►
From YouTube: Chapter Leaders Roundtable | October
Description
Video featuring 4 chapters across 3 countries
See archive post for details:
https://hub.e-nable.org/content/perma?id=48642
The Chapter Leaders Roundtable is a monthly meeting. It is an opportunity for chapters to connect, to share local and regional resources, and to explore some of the challenges and recent developments involved at their sites. With such a diverse and dispersed community, these meetings help teams to align common goals and support each other. Each chapter is the expert of their local region, and has a lot they can teach the larger group!
HUB SPACE:
hub.e-nable.org/s/e-nable-chapter-leaders/
MEETING FULL ARCHIVE:
hub.e-nable.org/content/perma?id=44174
A
All
right
so
welcome
to
another
exciting
rendition
of
the
chapter.
Roundtable
chapter
leaders
roundtable,
I'm
ben.
This
is
our
I
think.
Fourth
or
fifth,
let's
see,
I
think
it's
the
fifth
yeah.
This
is
the
fifth
meeting
that
we've
done
so
my
name's.
I
already
said
I'm
ben
I'm
involved
with
the
rochester
renable
chapter
here
in
rochester
new
york
and
let
me
pass
it
to
john
chol.
You
could
tell
us
a
little
bit
about
the
rochester
chapter
and
what's
new
with
us.
B
Okay,
so
I've
missed
the
earlier
in
introduction.
So
forgive
me
if
I
repeat
what
ben
might
have
said,
but
I
am
john
joe.
I
am
co-founder
of
enable
and
rochester
enable
limited
we
have
for
started
at
rit,
which
is
where
we
started
enable.
B
B
We've
worked
on
a
face
mask
project
during
the
pvp
era
which
we're
continuing
to
pursue.
These
are
clear:
face,
masks,
optimized
for
face-to-face
communication
and
and
that's
me
and
that's
us,
and
I
don't
know
who
to
pass
the
torch
to,
because
I
wasn't
here.
C
Okay,
hi
guys
I'm
madison
bondog.
I
am
the
president
and
chapter
leader
of
naple
dc
and
this
chapter
encompasses
the
volunteers
from
washington
dc
maryland
and
virginia
we've
been
kind
of
functioning
as
a
chapter
since,
like
2018
so
we've
you
know,
we've
done
a
lot
of
prosthetics
for
the
locals
in
the
area,
notably
we've.
You
know
we
were
involved
in,
like
the
the
ppe
demand
in
you
know,
march
2020
and
throughout
that
whole
year.
C
So
we,
you
know,
actually
collaborated
with
mayor
mount
university
with
eric
to
supply
the
work
stands
nationwide,
so
that
was
one
of
our
kind
of
big
projects.
C
C
So,
in
addition
to
prosthetics,
we
you
know
do
provide
other
devices
and
right
now
one
of
our
goals
is
to
you
know,
establish
ourselves
as
a
501c3,
so
that's
kind
of
what
we're
working
on
and
in
addition,
this
is
kind
of
a
new
project
that
we're
just
working
on
is
to
have
a
recycling
initiative.
So
we've,
you
know
been
researching
different
ways.
We
can
recycle
the
spools
prints.
Maybe
you
know
if
there's
prosthetics,
that
you
know
people
that
have
just
been
on
the
shelf.
C
If
we
can,
just
you
know,
repurpose
those,
so
I
don't
know
if
any
other
chapters
have
been
like
doing
something
like
this,
but
just
wanted
to
put
that
out
there.
You
know,
for
maybe,
like
another
conversation
offline
to
see,
you
know
what
what
everyone
is
doing.
If
people
have
looked
into
this-
and
you
know
if
they're
interested
I'd
love
to
like
we'd
love
to
kind
of
work
and
figure,
something
that
we
could
kind
of
apply
for
everyone
in
the
3d
community.
A
E
Thanks
kevin
yeah,
hello,
everyone,
I'm
allie,
I'm
also
an
intern
with
nabel
kevin,
and
I
are
both
brandeis
students
we're
getting
our
mbas
and
social
impact,
and
I
am
the
event
planning
coordinator
consultant
intern
for
enable
so
hoping
to
get
some
events
on
the
calendar
for
maybe
like
a
month
or
two
from
now
so
yeah
nice
to
meet
everyone.
E
F
Hi
everyone
I'm
from
turkey.
My
name
is
zaineb.
I'm
the
chapter
leader
of
turkish,
enable
we've
been
doing
hands
since
2014,
but
mostly
children
and
from
2016.
F
We
have
approximately
more,
I
think,
we've
close
to
one
3500
volunteers,
but
active
only
two
hundred
at
the
time.
I
won't
summarize
the
things
we've
done.
You
can
read
it
on
ben's
chapters,
chapter
spotlight,
but
currently
we
are
coming
to
an
close
end
of
a
project
we
did
with
a
cooperation.
F
They
sponsored
bright
selected
students
to
do
a
hand
for
another
kid,
so
kids
doing
hands
for
kids
is
the
project
and
we're
when
we've
done
the
hand
we're
almost
giving
it
next
week,
and
we
have.
I
have
done
a
online
workshop
with
enable
germany
a
few
weeks
ago
it
was
my
first
online
assembly
workshop,
which
was
like
challenging
because
we
always
did
the
assembling
workshops.
Together.
F
This
time
we
sent
out
kids
and
tried
to
guide
people
doing
assembling
it
online.
It
worked
surprisingly
quite
hard,
but
it
worked
and
we
have
another
project
coming
up,
which
I
cannot
give
the
details.
Yet
I
hope
it
will
make
our
future
bright
very,
very
bright,
especially
for
the
next
year
for
a
year,
I'm
chasing
a
sponsorship
deal,
so
that's
it.
I
think.
A
D
I'm
jeremy,
simon
a
long
time
enable
volunteer
help
a
lot
with
behind
the
scenes,
stuff
infrastructure
and
that
sort
of
thing,
and
so
I'm
mostly
just
here
to
learn
and
and
listen
see
how.
I
can
help.
