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From YouTube: e-NABLE Chapter Leaders Roundtable - June
Description
Video featuring 10 chapters across 5 countries.
See archive post for details:
hub.e-nable.org/content/perma?id=44176
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
So
welcome
to
the
chapter
round
table.
This
is
the
first
time
that
we're
trying
something
like
this,
but
I
think
it's
a
bit
overdue
because
it's
it's
such
a
interesting,
diverse
community
that
we're
working
with
and
the
goal
here
is
basically
just
to
have
an
opportunity
for
chapters
to
connect
to
share
local
and
regional
activities
and
resources,
but
also
talk
about
some
of
the
challenges
involved
at
each
of
the
chapter
sites
and
and
maybe
look
at
some
of
the
developments.
A
So
maybe
we
can
go
around
and
introduce
ourselves.
I
think
we've
already
done
some
of
that,
but
if
you
want
to
mention
the
chapter
that
you
work
with
and
maybe
just
give
it
a
general
sense
of
the
size
of
the
chapter
or
the
the
devices
that
you
work
with,
we
can
just
sort
of
go
around
after
you
speak
pic
pick,
somebody
else.
So
so
I'll
pick,
let's
see
I'm
on
you.
B
Hi,
I'm
ananya,
I'm
17.,
I'm
from
the
murrow
catholic
high
school
in
enabled
chapter,
and
we
have
about
15
to
20
members
and
some
of
them
come
every
meeting
and
some
of
them
just
drop
by
when
they
are
interested
and
then
so
far.
We've
built
like
five
different
hands
and
we've
completed
two
cases
delivering
to
two
different
boys
in
new
mexico
and
in
california.
B
Oh,
how
about
misha,
jane.
C
Okay,
my
name
is
isha
jane
and
originally
I
started
a
chapter
in
my
freshman
year
of
high
school,
I'm
a
senior
now
but
kind
of
like
delayed
because
of
certain
issues,
so
I'm
starting
it
back
up
and
I'm
working
with
the
robotics
team
and
the
nh
nhs
team
to
like
make
a
much
of
arms.
But
the
problem
is
that
we
don't
have
funding
for
3d
printing,
so
we
have
3d
printers,
but
we
don't
have
filament.
C
C
B
B
Children
yeah,
that's
it
oh
yeah,
and
we
have
about
30
volunteers
living.
A
E
B
Oh
sorry,
yeah,
maybe
barry.
E
Hey
thanks
sandra,
so
I'm
barry
brilly
in
in
indianapolis,
and
our
chapter
is
called
out
on
a
limb
and
there's
four
other
members
of
our
chapter
and
a
little
bit
of
history.
So
I
first
heard
about
this
from
article
in
the
magazine,
new
yorker,
I
think
like
two
years
ago
they
had
about
dyi
biohackers.
I
don't
know
if
anybody
else
read
that
at
the
very
end
of
the
article
it
mentioned
the
enable.
E
So
I
went
to
that
website
and
I
saw
that
and
I
thought
wow
that's
really
cool
and
I
could
use
try
that
out
on
my
3d
printer.
So
I
printed
out
the
phoenix
and
with
ben's
help
got
the
chapter
going.
So
thanks
a
lot
for
your
help
and
quick
getting
back
with
my
emails.
E
But
another
thing:
it's
of
interest
is,
I
have
a
friend
here
in
town,
the
other
one
of
the
other
chapter
members
whose
job
his
career
is
actually
fitting
orthotics
to
people,
and
he
does
that
professionally
and
he
said
one
day
he's.
It
was
sad
that
a
lot
of
the
people
that
come
in
especially
kids,
they
can't
afford
the
the
price
of
his
prosthetics
they're.
Like
5
000,
they
start
at
5
000
go
up,
so
I
asked
him
if
we
can
start
a
chapter
and
make
her
own.
E
He
got
really
excited,
so
there'd
be
a
good
demand
for
that.
But
it's
one
of
the
problems
I'm
having
right
now
with
one
of
the
clients
is
that
it's
the
shape
of
the
hand
it's
the
palm's
wider
than
it
is
long.
So
when
we
did
the
scaling,
it
didn't
work
quite
right.
So
what
we're
up
against
now
is
the
scaling
one
of
the
axes,
but
not
the
other
because,
like
stuff
like
the
pins
would
be
oval
instead
of
rounding,
etc.
A
Welcome
kenzie
you're
on
mute.
If
you
want
to
introduce
yourself
and
tell
us
the
chapter
that
you
work
with
and
the
general
size
of
the
chapter,
and
maybe
some
of
the
devices
that
you've
worked
with
and
then
when
you're
done,
you
get
to
pick
the
next
person
to
speak.
