidency.
Q
All
generally,
who
really
wants
to
focus
on
not
being
your
grandfather's
chamber
and
so
through
the
ways
we're
doing
that
specifically,
is
through
a
focus
on
gaining
commitments
from
major
corporations
throughout
the
city
to
do
business
with
small
businesses
led
by
people
of
color,
to
create
more
access
to
equity
and
wealth,
as
well
as
city
of
wait,
which
is
one
of
our
signature
programs
focus
on
young
people.
Young
professionals
there's
a
lot
of
sitting
with
delegates
in
the
room,
making
sure
that
20
and
30
year
olds
in
the
city
have
a
voice
with
the
Civic.
R
A
B
A
K
A
F
K
A
B
P
B
J
A
A
Every
single
month,
and
usually
it's
two
top
four
companies
that
get
to
present
this
month.
We
had
a
tie,
so
we
have
five
companies
presenting
and
we're
actually
going
to
start
things
off
with
a
real,
quick
introduction
to
our
student
startup
spotlight.
Every
month
we
have
one
of
the
local
universities
bring
us
their
students
who
have
a
so
they
get
to
come
up
here
and
tell
you
a
little
bit
about
their
program
and
their
company.
So
actually
let.
T
You
jump
right
in
I
was
going
everybody.
My
name
is
torie
land
and
I.
Am
the
assistant
director
right
all
right,
which
is
what
was
Institute's
technologies,
innovation,
entrepreneurship,
development,
but
so
accelerate
is
a
extra
curricular
program
that
allows
students
to
be
exposed
to
entrepreneurial
education,
place
where
students
called
an
idea,
the
passion
theirs
and
throughout
the
semesters,
because
you,
the
skill,
sets
that
they
need
to
take
their
ideas
next
level
today,
I'm
very
proud
to
present
to
you
introduce
a.
B
T
D
My
name
is
Altima
Thoreau
from
Humber
community
center
and
if
you
have
to
check
our
table
check
it
out
in
the
back,
all
blue
ocean
seas
at
least,
and
basically,
we
increase
engagement.
The
community
I
learned
the
teens
have
access
to
their
local
resources,
events
and
other
opportunities
to
keep
them
empowered
and
involved
stay
off
the
streets.
We
actually
ran
a
survey
at
each
division
across
Boston
and
we
thought
that
that
71%
of
the
teens
are
actually
aware
of
the
sentence
of
the
night.
J
A
A
Going
to
start
the
presentations
from
our
entrepreneurs,
these
presentations
were
chosen
in
the
online
voting,
so
each
one
of
them
has
five
minutes
at
the
end
of
their
presentation.
They
will
take
two
questions.
While
we
swap
out
the
presentations
in
the
web
on
the
screen.
So
if
they
don't
fill
up
their
five
minutes
doesn't
mean
they
get
three
minutes
of
questions.
Okay,
so
we're
going
to
start
off
with
Fab
Lab,
and
here.
B
B
A
B
G
U
U
In
the
series
that
one
South
and
Technology
Center,
we've
got
one
at
Lena
Park
and
we
recently
have
a
small
space,
120
110
square
state
in
the
grandma
in
late
innovation
labs
in
upper
corner.
So
we
want
you
to
come
and
see
us
there
we're
putting
that
in
these
other
phases.
These
are
all
community
owned.
We
do
not
own
them.
We
do
not
run
them,
but
we
provide
access.
We
provide
try
to
help
see
what
we
can
to
support
their.
B
U
Lives
as
directing
information
to
them,
my
name
is
Dallin,
as
I
said,
and
I
am
evangelist
for
Fablab.
To
tell
the
good
news
about
12
years
ago,
I
stepped
off
fur
off
of
Austin's
curb
and
into
a
new
play,
a
place
that
changed
my
life
that
my
Forte's
living
there
is
I,
was
homeschooling
them
and
trying
to
find
activities
for
them,
and
I
found
out
that
this
place
that
had
these
computers
and
the
machines
that
were
run
by
commuter
computers
would
work
fantastic
and
that,
and
as
a
result
of
that,
I've
got
a
daughter.
B
U
G
U
Are
the
startup
capital
of
the
world
and
that
labs
function
at
that
space?
We
want
that
lab,
not
just
in
our
communities
when
we
saw
how
we
were
doing
and
how
well
these
communities
were
doing.