A
G
C
G
There
we
go.
Can
you
all
see
my
screen?
Okay,
yeah,
cool
stuff,
okay,
so
lovely
to
meet
you
all
good
morning,
good
afternoon,
good
evening,
wherever
we
are,
I'm
alistair
rickette
and
I'm
a
fourth
year
masters
of
engineering,
biomedical
engineering
student
at
the
university
of
glasgow
and
I'm
currently
fulfilling
the
role
of
the
president
of
handprints,
enabled
scotland
for
2021
2022
princeton
wisconsin
is
essentially
the
main
scottish
division
of
the
enable
global
network.
G
So
I'm
going
to
talk
to
you
a
little
bit
today
about
what
we've
been
doing
in
the
background,
our
multi-divisional
society,
how
our
membership
works
and
just
some
of
the
efforts
which
have
been
really
really
heartwarming
and
really
fun
to
do
throughout
the
pandemic
before
the
pandemic
and
some
of
our
goals
and
visions
for
the
future.
So
I
hope
you
very
much
enjoy
this
and
just
know
that
towards
ender's
presentation
at
all
afterwards,
just
give
me
a
shout
if
you
guys
have
any
questions
at
all.
G
So,
let's
move
along
so
first
of
all,
let's
let's
get
to
the
basics,
who
we
are
most
guys
will
probably
know
already
from
an
enable
point
of
view,
but
just
for
reference
we're
a
student
led
society
based
at
the
university
of
glasgow.
G
As
you
guys
know,
we
produce
3d
printed
prosthetics
and
branch
out
into
assisted
device
production
for
people
of
all
ages,
so
towards
the
beginning
of
our
effort,
when
we
were
established
in
2016
with
a
single
recipient
cause,
this
has
gradually
grown
out
outwards
from
manufacturing
for
children
to
teenagers,
and
currently
we
actually
have
a
good
few
adult
recipients
as
well,
using
the
enable
phoenix
models
and
we're
also
producing
and
improving
them
as
much
as
we
can
too.
G
A
really
cool
fact
here
is
that
we
are
one
of
two
representative
societies
of
biomedical
engineering
at
the
university
of
glasgow,
so
being
student-led.
A
lot
of
our
members
which
come
through
are
from
biomedical
engineering,
but,
as
I'll
tell
you
later,
on,
we've
branched
out
to
other
divisions
too
in
the
university,
which
is
great,
we've
also
grown
from
a
single
prosthetic
course.
So
literally,
imagine
having
that
single
printer.
G
So
for
future
reference.
This
is
our
2017
committee.
Some
of
you
guys
might
recognize
names
from
previous
projects.
We've
had
some
of
the
posts
we've
had
on
the
enable
form.
You'll,
obviously
know
myself,
but
you
may
know,
for
example,
yazan
haider,
who
was
our
prosthetics
coordinator
last
year?
Our
lead
technician
and
her
technician.
Team
have
been
doing
quite
a
lot
this
year,
heather
mclachlan
and
a
good
few
current
recurring
and
new
names
to
the
committee
this
year.
So
this
is
our
first
committee
meeting
back
in
june.
G
We
are
still
operating
online
and
our
my
electrics
coordinator,
who
joined
slightly
later
there
for
us
too,
so
just
as
a
reference
keep
an
eye
out
for
us
because
we're
keen
to
connect
and
collaborate
with
everybody
and
take
a
look
at
some
of
our
social
media
sites
too,
which
I'll
provide
later
on
so
obviously
a
really
really
great
aspect
of
being
a
student-led
society.
Is
we
get
to
go
out
there?
G
Luckily,
with
the
pandemic,
ease
in
scotland
and
connect
with
people
connect
with
students
at
our
open
days
at
our
freshers
welcome
days
as
well?
So
this
is
from
september
this
year,
just
a
month
ago,
actually,
where
we
went
out
to
the
freshers
freyr
at
the
university
of
glasgow
and
presented
who
we
are
as
we
tend
to
every
year.
So
this
was
our
stall.
This
is
our
technician
heather
a
little
banner
with
our
divisions
on
which
I'm
going
to
talk
about
too
we've
also
3d
printed,
our
own
merchandise.
G
Our
new
technician
team
have
done
that,
and
that
was
a
smash
hit.
We
my
good
friend
heather
and
the
technician
there
had
3d
printed,
a
functional
hand
which
she
could
wear
and
we're
going
round
and
fist
bumping
people
on
campus.
So
just
about
getting
our
name
out
there
and
making
sure
people
know
who
we
are
and
what
our
cause
is.
G
And
then
we
also
had
a
little
stall
at
one
of
our
international
college
fairs
as
well-
and
this
is
our
my
electrics
coordinator,
presenting
there
for
us
so
very
student-based,
but
very
keen
to
collaborate
and
very
keen
to
get
ourselves
out
there
and
it's
all
about
creating
this
platform
upon
which
we
can
improve
our
own
3d
printing
skills,
our
design
and
manufacture
skills,
but
at
the
same
time
contribute
to
this
really
heartwarming
cause
that
we
have
at
enable.
G
So,
let's
move
along
being
as
modest
as
possible,
so
we
were
very,
very
privileged
to
receive
the
overall
excellence
in
engineering
award
from
the
engineering
talent
awards.
Last
year,
and
were
also
nominated
last
year
and
this
year
and
won
it
last
year
for
the
best
engineering
society
of
the
year
award,
which
was
great
and
most
of
you
guys,
may
have
noticed
from
our
social
media
that
we
were
also
a
winner
of
the
passion
fund,
bronze
prize
4,
000
us
dollars
as
well
and
from
the
rs
grassroots
design
competitions.
G
We've
won
a
good
view
to
progress
our
prosthetic
model
projects
which
I'll
talk
to
you
a
little
bit
later
so
going
into
our
first
division.
This
is
a
prosthetics
division.
This
is
a
core
topic
of
the
society
since
it's
beginning,
so
it's
the
first
ever
division,
which
was
created,
as
you
guys
will
know
it,
produces,
and
constructs
customized
3d
printed
prosthetic
hands
for
recipients
all
over
the
world.