B
Okay,
awesome.
Thank
you
guys
for
having
me
so
my
name
is
kenzie
paul
and
I
started
in
the
naval
chapter
in
mount
vernon
indiana
close
to
evansville
in
2018,
and
that
was
involvement
with
a
lot
of
my
classmates
and
then
we
started
doing
projects
with
enable
evansville,
which
is
a
little
bit
bigger.
We
have
about
10
to
15
volunteers,
and
then
I
now
attend
the
university
of
notre
dame
and
I'm
a
chapter
leader
with
notre
dame
and
abel
and
that's
a
lot
bigger.
B
We
have
about
100
members,
I'm
very
well
versed
in
the
phoenix
and
the
kwawu.
A
So
we
already
did
sandra
I'm
sorry
and
no
problem.
You
you
jumped
in
let's
see
who
hasn't
spoken
yet
maybe
zainab.
D
Sure
hi,
my
name
is
zainib.
I'm
from
turkey
we
joined
enable
in
2014
became
an
ngo
in
2017.
We
have
over
3
000
volunteers
at
all,
but
we
have
a
management,
approximately
20
people
we
did
over
100
hands.
D
G
A
Your
internet's
not
so
good,
maybe
can
you
call
right.
G
Okay,
I'll
I'll
present
our
branch.
As
I
said,
my
name
is
jacob
malinovic
and,
together
with
me
that
we
initiated
about
seven
years
ago,
the
israeli
activity
we
started
with
children
later
on.
We
moved
also
to
adults
which
don't
have
a
commercial
solution.
G
G
For
example,
we
developed
a
special
scanner
to
scan
and
get
a
3d
model
of
the
hands
of
the
children,
the
adults
that
we
need
to,
and
we
are
now
at
the
end
of
a
project
to
we
are
developing
an
electronic
and
it
will
be
for
adults.
It
will
be
a
we
think,
so,
a
unique
one.
G
Regarding
number
of
volunteers,
we
have
three
circles
I'll
say
the
first
one
is
about
20
volunteers
that
will
deplete
all
the
activities
about
50
to
60
volunteers,
additional
that
our
when
required.
We
know
what
are
the
expertise
and
they're
doing
mainly
r
d
and
things
like
that,
and
there
is
the
large
circle
which
I
assume
more
than
100
people,
which
we
call
them
when
we
need
a
specific
help.
A
F
A
F
All
right
so
john
shell,
co-founder
of
enable,
I
am
really
impressed
and
pleased
to
see
how
many
chapter
leaders
are
doing
such
wonderful
stuff.
I
my
chapter
is
rochester
enable
we
were
originally
a
research
and
development
group.
Then
we
took
up
residence
in
a
high
school
where
we
also
did
some
mentoring.
F
When
kovit
came,
we
shut
down
and
we've
been
focusing
on
personal
protective
equipment,
including
a
new
transparent,
face,
mask
that
we're
going
to
be
putting
out
in
the
next
few
weeks
and
basically
we're.
We
also
take
responsibility
for
administering
the
enable
fund.
So
that's
that's
me
right
now.
They're
really
only
I
would
say
ben
and
me
are
the
only
regulars
in
the
rochester
chapter
and
I
think
we're
sort
of
thinking
about
what
is
our
true
function.
Beyond
the
the
financial
oversight
property.
F
A
I'll
introduce
myself
my
name's
ben
rubin,
I'm
involved
with
the
renable
chapter
with
john
chill,
but
I
really
started
working
with
enable
a
few
years
ago
on
media
coordination
and
helping
to
shift
from
the
google
plus
community,
which
was
what
we
used
before
to
what
we
use
now
at
the
hub
and
one
of
the
projects
is,
is
looking
at
ways
to
help
chapters
collaborate
together
a
little
bit
better,
and
this
was
one
of
those
those
initiatives
of
you
know,
learning
from
the
the
local
chapters
and-
and
I
think
sometimes
it's
easy
to
forget-
that
it's
not
a
central
organization.
A
So
it's
it's
really
a
wonderful
opportunity
to
learn
and
share
resources,
so
maybe,
as
a
place
to
start,
I
think
barry
had
a
great
topic
that
he
brought
up
about
customization
and
I
think
the
more
cases
that
a
team
works
on
the
more
that
they
realize
it's
not
about
just
printing
a
hand.
Most
of
the
work
comes
from
the
dialogue
with
the
the
individual
recipient
volunteers
and
getting
their
guidance
what
they
need.