We
thought
you
know
it's
not
enough
for
us
to
have
Fab
Lab
for
us
to
do
something
with.
We
thought
that
we
need
to
have
something
for
more
people
to
work
with,
and
that's
what
that
said.
They
can
have
the
tools
of
a
new
economy
in
at
their
fingertips.
B
U
Through
one
of
these
labs,
instead
Giannini
disconnected
Adam,
we
wanted
them
to
come
together
to
work
together
to
build
best
practices
for
for
the
communities
to
be
able
to
have
it
to
be
able
to
innovate.
You
know
you
could
go
into
a
lab,
so
we've
had
this
happen
to
us
a
little
while
ago,
where
who
gives
when
to
Lena
Park
Fab
Lab,
and
they
said
what
are
we
going
to
make
today
into
a
less
than
two
hours.
D
U
D
U
A
D
U
Many
creations:
do
you
mean
success
story?
Okay?
So
the
question
is
how
many
success
stories
that
come
out
of
the
Fab
Lab
okay,
so
one
of
the
greatest
success
stories
of
bad
labs
is
maker
body.
Now
most
people
don't
understand
that
that
the
digital
fabrication,
those
the
desktop
3d
printing
industry,
actually
started
in
the.
U
With
greening
the
ghettos
project
and
in
the
Bronx
in
New
York,
and
so
that
they
all
they
wanted,
was
some
small
3d
printer.
They
want
a
few
hundred
and
they
made
when
they
designed
it
in
the
lab.
They
cut
it
out
on
a
laser
cutter
and
we
have
today
make
a
bother
and
they
fill
that
lab.
They
sold
that
company
for
over
four
to
four
hundred
million
dollars
when
they
build
it.
So.
B
B
F
Km
my
deployment,
video
of
Wittering
Missouri,
is
for
hilly
white
for
wellness.
I
was
like
you
to
think.
When
was
the
last
time
you
with
your
primary
care
physician
on
six
months
ago,
three
months
ago,
perhaps
a
month
ago,
I
follow
the
people
in
the
park.
When
was
the
last
time
you
went
to
your
beauticians
hops
forum,
you
a
pedicure
or
a
haircut
for
gentlemen.
Well,
if
you
like
me,
you
probably
go
to
your
primary
care
physician
fewer
times
when
you're
going
to
you're
physically
now
in
Uganda.
B
B
B
F
So
imagine
if,
for
each
of
their
primary
for
each
of
their
beauty
business,
they
had
the
option
to
see
their
primary
care.
Physicians,
then
how
much
less
would
infant
mortality
rates
and
maternal
mortality
rates
be
reduced?
So
if
you
think
that
is
something
that
school
we
agree,
because
we
think
that
it's
the
in
the
21st
century,
the
way
that
health
care
is
delivered
needs
to
change.
F
We
think
that
we
need
to
adapt
our
tool
to
where
people
are
and
provide
them
with
a
with
the
healthcare
where
they
are,
because
guess
what
health
care
currently
is
the
longer
an
issue
of
access
alone.
Access
has
greatly
improved
across
the
the
world,
and
now
there
are
so
many
other
bottlenecks
time
quality,
lack
of
education
that
prevent
people
from
going
for
primary
care
visits.
So
we
want
to
bring
health
care
where
the
people
love.
F
F
A
part
of
your
day
to
day
life
where
you
are
when
you
go
for
your
beauty
services
and
you
have
it
there.
So
how
would
we
do
that,
for
example,
would
say
coming
for
a
haircut
and
have
a
box
in
and
specifically
when
you
come
in,
will
see
you
because
you
came
in
for
a
mani-pedi,
and
we
say
this
is
the
one
surah
module
and
with
Missouri
in
addition
to
obtaining
basic
quality
beauty
services,
you
also
get
a
free
position,
consult
if
it's
your
time
and
follow.
B
F
F
O
F
They
say
yes,
so
the
need
is
there
the
that
a
sort
of
minimum
viable
projects
has
been
proven,
and
now
what
we
are
looking
for
is
we
already
have
went
to
containment,
okay,
Evander,
where
we
see
about
300
clients
a
month.
We
are
looking
to
raise
three
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
incompatible
day
to
build
another
four
thousand
Beauty
Center.
Our
gross
profit
is
about
fifty
percent.