G
Who
is
available
to
pick
up
a
prosthetic
project
there,
and
a
really
great
thing
is
that
we've
not
just
focused
on
glasgow
which
gradually
reached
out
to
thailand,
the
bahamas,
canada,
pakistan
as
well,
whether
that's
remote,
working
or
working
alongside
the
recipient,
that
that's
great,
that
our
projects
just
expanded
out
there
as
well
and
know
that
we
are
always
looking
to
innovate,
our
prosthetic
design
process
so
on
to
that
some
of
our
plans
for
the
coming
year,
as
stated
previously
by
my
good
friend,
noah
sram
in
one
of
our
previous
meetings,
is
that
we
absolutely
love
the
technique
of
photogrammetry.
G
We've
always
wanted
to
experiment
with
us
for
residual
limb
scanning.
Could
there
be
a
way
to
improve
the
efficiency
of
the
whole?
You
know
the
process
which
we
use
with
the
plaster
of
paris
to
form
the
thermal
form.
The
gauntlet
could
be
3d
print,
something
directly
from
photogrammetry,
which
is
maximized
in
terms
of
comfort
for
the
recipient's
residual
limb.
G
It's
very
diy
in
hand,
prints
and
we'd,
always
love
to
establish
or
get
in
touch
with
people
in
the
industry,
for
some
industry
standard
practices
which
allow
us
to
lay
solid
foundations
for
future
years
to
come
and
allow
people
to
gain
as
much
experience
as
possible
and
we're
always
encouraging
small
team
and
individual
research
projects
in
addition
to
the
recipient
projects,
we
have
going
and
we're
very
ambitious
this
year
to
establish
more
innovative
research
and
development
projects
using
the
current
open
source
enable
hand
models
we
have
so,
let's
move
on.
G
This
is
a
good
division
too
well
good
divisions,
but
this
is
a
particularly
exciting.
Last
year
this
is
outreach
division,
so
they
harness
novel,
cad
design
and
3d
printing
to
produce
low-cost
medical
and
assisted
devices.
G
So
in
the
past
year,
we've
been
in
contact
with
a
range
of
external
organizations
such
as
the
queen
elizabeth
university
hospital,
which
is
the
biggest
hospital
in
europe
based
in
glasgow,
particularly
with
their
spinal
injuries
unit,
to
produce
motor
rehabilitation
devices
for
people
who,
recovering
from
stroke
and
spinal
injury,
and
also
a
variety
of
non-profit
organizations
as
well,
but
some
of
our
recent
efforts,
as
I've
said
just
there
as
we've,
had
an
animal
walker
project
or
a
series
of
animal
walker
projects
for
the
past
two
to
three
years
now,
as
you
can
see
here,
it's
like
a
combination
of
3d
printing
joints
for
pvc
tubes,
which
are
assembled
together
to
produce
this
walker
device
which
helps
domestic
pets
with
conditions
such
as
arthritis
and
alleviating
pain
associated
with
that,
as
you
guys
know,
we've
got
the
assisted
devices
down
here
for
motor
rehabilitation.
G
This
was
done
last
year
and
it's
a
continuing
project
for
this
sheet
as
well,
and
another
really
cool
one
too,
as
braille
learning
tiles
for
partially
sighted
children
or
children
in
primary
schools,
who'd
like
to
learn
braille
and
really
really
low
cost
devices,
but
also
a
large
variety
of
skills
which
we
can
equip
in,
such
as
students
and
biomedical
engineering
and
beyond,
which
we
absolutely
love
and
we've
also
produced
or
looking
to
produce
bespoke
upper
limb
prosthesis
as
well,
which
I'll
talk
about
a
little
bit
later.
G
But
future
plans
for
this
division
has
obviously
expanded.
The
animal
mobility
effort
to
include
a
wide
variety
of
apologies
to
include
a
wider
variety
of
prosthesis
for
various
animals.
G
As
said
before,
we
want
to
incorporate
new
manufacturing
processes,
whether
that's
sla,
printing
or
other
types
of
3d
printing,
to
complement
the
new
efforts
which
we
have
once
we're
always
looking
forward
and
looking
to
innovate.
The
processes
we
use
to
design
our
of
our
devices,
as
well
as
the
innovations
we
produce
and
always
support
and
motivate
new
projects
by
incoming
members,
so
ensuring
that
the
large
cohort
of
members
we
have
each
year
has
listened
to
and
they
want.
G
You
know
ensure
that
their
ideas
that
they
have,
whether
they're
in
a
recipient
team,
the
outreach
team
or
just
a
general
member
in
our
society,
making
sure
that
they're
heard
and
their
projects
are
established
if
they
would
like
to
yes
moving
on
the
technician
division.
This
was
established
by
yours
truly
last
year
in
response
to
the
pandemic.
Actually,
we
are
actually
based
in
a
3d
potential
3d
printing
room
in
the
university
of
glasgow,
though
unfortunately,
we've
had
to
move
completely
online
and
remotely.
G
So
basically,
we
split
up
the
printers
with
a
pre-existing
committee
in
the
society
and
we
operated
our
3d
printers
from
our
homes
for
a
long
period
of
time
and
are
actually
still
operating
them
today,
but
in
2020,
when
I
took
on
a
3d
printing
technician
role,
I
established
this
division
not
only
to
deal
with
the
massive
influx
of
3d
printing
projects
which
we
had
going,
but
also
expand
the
technician
experience
to
students
who
are
keen
to
take
it
on.
G
So
we
see
this
as
a
society's
technical
backbone,
because
essentially,
without
this
team,
without
their
maintenance
of
printers,
it
would
be
very
difficult
to
continue
working
both
in
the
pandemic
and
in
future
years
to
come.
So,
as
you
guys
will
see
down
here,
the
maintenance
3d
printers.
This
is
one
of
our
3d
printers.
Here,
it's
a,
I
believe,
it's
a
perusa
model.
I
can't
remember
it.