A
What
fits
so
it
sounds
like
there's
some
custom,
printing
and
scaling
that
that
barry's
doing
maybe
sandra
yaca
for
zainab.
If
one
of
you
could
share
some
of
your
experiences
about
difficult
cases
and
some
of
them
can
be
opportunities
for
learning
some
of
them,
it's
really
hard
to
find
the
right
device.
G
And
this
is,
I
think,
one
of
the
most
important
issues
and
therefore,
in
our
case,
usually
it
is
two
or
three
cycles
means
we,
we
print
the
first
and
see
what
are
the
the
issues
and
then
the
second
and
sometimes
the
third,
and
we
in
one
case
even
had
to
go
over
six
cycles
until
the
child
was
happy
and
it
means
that
he
started
to
use.
You
know
the
end,
so
this
is
very
important.
G
One
more
thing
that
we
found
very
important
is
the
colors
and
the
logo
that
you
that
we
are
putting
on
the
ends.
If
each
child
decided
what
he
would
like
to
get
it
can
be.
I
don't
know
superman
iron
man,
some
teams
or
logos
of
football
teams,
or
we
have
hello,
kitty,
minnie
mouse,
you,
you
name
it
and
the
the
the
psychological
effect
of
these
logos.
G
Our
encounters
are
most
important
because
then
we
see
it
clearly
that
the
other
children
in
the
class
change
the
attitude
to
this
disabled
child
and
the
effect
is
very,
very
strong.
F
Those
are
great
points
I
wanted
to
say:
barry
that
sometimes
scaling
is
is
not
going
to
be.
The
right
is
not
going
to
be
the
ultimate
solution.
F
It
sounds
like
if
you're
getting
to
the
point
where
the
holes
are
being
distorted,
then
what
you
really
need
is
help
customizing
the
model
itself,
so
that
you
can
change
the
proportions
without
changing
the
shapes
of
the
holes
for
that
you're
going
to
want
to
work
with
a
modeler
or
a
3d
designer.
I
wouldn't
be
surprised
if
there's
someone
on
this
call
who
could
help
with
that.
But
if
that
is
not
the
case,
then
you
can
use
the
hub
and
put
out
a
call.
F
We
have
some
very
talented
designers
available
who
could
probably
help
you
figure
out
what
what
the
right
way
to
modify
the
model
is.
E
Yeah
thanks
I'll
do
that.
After
later,
thanks
john.
F
E
Yeah,
please
do
I
can
reach
out
to
you
later.
It's
not
yeah,
I'm
just
a
our
chapter
is
relatively
new
and
I've
just
been
doing
this
for
a
little
over
a
year.
Now
the
printing
stuff
figuring
everything
out
so.
A
Yeah
zina,
maybe
you
can
talk
a
little
bit
about
on
how
you
guys
have
developed
some
of
the
customization.
D
Okay,
we
just
are
trans
and
trap.
In
two
years
we
are
transitioning
into
a
system
where
every
volunteer
who
wants
to
do
a
hand,
not
every
volunteer,
is
involved
in
making
hands.
Some
are
involved
in
communication
and
other
issues
as
well,
and
what
volunteers,
who
want
to
do
hands
need
to
do
two
test
hands
before
meeting
with
an
actual
child,
so
that
reduces
the
amount
of
mistakes
that
are
being
made
and
the
customization
levels
that
are
being
made.
D
We
ask
them
to
do
a
hand,
usually
rapture
reloaded,
that
works
from
the
wrist
and
the
hand
that
works
from
the
elbow,
which
is
usually
unlimited
arm
after
they've
finished
and
completed
two
successful
hands.
We
assign
them
cases.
We
have
learned
that
some
cases
are
hard.
Some
cases
are
easy.
Easy
cases
are
cases
you
can
do
just
by
scaling.
Some
cases
are
very
hard.
D
Maybe
the
child
has
gone
through
surgery.
There
are
things
that
are
not
supposed
to
be
there
stuff,
like
that.
We
assign
very
hard
cases
to
experienced
volunteers
who
are
capable
of
working
with
3d
modelling
and,
if
necessary,
we
take
the
columbine
the
shape
of
the
hand
where
we
we
put
it
in
mold.
We
we
take
the
mold
of
them,
if
necessary,
so
the,
but
still
again
with
the
it's,
a
completely
volunteer
work,
so
the
process
may
take
up
to
a
year.
D
D
What
we
found
successful
was
building
teams
instead
of
individual
volunteers
that
speeded
up
the
space
but
made
the
process
more
speedy
because
it
we
had
divided
the
process
taking
measurements,
building
the
model
printing
and
assembling.
