►
From YouTube: Weekly e-NABLE Town Hall Meeting - April 8, 2022
Description
This is a recording of the weekly e-NABLE Town Hall meeting.
The notes/agenda document can be found here: https://bit.ly/e-nable-town-hall-notes
If you want to join into the meeting itself, you are welcome to do so. You'll find the Zoom link in the events calendar on the Hub.
A
A
Okay,
so
welcome
to
another
town
hall,
we're
just
getting
started
here
and
alexander
popped
in
just
to
share
a
quick
update,
we're
just
going
to
take
a
look
at
some
work
he's
doing
in
onshape
before
we
start
our
usual
meeting
here
so.
B
A
That
sounds
good,
except
unless
I'm
mistaken,
I
don't
think
you
want
defaults.
I
think
you
need
to
set
supports
to
only
touching
build
plate
because
otherwise
you're
going
to
get
supports
inside
all
the
channels
and
stuff
like
that.
B
A
A
B
A
B
A
Okay,
well,
why
don't
you
go
ahead
and
create
a
copy
that
people
can
access,
then
do
you
want
to
share
that
in
the
hub.
A
A
Well,
thank
you
for
sharing
that
update
alexander,
that's
very
cool,
and
that
was
very
quick
and
welcome
those
who
have
joined
us.
Let
me
just
adjust
my
windows
here,
a
bit
okay,
so
we've
got
our
live
stream
going
on
youtube.
Anyone
there
is
welcome
to
use
the
chat,
we'll
try
to
keep
an
eye
on
that
for
those
in
the
meeting
it's
there
in
the
lower
right
corner,
so
help
me
to
keep
an
eye
on
that
who
is
able
to
help
with
notes
today
and
are
you
in
a
good
position
to
do
that.
C
A
Action
items
ben
was
going
to
see
if
we
could
arrange
a
presentation
with
jack
buchanan
which
he
did
and
we
have
scheduled
for
the
29th
of
this
month,
and
I
am
so
looking
forward
to
that.
So
actually
it's
worth
mentioning
that
the
next
two
weeks
are
going
to
have
special
presentations.
So
today
I
think
we'll
be
continuing.
A
Some
of
the
discussion
we've
been
having
kind
of
the
big
picture
community
discussion
and
this
week
will
will
be
our
last
week
to
have
that
discussion
for
right
now,
then
we'll
take
a
pause
for
a
couple
of
guest
presentations
and
and
then
regroup
on
the
on
the
far
side
of
that.
A
So
I'm
gonna
go
ahead
and
cross
that
one
off
jeremy
write
up
a
lumia
discussion
thread,
including
a
proposed
pay
amount
for
the
matching
platform
analysis
fellowship
now.
I
was
holding
off
on
this
and
I'm
still
holding
off
on
this
because
we
had
a
nice
discussion
with
our
friends
at
deloitte.
Ed
seemed
interested.
Have
we
heard
anything
back
from
him
ben.
D
I
haven't
since
the.
A
So
it's
fine,
I
mean
he
has
a
lot
going
on,
but
I
think
we
should
still
hold
off
on
posting
this
because
I
think
they
are.
You
know
they'd
be
kind
of
an
ideal
candidate
to
help
us
with
this.
If
they
have
somebody
available
and
he
seemed
to
be
optimistic-
that
they
would
so
I'm
gonna
let
that
play
out.
I.
A
Our
laundry
list
yeah,
if
we're
presenting
the
whole
list
of
needs,
then
yeah.
I
definitely
won't
leave
it
out.
That's
great
ben
speak
with
kyle
about
the
potential
flash
forward
and
or
reality
partnership
any
any
new
discussions.
There.
D
You
know
you
can
actually
leave
that
on
the
list,
but
it's
it's
sort
of
in
the
queue
because
I'm
going
to
see
if
I
can
wrap
up
the
the
dean
rock
article
john's
been
helping
me
with
that
this
week.
It's
it's
a
significant
thing,
it's
sort
of
like
a
five-part
article.
I
just
finished.
I
think
the
final
draft
of
it
this
morning.
B
D
A
Perfect,
I
just
moved
it
down
here
under
action
items
that
will
take
some
time,
john,
where
can
following
up
with
school
or
john
and
ben
following
up
with
schools
about
internships.
Have
we
heard
anything
through
that
handshake?
Is
that
the
program
yeah?
Have
we
heard
anything
through
that.
C
A
A
I
I
think
there
was
actually
another
reply
that
I
haven't
gotten
to
so
I
I'll
get
to
that
after
this
meeting.