G
It
was
one
of
our
recent
printers
we
purchased,
but
they
also
host
student
design
competitions
as
well,
and
they
provide
educational
card
and
3d
printing
resources
for
university
of
glasgow
engineering
students-
whether
this
was
previous
in
person,
educational
sessions
before
the
pandemic
to
online
sessions.
Such
as
how
to
operate
a
3d,
printer
and
photogrammetry
sessions
in
line
with
some
of
our
collaborations,
this
was
actually
used
for
a
recruitment
process.
So
this
this
little
message
here
is
just
to
indicate
that
our
keen
technicians
team
is
currently
full
for
for
our
students.
G
But
some
of
our
plans
is
for
the
technician
team
is
to
launch
a
card
advice
platform
for
university
of
glasgow
union
students
in
line
with
some
of
the
cad
education
resources
which
are
currently
available
for
the
university
themed,
cad
and
design
competitions
throughout
the
year
to
engage
our
general
member
cohort
and
some
of
our
other
member
cohorts
and
our
first
competition.
G
There
was
to
design
hand,
prints
related,
3d,
printed
merchandise,
on
fusion
360,
and
this
was
our
winner
pistos,
who
is
in
biomedical
engineering,
who
designed
the
themed
keyring
for
handprints
to
be
used
at
future
events
as
well
to
promote
our
cause
and
obviously
increase
our
workshop
and
information
sessions,
whether
they're
online
or
whether
they
become
blended
and
a
little
bit
into
person
as
well.
G
Moving
on,
we
have
our
education
division,
so
this
is
a
really
crucial
division,
because
it's
all
about
getting
our
name
out
there,
whether
that's
to
elementary
school
children,
to
aspiring
members
of
handprints
and
able
scotland.
So
their
role
is
to
essentially
inspire
future
generations
of
stem
leaders
or
people
who
want
to
go
into
stem
essentially
and
before
the
pandemic.
They
often
went
out
and
presented,
engage
in
educational
lessons
at
primary
schools.
G
So
primary
schools
are
the
the
british
equivalent
of
elementary
school
and,
although
obviously
with
the
pandemic,
they've
had
to
move
online
and
a
lot
of
recent
efforts
such
as
tinkercad
and
scratch.
Programming
tutorials
for
primary
school
children,
so
they've
demonstrated
phenomenal
flexibility
in
moving
online
and
ensuring
that
the
inspiring
cause
of
handprints,
whether
that's
from
tinkercad,
all
the
way
up
to
showing
kids,
how
we
produce
our
prosthetics
or
how
biomedical
engineering
works,
is
continued
to
the
best
best
standard
as
possible
throughout
the
pandemic.
G
But
some
plans
for
the
education
division
is
obviously
ensure
that
all
those
division
members
are
trained
in
scratch
and
tinkercad.
Maybe
expand
us
to
the
rest
of
the
society
to
increase
educational
efforts,
but
also
and
likely
in
line
with
the
technician
team
produce,
workshops
and
activities
for
people
of
all
ages,
whether
they're
new
to
3d
printing,
whether
they're
a
student
in
a
society
or
looking
to
come
to
the
society
and
we've
also
attended
an
event
previously
at
the
at
glasgow.
Science
center
called
curiosity
live.
G
This
is
essentially
an
event
which
allows
us
to
showcase
our
work
to
primary
school
children
to
high
school
children
as
well,
and
all
about
getting
our
name
out
there
and
making
sure
people
understand
what
we
do
and
what
our
cause
is
and,
depending
on
how
the
pandemic
goes.
Fingers
crossed
as
well,
possibly
visiting
schools
and
semester,
two
back
to
in
person
visits
as
well,
which
would
be
phenomenal.
G
So
our
second
last
division
is
electrical
division.
So
this
was
established
in
early
2019
and
the
proof
is
in
the
name
here.
They
focus
on
the
design,
creation
and
testing
of
functional
muscle,
control,
prosthetic
hand
and
people
who
come
through
this
part
of
the
society
can
either
be
experienced
in
programming,
electronics,
cad
or
both.
So
the
range
of
skills
which
this
division
incorporates
are
by
far
the
largest
in
the
whole
of
our
society,
just
with
how
fast-paced
the
work
is
and
how
broad
it
is,
but
they've
presented
at
the
universities.
G
Let's
talk
about
x,
student
research
event,
which
is
like
a
university
of
glasgow
equivalent
to
ted
talks,
and
they
presented
likes
of
rehabilitation,
training,
motor
rehabilitation
following
nerve
injury
and
all
about
trying
to
fine-tune
this
myoelectric
hand
which
they're
producing
entirely
from
scratch
to
finally
produce
a
fully
functional
hand.
So
this
is
one
of
our
recent
efforts
there
using
some
of
the
myowares
computer
game
creation
for
hand,
rehabilitation
and
training
some
future
plans.
For
this.
G
It
solves
the
merge
ideas
from
other
myoelectric
hands,
so
all
about
collaborating
again
into
our
own
hand,
taking
inspiration
from
other
people
and
obviously
to
prototype
test
this
as
much
as
we
can
and
in
spite
of
remote
working
they've,
obviously
been
focusing
on
moving
the
system
from
arduino
to
raspberry
pi
for
purpose
of
efficiency
and,
obviously
for
purpose
of
space
as
well
for
the
hands
too,
and
new
micro
projects
too.
G
So
this
is
the
rehabilitation
hand
which
we're
talking
about
as
well
and
there's
just
so
much
keen
keenness
involved
in
this
aspect
of
the
division
of
the
society
and
really
really
innovative
stuff
is
happening
here,
and
I
can't
wait
to
see
in
future
years
where
they,
where
they
take
this.
G
So
last
but
not
least,
we
have
our
crucial
medium
publicity
division.
So
again
the
proof
is
in
the
name.
They
manage
the
society's
public
platforms
and
accounts
such
as
the
website,
our
instagram
account,
and
they
create
the
engage
in
post
and
promotional
material
which
bring
our
members
in
which
engage
people
their
eye
catching,
and
this
is
some
of
them
here.