D
So
the
team
makes
the
work
divides
the
work
among
itself,
and
so
we
can
assign
a
single
case
to
a
single
team
which
is
made
of
sometimes
or
three
people,
sometimes
of
15
people
doesn't
matter.
We
have
teams
in
universities,
we
have
started
having
teams
in
high
schools,
we
have
corporate
teams,
which
are
also
our
sponsors,
so
we
take
donations
from
corporations
and
teach
them
we
give
trainings,
and
then
we
make
a
team
out
of
them.
D
So
that's
how
we
have
built
cases
have.
I
stepped
on
every
shoe
on
every
thing.
A
I
think
I
think
it
covered
it
and
yeah.
I
think
one
of
the
most
important
parts
it
sounds
like
barry
that
you're
looking
at
is
trying
to
customize
with
a
unique
fitting
device.
It's
that
dialogue
going
back
and
forth
like
yakov
said
and
like
signup
said.
Sometimes
it
can
take
a
really
long
time,
but
it's
worth
it
to
go
back
and
forth.
E
F
Fine
barry,
but
they,
but
all
they
will
let
you
do
is
scale
which
will
in
fact
distort
the
the
hinge
points.
So
exactly
which
hand
model
are
you
working
on
the
phoenix
the
phoenix.
G
At
least
two
or
three
times
a
project
with
students
to
try
and
make
a
more
scalable
end,
let's
say:
take
the
phoenix
okay
but
design
it
in
a
way
that
the
scale
will
not
be
linear
for
all
the
end.
But
you
will
have
a
few
parameters
that
helps
to
to
do
the
customization.
G
Unfortunately,
I
have
to
say
that
until
now
we
failed,
we
didn't
succeed
to
complete
the
project
with,
is,
as
I
said,
two
or
three
teams,
and
I
would
like
to
say
that,
like
snap
told
us,
we
are
working
also
with
fixed
teams.
G
We
we
saw
that
when
you're,
when
there
is
a
team
with
a
good
communication
inside
the
team,
then
the
capabilities
are
excellent,
let's
say
or
much
better,
at
least
and-
and
I
think
that
this
is
very
important.
I
would
like
to
add
one
more
thing.
We
tried
few
times
to
initiate
teams
in
high
schools
and
we
failed
the
at
least.
Our
observation
is
that
the
the
the
children,
let's
call
them,
the
students,
are
too
young
and
they
are
not
ready
for
what
I
would
like
a
a
marathon
run.
G
D
Not
all
our
teams
are
high
school
and
I
agree
with
it's
harder
to
work
with
high
school
students
rather
than
universities,
because
in
universities
you
can
work
with
engineering
students
which
are
also
very
interested
in
the
hand
itself
as
well,
but
we
have
succeeded
in
some
high
schools.
I
think
the
key.
The
first
thing
is,
they
came
to
us.
We
didn't
go
to
them.
They
were
willing
to
learn
and
to
do
the
work.
D
The
second
key
is
that
high
schools,
who
did
that
were
technical,
high
schools
here,
who
were
a
lot
interested
in
engineering
stuff
as
well,
and
more
robotic
teams
already
competing
in
frc
and
so
forth,
who
are
also
talented
in
engineering
stuff,
and
we
are
currently
doing
in
high
school
projects
which
are
which
includes
students
with
high
iq
only
so
it's
a
it's
a
rather
elite
group
of
high
school
students
not
standard
high
school,
but
I
think,
if
they're
willing,
they
can
do
it
too,
but.
A
It's
hard
work,
I'm
curious
to
ask
some
of
the
the
students
that
we
have
with
us.
Have
you
partnered
with
any
other
chapters,
because
that
can
be
there's
actually
some
networks
of
schools
in
the
u.s
that
are
pretty
developed,
which
is
interesting.
So
I'm
curious
to
find
out
from
from
you
guys.
C
So
when
I
started
like
my
freshman
year,
I
partnered
up
with
other
schools,
and
then
they
had
like
this
convention
where
a
lot
of
people
attend
and
we
presented
our
product
and
we
got
one
of
the
enable
like
instructors
that
are
from
our
region
from
broward
to
come
and
display
like
three
printers
and
we
got
funding
from
there.
But
in
like
the
last
couple
of
years,
like
the
last
two
years
we
become
we've
become
on
and
off.
So
we
lost
most
of
our
contacts.
C
So
hopefully
this
year
like
we
can
make
it
up
again
with
other
schools
because,
like
I
had
two
other
high
schools
that
I
was
in
contact
with
but
like
they
graduated
or
they
moved
on,
and
we
just
like
lost
contact
so
hopefully
like
once
school
starts
again
because
of
the
pandemic.