But
my
guess
is
that
we'll
be
meeting
within
a
week
or
so
so
that
that's
good.
D
I
guess
as
an
update
to
that
as
well.
We
we
have
been
accepted
through
handshake
by
brandeis
as
of
this
morning,
so
nice
so.
D
Case
and
yeah,
and
he
said
that
he'd
look
over
our
account
this
coming
week
and
and
help
out
with
preparing
us
now.
That'll
help
us
not
just
for
brandeis,
but
you
know
it's
starting
to
have
a
presence
with
us.
Universities
well.
A
C
A
Oh,
even
better,
all
right
so
on.
We
go
upcoming
special
guest
presentations.
As
I
mentioned,
we
have
the
next
two
weeks,
booked
so
seif
savage,
we'll
be
presenting
a
research
paper,
understanding
the
care
ecosystems
of
3d
printed
assistive
devices
next
week
and
then
the
following
week,
we'll
have
jack
buchanan,
presenting
the
exciting
kwa
3.0
design.
We've
looked
at
some
video
clips
of
different
aspects
of
that
and
it
looks
unbelievable.
I'm
I'm
super
impressed
with
his
work.
So
I'm
looking
forward
to
that.
A
One
is
alexander
still
here:
no,
he
already
dropped
off.
We
got
to
make
sure
he's
aware
of
that.
He
will
definitely
want
to
see
that
one
okay
metrics
are
here.
I
don't
think
there
was
much
to
call
oh
hold
on.
This.
Doesn't
look
like
the
current
one.
Maybe
this
didn't
update.
Okay,
I'm
just
gonna
show
it
on
screen.
Here's
the
current
metrics,
because
we're
up
to,
I
think,
202
chapters
I
saw
we
had
a
new
one
interesting
note
we're
at
an
even
2500
members.
A
As
far
as
number
of
volunteers
registered
on
the
hub,
that's
kind
of
a
cool
milestone,
otherwise
things
are
are
pretty
typical.
As
far
as
activity
goes
still
sitting
with
a
very
healthy
balance
in
the
enable
funds
intent
folks,
okay
on
we
go
from
the
hub,
we
got
some
posts
to
look
at
one
from
masby
who's
with
us.
Excellent,
so
masby
shared
a
wrist
brace
splint
that
he
used
and
shared
a
photo
of
that
here
and
a
link
to
the
design
on
thingiverse
mazda
care
to
offer
any
additional
comments
in
this.
A
I'm
just
looking
at
his
comments
down
here.
Total
filament
usage
is
around
40
grams,
maybe
around
five
hours
of
print
time,
so
that
prints
flat
and
then
it
gets
thermoformed.
But
for
some
context
this
is
what
we
were
talking
in
the
chapter
leaders
roundtable
about.
You
know
whether
there
is
a
role
for
our
community
to
play
in
the
the
scenario
happening
in
ukraine
and
and
the
refugees
and
people
being
affected
by
that
it
was.
A
It
was
pretty
well
agreed
that
you
know,
there's
some
risks
doing
things
like
tourniquets
and
that
3d
printing
might
not
be
even
the
best
approach
for
that
injection
molding
probably
makes
more
sense,
but
something
like
this,
a
thermoformed,
splint
or
brace,
looks
promising,
and
there
was
another
link
that
was
shared
and
I
I
should
have
captured
it
here.
A
Let's
here
we
go
eric
bubar
shared
this
link
that
prusa
has,
and
they
have
quite
a
few
interesting
looking
designs
for
braces
and
fingers
and
hands,
and
these
different
types
of
splints
and
those
seem
to
be
very
a
very
good
fit
for
our
community
and
capabilities.
So
anyway,.
A
E
Oh,
you
hear
me
good,
very
good,
very
good
for
comments,
so
I
put
in
a
brief
overview,
then
asked
about
the
the
film
and
stuff,
so
I
put
in
a
brief
overview
how
it's
supposed,
how
at
least
the
process
that
I
took
to
form
it
and
yeah.
It's
it's
fairly
straightforward,
but
it
is
a
little
bit
fiddly
because
you
need
to
thermal
form
it
on
the
recipient
on
on
their
hand,
so
the
temperature.
A
I
will
point
out:
I
see
in
your
comments
here
that
you
say
pla
is
a
must
that
you
don't
want
to
even
be
using
the
pla
pluses
or
whatever
some
of
those
do
have
a
higher
temperature
resistance.
But
I
do
want
to
point
out
that
there
are
it's
pretty
common
to
have
find
a
tough
pla
which
is
different
from
a
pla
plus.
So
a
tough
pla
will
have
a
higher
strength,
but
it
does
not
increase
the
temperature
resistance
and
thermo
forms
just
as
well.