So
this
was
our
cad
competition,
which
you
previously
previously
seen
there
and
our
we
were
if
we
gladly
received
a
fund
from
the
university
called
the
src
fund
of
500
pounds.
G
So
this
was
some
of
our
artwork,
which
we
produced
from
such
and
obviously
to
help
organize
social
and
fundraising
events,
whether
they
are
in
person
or
remote,
and
are
crucial
in
organizing
a
sponsored,
walk
event
which
we
done
in
march
this
year
to
walk
2021
kilometers
for
our
cause
and
successfully
done
despite
the
pandemic,
not
being
too
good
here.
G
But
another
really
key
thing
is
that
the
research
new,
exciting
funding
opportunities
for
our
society,
such
as
link
tree
passion
fund
for
2021
and
some
of
the
other
university-bound
funding
efforts
which
we've
engaged
in
over
the
past.
G
So
obviously
the
future
plans
has
increased
social
media
following
increased
social
media
following
so
trying
to
gain
as
many
and
engagement
through
our
linked
tree
collaborations,
which
we've
had
there.
So
we
have
our
own
link
tree
app,
which
I'll
show
a
qr
code
of,
and
that
provides
a
big
centralized
area
for
you
guys
to
find
out
more
about
our
cause
there
and
obviously
increase
student
social
events
for
2021
2022
and
hopefully
expand
this
to
some
of
the
enable
network
too.
G
If
it's
online
we've
had
murder
mysteries
in
the
past
online
murder,
mysteries
and
they've
been
really
good
fun.
So
it's
all
about
yes,
we're
hard
working,
but
we're
also
students,
and
we
also
like
to
have
a
good
time
within
reason,
of
course,
and
we
love
to
do
that
too,
and
we
also
like
to
increase
external
sponsorship
and
student
project
competition
opportunities
within
the
society
and
look
to
gain
as
much
funding
opportunities
as
possible,
which
will
supply
such
so
I'd.
G
Just
like
to
say,
thank
you
very
much
for
having
me
on
here
today,
I'm
more
than
happy
to
expand
on
any
of
those
points
here
and
answer
any
questions.
Here's
a
little
qr
code
for
our
link
tree
site
there,
if
you'd
like
to
scan
that
just
now
or
look
at
it
later
more
than
happy
to
provide
these
notes
to
people
after
this
meeting
and
yeah.
It's
a
pleasure
to
be
here.
I
feel
like
a
man
walking
amongst
legends,
and
I
hope
you
guys
enjoyed
him
so
yeah.
Thank
you
very
much.
A
Great
thanks
alistair.
It's
it's
awesome
to
see,
I
mean
some
of
the
stuff
that
you're
doing
with
the
membership
process
and
chapter
networking.
A
D
More
comments
than
questions,
my
only
question
would
be:
how
on
earth
have
you
been
able
to
do?
All
of
this
I
mean
you
guys
have
with
all
the
different
divisions
which
seem
to
be.
I
mean
these
aren't
just
you
know
they
seem
to
be
well
organized
and
established
it.
Just
to
me
it's
like
where
I
kind
of
wanted
things
to
be.
You
know
years
down
the
road
and
it
seems
I'm
just
curious.
G
G
So
it's
many
different
aspects
all
the
way
from
producing
something,
technical
and
helping
someone
in
everyday
life
to
meeting
new
people
and
learning
new
skills.
So
that's
quite
a
generic
response
understand,
but
I
I've
actually
been
I've
been
in
a
society
for
three
years
now
and
two
years
before
it
was
very
grassroots
up
and
coming
so.
I've
had
the
immense
privilege
to
just
see
it
snowballing
perfectly
into
this
multi-divisional
cause,
which
is
just
fantastic
to
work
work
alongside
so.
F
D
And
what
is?
Is
there
any
kind
of
a
structure
or
anything
that
ties
them
all
together
that
that's
sort
of
an
umbrella
or
how
does
that
work?
Are
they
pretty
much
independent.
G
So
this
was
so
that
was
that
little
list
which
I
showed
there
that
basically
all
of
the
the
leaders
which
you've
seen
now
the
outreach
coordinator,
I
probably
should
have
explained
that
a
little
bit
more,
the
design
projects
coordinator
they're
responsible
for
each
of
those
divisions
there.
So
it's
all
about
this
central
committee,
which
come
together
every
few
weeks
or
so
talk
about
progress.
How
could
we
improve
this
part?
Is
there
a
problem
there?
B
It's
alistair
just
to
follow
up
on
that,
so
you've
been
there
three
years,
you've
been
the
the
president
of
the
organization
for
how
long.
B
Okay
and
your
predecessor
has
graduated
and
moved
on.
G
No,
my
predecessor
is
actually,
and
so
it
works
by
years.
So
the
person
who
was
the
president
last
year
is
in
the
year
above
me,
so
it's
all
about
obviously
passing
the
baton
on
to
consecutive
years,
which
comes
through
the
society.
B
So
I'm
just
trying
to
follow
up
on
on
jeremy's
question,
because
you
have,
if
there's
a
recipe
in
there,
we
all
need
it.
So
you
mentioned
one
thing:
is
that
you've
got
a
sort
of
a
tiered
succession
plan
built
in
this
notion
of
of
sort
of
identified,
formal
divisions
when
did
that
come
into
being.
G
I
would
say
within
the
first
year
we
had
a
prosthetics
division
and
an
outreach
division
and
as
the
knowledge
built
up
as
we
had
more
technical
knowledge.
That's
when
things
more
interesting,
such
as
the
myoelectrics
division
and
the
education
division,
came
into
play.
D
D
G
Yep,
I
think,
in
this
current
climate
as
well,
people
are
people
like
to
interact
with
other
people,
see
how
they're
getting
on
so
it's
ever
more
important
and
online,
and
things
like
that
and
just
ensuring
which
the
people
know
what's
happening
in
the
background.
Making
sure
they're
in
contact
is,
is
the
way
we
go
and.