We
are
looking
at
fifty
forty
million
revenue
by
year.
Five
and
you
can
support
us
by.
F
F
This
model
be
replicated
in
other
African
countries
or
even
other
communities
within
the
US,
and
they
say
yes
so
currently
we
are
starting
in
Uganda,
but
we
realized
that
this
model
is
very
much
applicable
to
the
African
American
community
in
the
u.s.
to
the
Latino
community
in
the
US,
and
we
are
hoping
to
build
this
out
across
sub-saharan
Africa
with.
D
K
F
B
A
L
B
L
The
service
industry
grow
and
scale
their
companies
with
technology
during
the
past
10
years.
We
definitely
always
allow
retail
in
the
retail
economy,
and
that
was
in
the
form
of
e-commerce,
and
that
destruction
happened
at
a
very,
very
fast
pace
when
that
happened.
A
lot
of
retailers
who
weren't
able
to
pivot
a
lot
of
loss
and
from
small
mom-and-pop
shops
on
Main,
Street
or
even
around
here.
Overall,
a
lot
of
them
just
could
not
survive.
F
L
Owners
were
consulting
for
for
the
past
10
years.
A
lot
of
them
actually
shut
down,
Gale
now
shut
down
and
what
they
did
is.
They
actually
became
please
for
the
very
same
tech
companies
who
disrupted
them,
and
that's
really
where
we
saw
a
really
serious
opportunity
here
to
really
help
small
businesses,
especially
the
service
industry,
they're
the
backbone
of
the
US
economy,
and
we
felt
like
that
was
our
mission
to
help
them.
They
equip
them
with
the
right
tools,
so
they
could
scale.
L
B
D
N
L
L
Is
that's
what
we
felt
like
you
know
this
they're
overwhelmed
they're
stressed
out.
They
can't
manage
and
balance
all
these
tools
and
that's
where
the
opportunity
to
call
comes,
as
you
can
see:
they're
venting,
10,
plus
apps,
so
pulse,
basically
democratize.
The
same
type
of
technology
over
invested
millions
of
dollars
with
they're
fortunate
to
have
these
backing
them,
they're
fortunate
to
have
some
of
the
smartest
MBAs
working
with
them
behind
the
scenes.
We
leverage.
L
The
presentation
feel
free
to
visit
our
booth
and
I'll.
Give
you
a
real-life
demo.
I
know
a
lot
of
you
guys
have
service
providers
that
are
awesome,
they're
creative
at
what
they
do.
They
hard
workers,
but
have
they
honestly
to
scale
in
the
past
somewhat
years,
you've
been
doing
business
with
them
and
if
they.
D
L
There's
definitely
a
problem,
and
we
could
definitely
help
them
right
now,
plus
lowest
end
on
one
by
the
way.
In
addition
to
technology,
we
understand
that
technology
is
not
the
only
solution.
These
small
business
service
providers
actually
need
a
lot
of
mentorship
and
gadgets.
So
on
top
of
that,
we
also
built
an
algorithm
that
sense
what
they're
doing
wrong
in
their
business
and
it
pushes
in
real
time
content
on
the
liquid
reads:
content
on
they
can
improve
their
business
every
week
at
the
end
of
the
week.
Thanks
for.
D
L
L
L
So
we
have
10,000
downloads
right
now
and
that's
actually
a
good
question.
Our
marketing
efforts
are
twofold:
we're
doing
a
lot
of
digital
marketing
and
SEO,
and
also
a
lot
of
ASO
right
now.
We're
number
five
under
certain
keywords,
as,
for
example,
appointment
scheduler
with
top
5
apps
right
now
competing
with
apps.
Are
you
know,
300
million
dollar
companies
like
Leggero
and
thousand
no
we're
getting.
L
Beauty
and
also
the
fitness
industry,
and
we're
also
working
on
strengthening
our
channel
partnership
programs.
We
have
three
nationwide
partnerships
right
now
on
a
base
population
of
the
United
States
35,000,
plus
freelance,
massage
therapist,
that
the
market
our
product
well
composite
Pilates,
which
is
one
of
the
biggest
education
companies
in
the
in
the
country
that
offers
education
to
Pilates
and
yoga
instructors.
They're
marketing
our
products
and
we
have
another
software
reseller
fall
to
spot.
S
S
Well,
my
name
is
andrey.
I
am
the
founder
of
Joanie.