We've
been
like
lost
contact
with
like
everyone.
C
B
Yeah
I
was
like
searching
for
chapters
nearby,
but
I
don't
think
there's
any
active
chapters
near
my
high
school,
but
I
like
partnered
with
a
couple
of
volunteers
that
were
like
willing
to
help
me
and
then
in
our
past
two
cases
like
I've
been
asking
them.
Questions
and
they've
been
really
helpful.
So
that's
worked
for
us.
A
A
B
Yeah
we're
just
working
with
novi
high
school
and
their
robotics
team
that
we
paired
up
with
them.
We've
also
connected
with
the
troy
chapters
and
other
surrounding
chapters
again
it
during
the
pandemic.
We've
kind
of
lost
those
connections
because
we
have
been
a
little
busy
with
the
other
stuff
but
yeah
during
the
summer.
We're
planning
on
reconnecting
with
those
chapters
and
starting
to
meet
up
with
them
in
person
again.
F
Great,
that's
all
really
terrific.
I
did
want
to
want
to
say
that,
while
it's
really
ideal
to
be
able
to
work
shoulder
to
shoulder
with
people
in
real
life,
one
thing
the
pandemic
has
done
for
us
is
make
these
kinds
of
zoom
calls
routine
for
everybody,
and
you
can
do
a
lot
of
collaboration
that
way.
F
So
one
of
the
functions
of
this
meeting
and
the
functions
of
the
hub
is
to
help
groups
find
even
regular
partners
who
may
not
be
located
in
the
same
area
and
barry
in
your
case
in
particular,
because
you
have
an
orthotist
working
with
you,
and
that
is
a
really
valuable
relationship
that
we
would
love
to
cultivate
and
learn
more
about.
I
think
you
should
you
should
really
work
with
us
to
help
find
a
good
3d
designer
to
really
become
part
of
your
team.
E
A
You
know
it's
something
to
keep
in
mind
too,
with
high
schools.
It
can
be
a
pretty
fast
tempo.
You
know,
you've
got
a
lot
of
classes
and
there's
also
the
the
club
or
the
the
chapter,
the
some
of
the
other
chapters.
Like
zynev's
chapter,
you
know
it's
it's
a
network.
It
has
been
a
network
of
over
3000
people,
so
it's
really
all
over
the
country
and
I
think
in
the
us
there's
it's
a
different
kind
of
structure.
There's
not
so
many
chapters
that
are
connected
in
that
way.
A
So
we
can
learn
a
lot
from
from
how
they're
doing
things,
but
also
trying
to
find
those
projects
that
do
align
between
different
schools
and
different
chapters.
It
has
seemed
to
be
pretty
pretty
useful
for
some
of
the
chapters
you
know.
I
was
curious
that
maybe
we
can
touch
on
some
of
the
community
infrastructure.
A
There's
some
new
updates
that
we've
added
some
of
it
directly
connects
to
chapters
is.
Is
everybody
aware
of
the
hub?
I
imagine
I've
seen
I
recognize
most
your
names
from
the
hub
if
it's
not
familiar
shoot
a
message
in
the
chat
I'll
I'll,
add
a
link
to
the
form
feel
free
to
use
the
chat
and
that
the
remaining
time
that
we
have
for
this
call
as
well.
A
If
you
have
any
other
questions
that
are,
you
know,
feel
like
off
topic
or
something
just
toss
them
in
the
chat
and
we'll
we'll
make
sure
to
get
to
them.
But
I
thought
I'd
share.
There's
there's
a
couple
things
that
maybe
could
be
useful
for
chapters.
One
is
the
new
badging
system.
That's
been
updated
in
the
last
couple
weeks.
I
can
share
my
screen.
A
I'm
sure
most
you
guys
are
are
aware
of
this
already,
but
we
have
a
system
of
badges,
it's
going
to
continue
to
be
updated,
but
this
can
be
a
great
way
to
learn
about
the
people
in
the
community.
So
when
you're
in
the
forum-
and
you
see
somebody
making
a
post
if
you
hover
over
their
profile,
you
can
see
that
the
badges
that
they've
collected
so
vivek
has
printed
the
v-necks
v3
hand
and
and
has
some
other
badges.
A
This
can
be
a
really
great
way
if
you're
struggling
with
a
specific
challenge
with
a
specific
device
or
printing
or
even
community
development,
you
can
post
and
then,
when
you
again
hover
over,
you
can
find.