B
Aleister,
have
you
all
adopted
or
mentored
other
chapters
and
have
you
thought
about
that
so.
G
We
also
are
in
contact
with
enable
uc
at
the
university
of
cincinnati
in
ohio
and
obviously
the
big
big
parts
of
enables
such
as
enable
france
you
guys
over
at
rochester
as
well,
but
I
could,
I
can
never
say
which
we've
we've
been
in
contact
with
new
division,
our
new
grassroots,
enable
divisions,
enable
nepal
and
enable
netherlands,
or
a
couple
of
other
ones
as
well,
which
you
guys
might
know
from
previous
prosthetic
projects.
We've
had.
B
B
That's
something
that
I
think
would
benefit
many
of
them,
because
you,
you
may
not
remember
this
or
it
may
have
been
before
your
time,
but
every
chapter
has
a
struggle
getting
established
and
we
have
not
provided
a
recipe
or
a
playbook
or
systematic
coaching
in
part,
because
we
haven't
known
what
works.
B
You
have
a
model,
that's
clearly
working
for
you
all.
It
might
well
work
for
many
other
university
chapters.
We
have
a
lot
of
university
chapters
I'll.
Let
you
finish
that
sentence,
but
please
give
it
some
thought.
Okay,.
G
Actually,
on
your
on
that
thought
there,
and
I
feel
like
a
complete
idea
for
saying
this.
We've
actually
helped
a
lot,
a
new
society
at
the
university
of
strathclyde,
which
is
another
university
in
glasgow
glasgow
based,
I'm
not
sure
if
they're
affiliated
with
enable
they
certainly
use
the
open
source,
enabled
hands,
I'm
not
sure
if
they're
recognized
yet,
but
on
that
note,
they've
started
to
adopt
the
outreach
structure,
for
example,
divisions,
multi,
multi-divisional
society
structure,
which
we've
previously
incorporated.
G
So
to
answer
your
question
later,
we
have
actually
helped
a
new
entirely
new
society
at
the
university
of
strathclyde
there,
who
are
certainly
up
and
coming.
B
G
Yeah,
no,
I
completely
understand
what
we
do
at
the
end
of
each
committee
rotation.
So
normally
april
time,
when
a
completely
new
committee
comes
into
play,
we
pass
on
key
documents
from
the
previous
committee
or
the
previous
leaders
pass
on
their
knowledge,
through
normally
multi-page
documents
which
explain
the
progress
of
the
division
that
you're
what
some
ideas
are
for
the
future.
G
So
collectively
over
the
past
three
or
four
years,
we
do
have
some
documents
on
how
the
divisions
are
run
and
how
to
improve
them,
and
that
could
be
something
absolutely
which
could
be
passed
on
to
the
future
aspects
of
enable
as
well
to
help
them
yeah
for
sure.
B
Well,
you
guys
are
good
presenters.
Let
me
ask
you
to
think
about
what
would
be
the
best
process.
Besides
just
handing
the
documents
over
to,
for
example,
in
a
future
chapter
round
table
say:
here's
you
know
we're
going
up
a
level
you,
you
you're,
very
experienced
teaching
people
how
to
make
prosthetics.
B
So
I'm
giving
you
a
challenge
and
making
a
mental
note
to
come
back
in
a
few
weeks
and
see
if
you've
had
any
thoughts
about
that.
E
Yeah
kind
of
going
off
of
that
I've
been
discussing
with
ben
john
and
kevin
we're
in
the
very
early
stages,
but
potentially
having
like
a
university
high
school
event
where
different
chapters
internationally
present,
for
maybe
around
five
minutes
about
like
what
their,
what
they've
been
doing,
what
their
structure
is
like
and
then
we
were
also
thinking
of
having
some
keynote
speakers
and
debating
whether
or
not
to
make
this
like
a
single
day
event
or
an
all-weekend
event.
E
So
I
wondered
if
that's
something
you
might
be
interested
in
and
if
so
I
could
put
my
email
in
the
chat.
A
Thank
you,
and
I
was
going
to
mention
earlier
that
it
does
depend
on
the
region
of
the
process.
That's
involved.
So,
for
example,
madison
mentioned
that
she's
looking
at
501c3
status
with
with
working
in
the
eu,
have
you
guys
formally
set
yourselves
up
as
an
ngo?
How
does
how
has
that
worked?
And
that
definitely
seems
like
that
would
be
something
that
would
be
worthwhile
to
have
in
this
educational
conference,
because
it
seems
like
there's
there's
many
ways
that
people
go
underneath
the
umbrella
of
the
school.
G
Yeah
for
sure,
regarding
regarding
europe,
we've,
not,
I
don't
believe,
we've
considered
anything
ngo,
the
most
that
we've
went
as
ensuring
this,
like
disclosure
of
our
members
for
educational
events
with
children,
but
from
our
umbrella
point
of
view,
we've
not
considered
anything
like
that,
but
that's
a
certainly
a
good
point
in
terms
of
in
terms
of
officializing
the
whole
education
effort
there
well.
A
And
the
school
supports
your
effort,
I
think
sometimes
some
of
the
school
chapters
need
to
set
up
a
separate
ngo
just
because
of
liability
stuff
in
the
us,
which
maybe
isn't
such
an
issue
in.
G
A
G
Likewise,
with
the
current
the
new
university
chapter
at
strathclyde2,
I
believe
they're
they're
not
having
too
many
issues
with
it,
but
I
completely
completely
understand
it's
good
to
know.
C
No,
actually,
my
organization
is
outside
of
the
university,
so
yeah
it's
it's,
but
we
do
have
like
volunteers
that
you
know
some
of
them
are
in
school.
We've
had
one
that
were
in
high
school,
but
overall,
all
our
volunteers
are,
you
know,
outside
of
the
university
system.
A
Okay,
great,
very
cool.
Well,
thank
you!
So
much
for
for
sharing
aleister
I
figured.
Maybe
we
can
just
go
around
and
is
there
any
other
updates
that
people
want
to
share?
We've
got
about
15
minutes
left.
I
did
also
actually
before
I
forget.