Joanie
gets
the
stuff
that
you
donate
to
the
people
in
your
community
who
needed.
Well.
We
are
a
joke.
Joanie
in
the
donation,
matchmaking
service.
We
get
the
stuff
that
you
donated
the
people
in
your
community
who
need
it
most
through
a
network
of
local
charity
partners.
S
We
connect
you
with
individuals
and
families
of
crisis
who
glass
exactly
what
you
wanted
to
give
and
imagine
a
mother
who
goes
to
a
woman
who
goes
to
NGH
to
give
birth
except
she's
homeless
and
maybe
she's
clinging
about
the
violent
situation.
So
when
she
and
her
child
has
to
leave
the
maternity
ward
on
the
third
day,
there's
really
no
off
no
good
options
for
her
and
beyond.
That
has
none
of
the
items
that
she
would
need
that
we
consider
bare
essentials
on
having
a
child,
no
babies,
and
that
you
know.
D
S
D
S
D
S
S
Ultimately,
end
up
leaving
the
community
and
never
get
to
the
people
in
our
community
who
need
them
most
Dhoni
is
working
to
change
that
we
are
building
a
better
way.
We
have
built
a
network
of
local
charity
partners
like
homeless,
shelters
and
victims,
women's
shelters
for
victims
of
domestic
violence
and
child
welfare
programs
that
post
their
needs
on
our
website,
so
that
when
Mom
number
two
with
a
Stoney
and
says
I
had
a
handful
of
baby,
pajamas
and
I
want
to
donate
the
app
Sherry's
a
list
of
local
nonprofits
for
her.
S
That
need
those
items
and
the
woman
tend
to
drop
those
right
across.
She
can
mail
them
in
or
it's
her
company,
Mia
or
her
workplace
or
her
office
building
her
offeror
apartment
buildings
and
sponsor
Germany.
She
can
drop
off
her
items
right
on
site
and
that's
really
how
done
that.
We
offer
the
concierge
service
to
our
corporate
partners
and
our
partners
building
partners
who
contract
don't
need
to
offer
our
service
to
their
tenant
and
Curly
and
losses
are
hundreds.
A
A
S
S
S
S
It's
just
Lofton
right
now:
Boston
is
our
pilot
city
and
all
donations
made
in
Boston
stays
awesome,
and
that
would
be
true
of
any
city
that
we've
been
to
so
that
we're
really
building
supportive
community
networks,
and
we
believe
that
when
people
donate
something
they
will
even
or
they
intend
for
it
to
go
to
someone
in
their
vicinity.
And
now
that's
not
the
case,
but
we
want
to
make
that
a
reality.
A
B
A
B
D
R
T
D
G
R
2024
is
going
to
be
in
a
computer
tag,
so
our
solution
to
that
problem
is
to
create
our
after-school
taxon
program
where
we
partner
up
with
school
districts
and
after-school
providers.
Let's
do
two
local
boys
and
girls.
Well,
both
girls
Inc,
and
we
essentially
provide
hands-on
experimental
learning
project
led
by
trained
stem
professionals
as
well
as
educators
in
a
semester-long
setting.
So
we
go
to
exactly
where
the
kids
are
at
so
sneak
everything
from
typing
to
coding
for
robotics.
R
Intelligence,
we
try
to
make
this
fun
and
engaging
for
kids
ages
8
to
14,
so
our
business
model
is
that
we
are
focused
on
this
by
sitting
like
Lowell.
The
first
wave
of
Technovation
happens
in
major
city.
Now,
there's
a
secondly,
the
tech
innovations
happen
in
college
than
Uniqlo.
So
how
do
we
build
infrastructure?
How
do
we
start
to
build
that
talent
to
support
our
cities
like
mol
and
to
ultimately
support
a
creative,
stronger
boss
event,
so.
B
R
R
B
R
That,
and
so
this
is
our
current
partners,
girl,
Lincoln
bowl,
as
well
as
DBA,
hope
to
target
school
districts
to
charge
school,
etc.
We
want
to
replicate
our
clubs
everywhere
we
can
and
then
we
want
to
go
and
help
provide
that
to
other
midsize
cities
in
the
Commonwealth
of
Massachusetts,
making
a
stronger
innovation
ecosystem.