Oh
wow
bob
has
a
lot
of
experience
with
a
lot
of
devices,
and
you
can
even
you
know
at
sign
and
then
put
his
name.
A
A
Badges
nobody,
the
chapter
status,
is
also
a
badge,
so
you
know
that's
where
the
the
map
comes
from.
A
A
Let's
see
if
I
can
zoom
out
a
little
bit
sorry
guys
when
you
click
on
one
of
the
chapters
that
has
a
spotlight
you'll,
see
it
at
the
top
that
has
sort
of
the
star
around
it,
and
you
can
open
up
a
a
pretty
deep
dive
into
how
the
chapter
works.
So
there
is
information
on
the
site,
community,
the
tech
and
specs
of
the
team,
the
team
and
specialities,
the
design
and
process
projects
and
collaborations
there's
a
lot
of
links
in
here,
research
funding.
A
Again
it's
worthwhile
to
remember
all
enabled
chapters
are
financially
independent,
so
each
one
finds
a
different
model
for
sustaining
itself,
sometimes
under
the
umbrella
of
a
school,
sometimes
as
a
maker
space
and
then
at
the
bottom
there's
certain
links
to
the
public
presence.
So
we
have
about-
let's
see,
I
think,
eight
different
spotlights
but
send
me
an
email,
I'll
put
my
email
in
the
chat.
A
If
anybody
else
is
interested
in
on
sharing
and
and
again
I'll
put
a
link
to
this
project,
it
can
be
some
inspiration
for
teams
to
learn
about
some
of
the
other
models
that
exist.
A
It
looks
like
we've
got
a
a
new
member
ricardo.
Maybe
you
could
introduce
yourself
what
chapter
do
you
work
with
and
about?
How
big
is
your
team?
H
Approximately
80
devices,
most
most
of
them,
already
signed
it
by
by
us,
and,
yes,
I
I
I
want
a
share
in
in
this
meet.
We
love
with
all
of
you,
because
we
develop
a
lot
of
new
devices
very
interesting,
for
example,
for
my
electrics
prosthesis
with
elbows.
F
A
Yeah
and
there's
also
the
hub,
has
some
separate
spaces
for
different
projects
and
adding
a
link
right
now
in
the
chat
for
bionic
designs.
There's
a
pretty
impressive
team.
That's
collected
around
bionics
right
now,
so
ricardo,
if
you're
involved
in
bionic
design
or
if
anybody
else
in
the
call
is
working
on
projects
that
team
meets
once
a
week.
I
think
vivec
is,
is
actually
leading
that
effort,
but
there's
people
from
all
over
the
world
that
are
a
part
of
that
project
and
it
seems
like
it's
moving
pretty
fast.
So.
H
Yes,
I've
been
I'm
very
interested
in
insurance
experience
here
in
peru
from
the
bionic
devices,
because
for
for
us,
I
don't
know
here
in
peru,
for
example,
is
very
very
expensive
because
of
the
prosthesis
is
is
more
expensive
than
80
000
here
in
peru,
and
that
is
impossible
for
our
users
and
we
we
try
to
reduce
all
the
costs
in
the
electronics
and
in
the
materials
to
deliver
the
processes
for
free
for
the
users,
and
the
experience
are
very
well
filled
in
with
our
bionic
devices.
A
A
Yes,
the
link
that
I
just
shared
is
a
link
to
the
project
focused
on
bionics,
so
within
the
hub
there's
all
these
other
projects.
A
Yep
yep
yep,
so
I'm
looking
in
the
chat
and
there's
a
comment
from
ananya
about
finding
new
cases,
and
I
know
so
for
folks
in
the
in
the
u.s
there's
the
enable
web
central.
It's
actually
an
international
effort,
but
each
each
region
really
has
its
own
community
that
that
pulls
that
together
so
anonymous.
Maybe
you
can
tell
us
a
little
bit
about
your
experience
and
we
can
see
if
we
can
help.
B
Yeah
we
like
last
year,
just
use
enable
web
central
to
find
our
cases
and
it
worked
pretty
well.
We
got
like
two
different
cases,
which
was
just
how
much
we
could
handle,
but
I've
been
looking
just
like
every
few
days
right
now
and
they
haven't
been
too
many
that
we
think
we
can
work
with.
So
I
was
just
trying
to
see
if
there's
other
ways
that
we
can
get
it,
because
I
feel
like
there's
more
people
who
need
hands.
They
just
don't
really
know
about
mabel
yet
so.
A
Right
and
in
the
chat
you
you
mentioned,
you
know
connecting
to
local
churches,
organizations,
veterans
associations.