We
got
well
last
month,
terry
shared
his
project
working
on
sort
of
a
website
matching
system,
and
he
did
email
me
with
a
draft
of
that
empty
version
of
his
website.
I
added
that
as
a
comment
into
the
archive
from
last
month.
A
I'll
add
that
in
the
chat,
but
thanks
to
terry-
and
I
know,
zeynep
was
interested
in
following
up
on
that.
So
I
just
wanted
to
make
that
point.
D
As
are
we
I've
already
downloaded
the
site
archive
and
I
have
a
copy
of
it.
I've
set
up
a
staging
site
on
my
hosting
platform,
but
I'm
a
little
bit
stuck
right
now
and
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
their
their
files
are
organized
very
differently
from
what
I'm
used
to
and
I'm
not
enough
of
a
systems
admin.
I'm
gonna
need
somebody
to
help
me
just
with
the
getting
everything
imported,
but
I've
got
everything
set
up
and
ready
to
go
for
that
test.
D
I
just
have
to
find
somebody
to
help
with
that
that
part
that
I'm
not
skilled
enough
for.
B
Zainab,
has
your
team
managed
to
to
get
that
up
and
running.
F
No
because
we've
been
involved
too
much
in
the
other
projects
and
we
have
to
focus
on
closing
them,
because
it's
very
important
if
we
do
have
sponsorship
deal
which
is
tied
to
the
project
kids
making
hands
for
kids,
we
will
have
a
professional
team,
finally
yeah,
so
I'm
trying
to
make
that
happen.
F
D
F
So
but
I
got
a,
I
got
it
in
my
to-do
list
to
enroll
in
theo's
site
first
and
dig
in
as
a
user
as
an
maker
as
well
before
setting
it
up
here
in
turkey,
because
we've
been
handling
too
many
projects.
At
the
same
time,
I
am
trying
to
at
least
finalize
some
of
them
before
entering
a
huge
one
like
that,
because
we
have
to
update
the
whole
system,
and
I
have
another
announcement
that
I
forgot
at
the
beginning.
We
just
had
an
children's
book
about
enable
hand
come
out
today
in
turkish.
F
Yes,
she
was,
the
writer
was
inspired
by
our
recipients.
Yamur
the
kid
got,
the
the
kid
who
got
her
fourth
hand,
fifth
hand
this
year,
first
child
recipient
of
our
enabled
chapter.
F
Actually
so
she
was
in
a
recital,
a
ballet
recital
and
she
was
dancing
with
her
hand
and
she
was
in
the
the
writer
was
in
the
crowd
and
watching,
and
she
made
an
interview
interview
with
her
and
then
she
decided
to
put
it
on
a
storybook,
and
the
story
is
actually
about
her
and
we
are
also
a
part
of
the
story
and
we
just
met
with
the
publisher
and
we
decided
to
give
out
a
book
to
all
recipients
that
we
do
the
hand
for
so
we've
been
working
on
this
hope,
something
like
that
happens
in
every
language.
F
A
Do
you
have
a
link
to
the
the
book.
F
D
And
there
are
a
couple
of
good,
similar
books
like
that
that
have
been
done
in
english,
that
I
know
they've
been
shared
at
past
conferences
and
that's
a
great
idea
to
reach
out
to
the
publishers
to
see
if
they'd
support
giving
out
free
copies
to
our
recipients.
I
think
that's
a
wonderful
idea.
F
Yeah,
that
would
be
great,
so
I
will
send
a
link
and
some
pictures,
because
I
we
all
we
haven't,
got
the
book
itself.
Yet
I
just
got
pictures
and
the
link
they're
going
to
send
it
this
week
and
I'll
make
a
post
of
it
in
in
the
facebook
pages
and
I'll
send
an
email
to
you.
A
Very
cool
one
thing
I
just
wanted
to
follow
up
on
really
quick
as
long
as
we're
going
around
with
catching
up
on
things,
I'm
curious
madison.
You
mentioned
a
recycling
effort.
I
know
that's,
that's
come
up
actually,
in
a
couple
other
meetings,
people
have
talked
about
trying
to
find
more
of
a
bridge
between
you
know
some
sort
of
climate
action
and
enable
efforts.
What
have
you
been
working
on
and
I
can
I'll
share
a
couple
posts
in
the
chat
of
other
chapters
that
are
working
on
similar
efforts.
C
Yeah
so
right
now
we're
kind
of
just
in
the
research
phase,
so
just
kind
of
like
looking
at
you
know
the
options,
what
can
be
recycled,
how
you
know
things
should
be
recycled
and
but
we
did
narrow
down
kind
of
three
solutions.
C
So
you
know
there's
there's
a
recycling
machine
assembly
which
is
like
14k,
but
we
thought
that
was
kind
of
not
feasible
with
just
our
small
small
group,
and
then
there
are
recycling
boxes
that
you
just
you
know,
put
your
3d
prints
the
spools
as
well,
and
then
you
know
it
just
ships
to
you
know
a
third-party
distributor.
That
does
that.
But
you
know
I
guess
the
con
is
that
you
can't
really
use
you
know,
reuse
the
materials.
C
So
then
you
know,
I
think,
the
third
option
that
we
were
kind
of
thinking
of-
maybe
you
know
maybe
doing
some
fundraiser
or
you
know,
saving
up
or
or
something
for
you
know
an
all-in-one
recycling
machine
that
you
know
has
a
built-in
grinder
and
that
can
you
know,
convert
you,
know
spools
and
old
filaments
into
a
you
know
a
new
spool
and
you
know
we're
just
kind
of
thinking
ahead.
Like,
oh,
you
know,
maybe
the
the
spool
like
if
they're
not
you
know,
I'm
not.
C
I
I'm
not
sure,
because
I'm
still
kind
of
we're
still
kind
of
like
looking
into
like,
if
there's
any
studies,
if
any
like,
if
you
know
the
it's
still
durable
materials
we
use
for
prosthetics
or
other
devices,
or
you
know,
maybe
this
could
be
a
solution
that
we
could
just
use
for
prototypes.