R
Of
kids
start
to
lose
interest
in
stem
between
the
ages
of
18
14,
to
be
a
middle
school
teacher
and
as
time
I
had
kids,
they
were
not
interested
in
stem.
So
this
is
the
age
where
we
have
to
engage
them
and
sustain
that
engagement
so
that,
ultimately,
all
of
you
guys
who
are
lot
of
tech
people
in
this
country
and
the
customers.
Oh,
they
have
talent
to
really
make
sure
that
you
guys
are
providing
services.
R
Recently,
we've
also
been
recognized
that
nonprofit
mass
student
network
in
the
young
professional
category
for
our
profit,
startup
and
here
is
our
accomplishments
for
a
Sierra,
Leone
pilot
again
I
feel
like
we
have
community
mobilize
around
young
children.
You
get
results
like
this
kids
to
say
that
they
understand
technology
feel
comfortable
technology
who
wants
us
to
come
back
and
replicate
our
model
for
them
and.
B
R
We
offer
so
we
are
growing
our
Advisory
Council,
so
if
you're
very
interested
in
working
at
a
non-profit
startup,
we
would
love
to
come
talk
to
me.
I
will
talk
to
you
guys
a
hike
and
join
our
council
if
you
are
looking
for
a
deeper
way
to
make
impasse
regarding
our
board
of
directors.
Those
are
very
interested
in
our
bottle.
What
we're
doing
please
come
talk
to
me
if
you're
also
philanthropist
in
the
room.
I,
don't
know
if
you
guys
are
in
the
room,
but
if
you
are
and
you're
interested
in
what
we're
doing.
R
A
B
A
B
A
You've
been
to
a
man
in
the
nation
nice
before
you
know,
we
do
a
little
kind
of
church
social
thing
you
run
over
and
find
somebody
that
hasn't
been
to
one
before
to
shake
their
hand.
I'm
going
to
give
you
one
minute,
all
right,
keep
your
hands
up
with
your
new
people,
someone's
going
to
take
your
nose.
B
A
B
A
And
mr.
purple
shirt
you
need
the
hello
there.
We
go.
Alright,
okay,
I'm
going
to
cut
it
off
your
you
guys
have
done
a
good
job.
One
thing
about
mass
innovation
right
you're,
welcome
at
every
mass
generation
actually
need
to
come
to
another
one,
and
next
one
we're
going
to
be
having
our
100
mass
innovation,
life
event
and
it's
absolutely
obscene.
A
B
A
V
And
together
pretty
quiet
wins
like
people
talked,
it
goes,
don't
respond.
What
my
name
is
ko
ko
ko
ko?
How
you
spell
that
dr.
pioneer
it
all
sisters
right
here
is
because
you
an
idea
but
absolutely
work,
just
like
shadow
paddles
I
ever
heard
about.
We
worked
before
that
we
just
during
public,
while
for
those
he
was
never
heard
of
a
witness.
The
first
time
work
is
a
co-working
space,
touristic
coolest,
coordinate
in
the
world,
and
the
artists
have
created
these
helping
small
businesses
that
huge.
V
G
Hello,
everybody
are
you,
my
name
is
Chantel
Calloway
of
the
founder
and
CEO
of
Callaway.
Creative
and
I
am
a
bhakta
born
entrepreneur.
I
invented
this
really
dope
party
game
called
romantic
and
if
the
vocabulary
game
inspired
by
hip
hop,
it's
really
really
fun
and
educational.
At
the
same
time,
so
very
versatile,
you
can
use
it
in
the
classroom
or
at
your
house
party,
so
it
promotes
literacy
while
also
paying
homage
to
the
roots
of
hip-hop
artists.
G
A
A
I
A
B
B
B
A
Make
like
you
like
each
other,
come
on
alright
picture
in
there
get
in
there
price
price
givers
good
job,
alright.
So
these
are
your
winners
for
tonight,
based
on
your
vote,
I
also
wanna.
Let
you
guys
know
we're
looking
for
tech
products
from
women
for
our
fourth
annual
women
founders
event,
which
is
coming
up
in
the
fall.
We.
D
A
Draper's
assembler
offices
as
the
sponsor
and
it's
hosted
by
the
Museum
of
Science
and
the
museum
innovators
of
space
tech
behemoth
with
some
middle
Nye
and
that
will
be
July
12
tonight
after
party
will
be
at
merengue.
That's
160,
Blue,
Hill,
Avenue.