That
is
a
great
way
to
learn
a
little
bit
more
about
your
local
community.
A
It
can
be
a
lot
better
as
a
learning
opportunity
for
your
team
to
to
have
time
to
go
back
and
forth
and
and
go
through
the
customization
and
and
that
kind
of
stuff.
Anybody
else
have
any
thoughts.
D
We
found
out
that
hospitals,
doctors,
pediatricians
especially
or
physical
workers,
physical
physical
therapy
workers-
they
are,
they
have
a
lot
of
access
to
kids,
especially
and
or
people
in
general,
who
need
these
hands
and
don't
have
any
knowledge
about
enable
or
any
other
foundation
that
can
provide
them
without
taking
a
lot
of
money.
So
I
would
recommend
to
get
in
touch
with
them.
F
I
would
reinforce
that.
I
I
think
we
have
found
that,
while
doctors
and
prosthetists
are
quite
conservative,
the
physical
therapists
are
the
ones
who
are
the
real
problem
solvers
and
are
accustomed
to
hand
crafting
solutions
for
individual
clients.
So
they
they
are
a
particularly
good
group
to
reach
out.
E
D
Is
going
low
and
I
have
to
leave
soon,
can
I
have
any
additions
or
does
anybody
have
any
questions
for
me
or
do
you
want
to
know
something
about
our
chapters.
A
I
did
share
a
link
in
the
chat
to
designer
chapter
spotlight
and
it
has
her
contacts
in
there
as
well.
So
it's
really
worth
looking
and
reading
about
their
activities,
turkey,
it's
it's
really
a
regional
hub,
it's
not
just
a
chapter,
but
it's
a
whole
network.
They
have
thousands
of
volunteers
that
they've
worked
with
and
yeah,
maybe
for
chapters
that
are
looking
to
learn
about
organizing
teams,
especially
working
on
different
cases,
in
sort
of
more
of
a
decentralized
network
design.
App
is
a
great
resource
for
that.
A
Okay,
thanks
sign
up
and
enable
france,
okay.
A
A
That
group
right
now
is
has
been
enabled
brazil
in
april
france
and
enable
turkey
have
been
looking
at
the
systems
that
they're
using
to
manage
their
cases
and
and
trying
to
share
some
resources,
but
anybody
else,
maybe
sandra
or
yakito,
if
you're
interested
feel
free
to
reach
out,
and
I
can
keep
you
in
the
loop.
G
I
can
say
that
we
developed
also
a
system
to
manage
all
the
activities.
Unfortunately,
volunteers
are
not
so
happy
to
share.
You
know
to
put
all
the
data,
so
it
is
a
kind
of
system
that
we
have
data,
but
not
all
the
data.
A
Yeah,
so
that's
a
great
point.
A
Yeah
data
management
is
is
really
important
and
actually
the
the
project
that
the
those
teams
are
working
on
is
just
about
being
able
to
sort
of
share.
The
structure
of
you
know
a
website,
and
then
the
data
would
be
kept
locally,
and
but
it
that's
a
really
good
point
that
the
the
bigger
a
chapter
grows
and
the
different
partnerships
that
they
have,
especially
with
hospitals
and
public
health
care
it
can.
It
can
become
something
where
it's
it's
important.
The
data.
G
G
You
know
they
would
like
to
operate
and
not
solutions
like
we
suggest,
at
least
in
many
cases
with
children,
so
our
cooperation
with
hospitals
is
relatively
poor.
Unfortunately,
we
started
in
the
last
three
years
a
new
project
which
is
not
ends,
but
it
is
a
special
I'll
say
device
to
open
the
ends
of
people
with
a
end.
G
I
assume
that
soon
we
shall
soon
we
should
share
this
project
and
the
results
with
all
the
enable
communities.
At
the
moment
we
are
still
running
I'll,
say
the
r
d
kind
of
beta
sites,
and
so
on.
A
Yeah
in
the
u.s,
it's
also
difficult
to
collaborate
with
hospitals
for
some
of
the
countries
in
in
south
america
and
central
america,
though
places
with
public
health
care
system,
it
can
be
different
ricardo.
Do
you
find
that
you
are
able
to
work
with
doctors
in
public
health
care.
H
Now
we
have
the
possibility
of
work
before
the
intervention,
the
operation,
because
it's
very
important
for
the
for
the
user
know
all
the
possibilities
of
prosthesis.