So
that
would
be
a
nice.
C
D
A
Interesting
because
I've
even
I've,
I've
done
pet
g
before
even
and
pet
g.
You
certainly
have
to
heat
it
for
a
longer
period
of
time.
It
takes
longer
for
it
to
get
to
that
deforming
temperature,
but
it
was.
I
actually
did
an
assembly
tutorial,
video
on
the
phoenix
using
pet
g
showing
that
thermoforming,
so
it
might
depend
on
the
process
being
used.
Were
you
using
a
heat
gun
or
hot
water,
or
what
were
you
using
for
this.
D
A
D
A
E
I
probably
left
it
for
a
minute
or
so,
and
it
was
sort
of
pliable,
but
not
enough
to
bend
it
over
the
buck.
Yeah.
A
D
To
add
to
to
our
look
at
things
outside
of
typical
devices
supporting
the
refugee
community,
this
is
a
little
bit.
You
know
maybe
out
there,
but
I've
been
working
on
a
project
here
in
rochester,
new
york,
supporting
afghan
refugees
in
resettlement
and
one
of
the
things
you
know
in
a
previous
lifetime.
D
I
was
working
doing
sports
development
in
afghanistan
and
cambodia
and
south
africa
and
with
skateboarding
and
one
of
the
it's
sort
of
a
long
story,
but
one
of
the
things
that's
required
for
doing
those
kind
of
sports
development
programs
are
safety
equipment,
wrist
guards,
elbow
pads,
knee
pads,
which
can
be
pretty
expensive.
So
I'd
be
interested
to
follow
up
about
this
design
for
wrist
guards
to
see.
If
that
could
be
a
project.
A
Well,
then,
I
think
we
are
gonna
that
at
that
point
we
will
care
about
impact
resistance
right.
Certainly
so
we'd
have
to
test
some
other
materials,
but
it's
possibility
for
sure
and
remember
this
also
part
of
it
is
is,
is
you
know
the
design
itself
is
relevant.
You
know,
maybe
by
adjusting
the
geometry,
you
could
make
it
easier
to
thermal
form,
even
with
some
of
the
more
you
know,
higher
higher
strength
or
higher
temp
materials,
so
anyway,
interesting
stuff.
A
Thank
you
for
sharing
that
massey
and
I
added
in
the
other
link
for
prusa
there
on
the
post
for
anyone
interested
in
that,
and
I
I
hope
that
discussion
continues
because
we
kind
of
left
it
hanging,
but
I
do
think
there's
there's
opportunity.
It's
it's
all
about
finding
the
right
connections.
We
need
somebody,
that's
on
the
ground
has
contact
with
the
people.
That
would
benefit
from
something
like
this
and
can
help
to
clarify
sort
of
what
they
need
or
can
use,
and
so
I
think
we're
waiting
for
that
human
connection.
At
this
point,.
E
Regarding
rigidity,
the
device
is
really
cool
in
the
way
that
I'll
pull.
E
A
D
You
know,
and
they
they
do
have
typical
wrist
guards.
They
sort
of
have
like
a
harder
piece
that
you
can
sort
of
clip
in
which
could
be
possible
if
just
so.
E
All
of
this
is
purely
cosmetic,
so
you
know
realistically,
we
could
create
our
own
and
create
our
own
pattern
and
just
having
these
ribbed
features
for
extra
rigidity
really
helps,
and
then
the
outer
brim
there's
sort
of
a
border
which
again
helps
with
the
with
the
rigidity.
D
Definitely
a
good
project
for
schools
too,
as
something
that
you
know,
students
could
scale
and
size
and
you
know,
learn
about
thermoforming
and
print
flat.
E
The
sizing
for
this
is
personally,
I
believe
that,
probably
something
like
you
know,
print
a
few
80,
whatever
percent
size
would
be
probably
for
children
or
just
more
delicate
hands,
but
this
is.
E
To
that
extent,
and-
and
it
was
really
and
her
wrist
was
very
painful,
so
this
helped
her,
you
know,
keep
it
keeping
of.
E
It's
not
formed
for
for
me
yeah
all
of
these
gaps,
but
but
it's
very
comfortable
it
looks
cool.
It
doesn't
anything
like
the
the
sort
of
default
vanilla
one
size
fits
all
braces.
It's.
A
D
It's
also
a
lot
more
breathable
than
like
the
wrist
guards
that
we're
using
in
the
the
programs
with
the
afghan
youth,
and
we
have
had
issues
with
you
know
some
of
the
pads
don't
fit.