Or
you
know
when
people
are,
you
know
making
devices
to
get
the
badges.
So
I.
C
D
Material
engineering
partner
here
very
closely
that
does
a
lot
of
this
and
you
can
recycle
all
these
materials.
But
the
key
is
that
you
have
to
blend
them
in
with
a
certain
percentage
of
virgin
material
in
order
for
them
to
be
viable
and
they
can
only
be
recycled
so
many
times
they
every
time
they
go
through.
So
there's
there's
guidelines
by
material
as
far
as
what
you
can
and
can't
do,
that
would
work.
D
We
don't
yet
have
a
program
figured
out
for
the
recycling
of
the
materials
themselves,
because
there's
so
much
variability
like
if
we
have
customers
send
us
their,
you
know
pla
or
their
abs
or
whatever
it
there's
so
many
different
kinds
of
pla
different
base,
resins.
It's
it's
so
hard
to
kind
of
get
something
you
know
consistent
out
of
that,
but
we
do
have
at
least
through
my
company
here
in
the
us
we
have
a
spool
recycling
program
that
we've
established.
That's
been
done,
it's
been
doing
quite
well.
D
In
fact,
one
of
our
enable
chapters
that's
run
by
a
guy.
Some
of
you
know,
named
shashi,
jane
out
west,
is,
is
running
a
drive
right
now
and
planning
to
ship
several
pallets
full
of
spools
to
us
for
this
program,
and
we
don't
grind
them
up
or
anything
like
that.
He
this
this
guy,
he's
the
one
he
produces
filaments,
and
so
he
actually
uses
these
spools
and
winds
new
filament
onto
them
and
sends
them
out
to
his
customers
and
so
he's
just
putting
them
back
into
use.
D
So
we
do
at
least
have
a
program
for
anybody
that
wants
to
send
spools
aim
to
have
them
put
views,
but
we
don't
have
anything
for
the
filaments.
Yet
I'll
put
the
address
here
in
the
chat.
If
anyone
has
spools
that
they've
gathered
up.
C
Yeah,
that
would
that
would
be
great
because
yeah
right
now
we're
just
kind
of
instead
of
throwing
them
just
kind
of
saving
up
our
old,
failed
prints
and
and
spools,
and
just
you
know,
trying
to
see
what
you
know
we
can
do.
You
know
if
we
can
use
them
for
for
something,
if
you
know
not
prototyping
or
making
you
know
like
figurines
or
something
that
we
could
give
to.
You
know
the
community
so
just
trying
to
close
that
that
loop,
sculptures
yeah
there's
a
lot.
C
C
A
Very
cool
another
thing
that
I
I
saw
in
the
notes,
john,
had
a
question
about
your
devices
for
the
blind
madison
in
the
chat.
C
Oh
yeah,
so
this
was
a
couple
of
months
ago,
but
the
maryland
school
of
the
blind
reached
out
to
us
earlier
this
year
and
we've
done
like
a
few
projects
with
them.
So
we've
done
like
braille
writer
guides,
so
we
3d
printed.
You
know
these.
It
kind
of
looks
like
a
comb
where
they
you
put
it
into
the
braille
writer
to
help
them.
You
know
line
their
fingers
or
like
key
holders.
C
So
you
know
you
put
your
key
in
there,
so
they
know
what
orientation
their
keys
going
into,
so
those
were
kind
of
like
other
projects.
Outside
of
you
know
the
enabled
prospect
devices
that
we
were
able
to
you
know
offer
to
you
know
the
blind
community.
So
it
was.
You
know
it
was
really
cool
to
be
able
to
be
a
part
of
that.
B
You
know
you
so
that's
great
madison.
You
mentioned
that
alistair.
I
think
mentioned
some
non-prosthetic
assistive
technology
devices
that
his
group
was
working
on.
You
know
you
guys
have
found
some
additional
ways.
You
can
help.
People
using
3d
printers
enable
is
not
necessarily
fixated
on
prosthetics
and
if
you
can
identify
these
additional
worthy
and
interesting
projects,
we
should
put
the
word
out
and
maybe
have
a
new
wing
of
the
the
device
catalog.
B
D
I
want
to
add
to
that,
because
the
right
now
we're
actually
in
the
midst
of
re-designing
and
reorganizing
our
devices
catalog.
So
the
timing
is
really
perfect
for
that.
We
already
talked
about
adding
in
a
category
for
animal
devices
and
that
sort
of
thing,
but
I
agree,
agree
100
and
the
timing
is,
is
perfect
to
try
to
get
some
of
these
in
here.
D
I
I'd
be
happy
to
help
alexander
one
of
our
other
volunteers
is
the
one
kind
of
building
out
the
new
catalog
pages,
but
I'd
be
happy
to
help
kind
of
gather
that
information,
like
even
point
you
to
a
form
that
I
have
that'll,
you
know
give
you
exactly
the
the
data
points
that
we
need
for
these
designs
and
the
photos
and
everything
and
you
could
just
fill
out
the
form
and
submit
them
to
us-
would
be
very
helpful.
C
D
Let
me
get
I'll
get
the
link
here.
I'll
put
it
in
the
chat
in
a
moment.
A
Great,
so
it
looks
like
we're
at
the
top
of
the
hour,
but
it'd
be
awesome
to
to
continue
some
of
these
conversations
I'll
be
sending
out
the
archive
post
and
that's
a
wonderful
place
to
add
in
some
comments.
At
the
end,
I
know.
Jeremy
and
xynep
are
going
to
be
continuing
to
look
at
the
website.
A
Alistair
madison,
you
guys
are
going
to
be
looking
at
assistive
technology
and
there's
a
couple
other
things
that
we've
sort
of
talked
about
as
as
action
items.
So
we
can
just
continue
in
the
the
archive
post
and
thanks
so
much
for
coming
today,
a
special
thanks
to
alistair
for
for
his
presentation
and
if
you
want
to
share
me
a
link
to
your
presentation.
I
can
also
add
that
into
the
the
document.