H
Before
the
the
the
intervention
of
the
of
the
doctors,
because
here
in
peru,
the
doctors
only
now
the
traditional
prosthesis
and
maybe
inter
operate
the
patient
for
the
before
the
elbow,
but
it's
only
necessary
in
the
hand
and
for
that
also,
we
work
with
the
doctors
in
the
preview
of
the
operation
for
the
for
the
user.
A
Great,
so
it
sounds
like
ricardo
and
his
team
have
bridged
to
working
with
hospitals,
and
there
are
more
opportunities
with
some
of
the
devices
that
the
open
source
devices,
so
that's
great,
so
we're
we're
running
short
on
time.
I
did
want
to
share
a
few
resources
and
then
take
some
last
questions
too.
First
question
is:
is
this
useful
for
everybody?
Is
this
something
that
you'd
want
to
join
once
a
month
or
once
a
quarter.
A
E
I'm
sorry
ben,
can
you
post
some
people's
emails
because
I
want
to
send
some
questions
to
them.
A
Yeah,
if
everybody
wants
to
add
their
emails
into
the
chat,
I
can
add
that
into
the
archive
post.
Yeah
thanks
and
I
did
take
some
notes
about
where
everybody's
from
so
the
other
way
that
you
can
do.
It
is
if,
if
somebody's
already
left,
the
call
I'll
put
the
chapters
down
that
were
that
participated
and
you
can
go
on
the
chapters
map
and
you
can
find
all
the
information
to
facebook
and
all
that
stuff.
A
So
I'm
going
to
share
my
screen,
really
quick.
I
did
want
to
share
this
resource.
This
is
specifically
designed
for
chapters
so
in
the
enabled
hub.
We
have
this
wishbone
project
and
it's
an
opportunity
for
chapters
to
request
funds
up
to
a
thousand
dollars
if
they
need
something
for
equipment
and
also
to
share
equipment
and
materials.
A
So
the
way
it
works
is
you
make
a
chapter
request
for
funds?
It
opens
up
a
form,
you
fill
it
out.
You
can
support
a
chapter
or
you
know
help
chapters
cover
shipping.
If
they
need
things
you
can
offer
equipment
or
you
can
ask
for
support
it's
a
new
project.
There
haven't
been
many
people
involved.
We've
had
a
couple,
people
that
have
had
requests,
there's
two
printers
that
are
posted.
These
are
free.
A
If
somebody
wants
to
request
it,
they
can
follow
up
by
going
through
the
the
links
at
the
top
I'll
include
that
in
the
chat
again,
this
is
specifically
for
chapters
and
there's
a
whole
wiki
within
the
project.
So,
if
you
want
to
learn
more
about
it,
you
can
actually
it's
really
even
easier.
If
you
just
go
to
the
the
main
forum,
you
can
say,
learn
more
and
I'll.
A
Take
you
right
to
that
specific
part
of
the
wiki
and
there's
a
sort
of
a
question
and
answer
of
how
it
works,
but
again
for
for
folks
looking
for
some
resources,
especially
for
starting
up
I'm
adding
that
lincoln
and
maybe,
as
one
last
mention,
there's
also
a
community
effort
like
this
for
device,
pilots
or
recipient
volunteers
just
another
way
of
putting
it.
People
that
have
limb
difference
that
are
trying
open
source
devices.
So
for
chapters
have
a
large
community
that
they're
working
with
you
can
direct
them
to
this
group.
A
If
they'd
like
to
participate,
they
can
join
a
group
of
people.
Talk
about
the
devices
that
they've
tried
talk
about
the
designs
that
they're
working
on
some
of
the
people
are
designers
also
that
have
limb
difference,
and
they
have
really
wonderful
insights
on
how
to
improve
this
whole
process.
A
A
Great
well
thanks
so
much
for
everybody
for
joining
today,
again
I'll
follow
up
with
an
email
and
a
post
in
the
hub.
Anybody
have
any
last
questions.
F
B
I
just
had
a
quick
question
if
any
like,
if
anyone
had
any
experience
with
like
devices
that
specifically
helped
for
riding
bikes,
because
I
yeah
like
I-
was
working
with
one
of
the
one-
a
little
boy
who
wanted
a
hand
that
would
help
him
bike
and
we
built
him
a
phoenix
youtube.
But
I'm
not
sure
if
that's
like
working,
it's
helped
him
like
play
catch
and
have
like
a
hand
but
not
exactly
right.
A
There's
a
couple
adapters
for
that.
Let
me
pull
one
up
and
I
can
share
it
in
the
chat
with
you.
A
Start
there
it
is
so
check
this
out
and
actually,
if
you
make
a
post
or
if
you
search
in
the
hub
for
bicycle,
you'll,
see
a
lot
of
of
other
resources.