You
know
some
kids
are
bigger
than
others.
It'd
be
a
neat
project
to
be
able
to.
You
know,
scale,
bigger
ones
if
you
need
it
and
for
now.
E
And
also
probably
a
non-intentional
feature
of
this
is
specifically
this
slip,
because
you
can
thermal
form
it.
You
can
keep
it
sort
of
open
and
gaping
up
like
this,
so
that
you
have
more
flexibility
for
your
fingers.
But
if
you
want
to
keep
the
upper
palm
more
rigid,
you
can
just
thermal
form
it
shut,
and
so
it
will
be
more
difficult
to
to
manipulate
the
fingers,
which
could
be
a
pro
and
con
depending
on
the
situation,
but
because
we
can
thermal
form
it
any
way
we
want.
C
You
know
a
an
auxiliary,
strap
on
that
front.
Most
corner
would
be
another
way
of
adjusting
that
flap
that
you
were
just
talking
about.
A
The
back
remember
the
key
different
remember.
The
key
difference,
john,
is
with
a
splint.
The
whole
point
is
you
don't
want
the
wrist
to
move
and
with
our
devices
you
need
the
wrist
to
move
so,
but
for
but
for
parts
of
the
hand
I
mean
in
terms
of
using
that
kind
of
a
pattern
of
leaving
it
open
and
breathable.
That
has
some
interesting
potential.
C
A
Look
we're
gonna
look
at
one
of
those
next
actually
so
why
don't
we?
Why
don't?
We
use
that
as
an
opportunity
to
move
on
here,
because
daniel
kroll
posted
a
a
note
that
he's
seeking
an
arm
device?
Well,
actually
it's
the
next
one
that
I
was
thinking
of,
but
we'll
go
to
this
one
first,
so
daniel
is
seeking
an
armed
device,
but
he
didn't
think
we
have
anything
that
can
help
him.
A
He
was
basically
saying:
hey
wonderful
work,
you
guys,
but
I'm
gonna
say
goodbye
and
alexander
and
ben
were
kind
enough
to
jump
in
and
say
whoa
whoa
whoa,
don't
leave
so
quick.
You
know
and
basically
started
asking
some
questions.
You
know,
let's
explore
this
a
little
bit
further
and
encouraging
him
to
stick
around,
and
I
just
thought
that
was
worth
highlighting
as
a
good
example
that
you
know
just
because
we
don't
have
what
somebody
needs
today
doesn't
mean
that
we
won't
have
it
tomorrow.
A
A
Okay,
so
we'll
just
encourage
daniel
to
stick
around
give
us
a
chance
to
see
if,
if
maybe
we
can
come
up
with
something-
and
this
is
the
one
I
was
just
referring
to-
then
alejandro
says
that
he's
seeking
a
device
for
somebody
that
has
sort
of
a
non-standard
anatomy.
This
is
like
what
john
was
just
saying,
missing
some
fingers
and
is
looking
for
a
suggestion
from
us
and
chinway
gave
an
interesting
link
here.
Saying:
hey
check
this
out.
This
has
some
interesting.
A
So
this
is
somebody
that
was
just
blogging
about
their
work.
Making
some
trying
to
make
a
device
for
a
kid
from
iraq,
but
embedded
in
here
are
all
kinds
of
interesting
links
for
different
types
of
thumb,
lists
and
custom
hands
and
I'll
be
willing
to
bet
that
we
don't
have
some
of
these
on
our
radar,
so
it
just.
It
was
interesting
to
me
that
we
kind
of
come
across
things
like
this,
sometimes
with
with
these
interesting
resources
that
we
didn't
know
about
it.
A
Would
this
strikes
me
as
a
great
role
for
a
volunteer
that
somebody
that
can
kind
of
be
keeping
an
eye
out
for
designs
or
or
resources
like
this,
that
we
might
not
have
been
aware
of
and
when
they
pop
up
on
a
post
like
this,
let's
grab
those,
let's,
you
know
check
out
their
licenses,
let's
bring
them
into
our
catalog.
Let's
make
sure
that
we're
sharing
these,
you
know
with
the
rest
of
the
community,
and
I
don't
think
we
really
do
a
great
job
of
that
right
now.
A
C
A
C
Kevin
kevin's
work
on
the
hub
has
already
been
a
substantial
step
in
that
direction,
based
on
isabelle's
work
before
her.
So
that's
a
good
example:
jeremy,
the
kind
of
function
that
that
they
might
take
on.
A
A
So
here's
our
upcoming
events
and
the
one
we
have
today
is
the
new
member,
meetup
and
I'll
be
presenting
a
summary
of
our
current
needs
and
hopefully
getting
some.
Some
people
to
you
know
take
on
some
of
those
roles,
we'll
see
what
happens,
but
as
we
know
it's
it's
you
know
these.
These
things
tend
to
get
more
play
after
the
fact
in
their
in
their
recorded
form
than
they
do
live.
A
So
even
if
we
don't
have
anybody
in
the
meeting
we'll
share
it
on
the
hub
and
and
it'll
be
a
good
vehicle
to
help
spread
the
word
about
what
our
needs
are,
and
hopefully
that'll
open
up
some
some
new
paths
for
us.
So
let
me
just
pull
up
the
summary
ben.
Do
you
have
anything
else?
Do
you
want
to
go
over
here
in
terms
of
this
month's
events?
Where
are
we
at
here?
The
15th
so
that's
here
today
and
then
I
guess,
is
it
just
one
more.
D
Yeah,
the
the
last
event
that
we
have
is
the
focus
follow-up,
which
will
be
looking
at
lower
limb
devices.
There's
been
some
some
really
significant
work.
I
think
this
year
so
far
coming
from
the
the
team
in
in
maine
and
also
in
a
couple
of
the
directions,
including
paraguay,
so
I'm
excited
to
see
what
they
have
to
share
and
and
again
they
have
a
a
health
care
system
that
that
has
been
embracing
their
work.
D
So
you
know
something
for
for
u.s
chapters
to
take
note
of,
and
you
know,
even
though
it's
not
something
that
directly
applies
to
our
current
agreement
with
the
fda.
There
are
us
chapters
that
are
supporting
international
work
that
are
using
lower
limb
devices
so
that
that's
something
to
think
about
that.
We
have
these
really
advanced
chapters
outside
of
the
us
that
that
are
working
in
a
collaboration
with
lower
limb
with
their
healthcare
systems.
A
Nice,
okay,
all
right
on
the
go
to
our
discussion
topic.
So
you
know
the
the
discussion
we've
been.
Having
has
been
this
kind
of
sort
of
a
higher
level
discussion,
just
in
in
light
of
several
volunteers,
reducing
their
time,
one
or
two
retiring
from
their
enable
activities.
A
You
know
kind
of
how
we're
going
about
things
and
while
we're
making
an
effort,
as
we
were
just
talking
about
to
find
people
to
take
on
some
of
these
roles,
we
also
don't
want
to
just
assume
that
the
way
we've
been
doing
things
is
the
way
we
should
be
doing
things.
You
know
we're
very
open
to
different
approaches
and
want
to
hear
what
other
people
have
to
think.
We've
had
some
great
discussions
recently
talked
with
eric
bubar,
who
is
looking
into
sort
of?
How
do
we
describe
this
john
kind
of
building?
C
C
But
if
you
imagine
one
of
those
interns
serving
on
the
board
of
the
amputee
coalition
and
then
imagine
that
other
brandeis
interns
could
then
work
with
them
to
try
to
develop
the
outreach
program
that
opened
up
a
whole
new
way
of
thinking
about
how
we
might
bridge
the
gap
to
the
recipient
community.
A
It
does
and
there's
actually
an
interesting
aspect
of
this
that
I
hadn't
considered
before
you
know
when
we've
explored
using
interns
in
the
past.
There's
there's
a
challenge
with
that
because
in
at
least
in
my
experience
so
far,
they
do
wonderful
work.
The
challenge
has
more
to
do
with
the
lack
of
continuity.
You
know
you
have
one
for
a
period
of
time
and
then
you
lose
them
and
somebody
else
comes
in.
A
But
when
I
look
at
this
scenario
with
ian,
he
could
potentially
provide
kind
of
an
overlay
where,
when
one
wraps
up,
he
finds
somebody
else
to
kind
of
step
in
and
can
help
with
the
transition
and
and
yeah.
There's
there's.
Definitely
some
interesting
potential
there
that
I
look
forward
to
talking
to
him
about
that's
great
right.
C
C
There
are
several,
I
think,
groundbreaking
new
devices
showing
up
jack's,
kwawu
and
the
evo
hand,
and
for
that
matter,
some
print
in
place.
Possibilities
on
the
horizon,
andrew
and
alexander,
are
continuing
to
do
terrific
work,
even
as
we
are
bracing
ourselves
for
the
notion
that
they
might
get
real
jobs
and
becoming
less
available.
Nonetheless,
they're
doing
great
work
and
making
great
progress.
C
I
just
want
to
say
that,
while
I
think
jeremy-
and
I
and
bob
are
all
looking
to
reduce
our
centrality,
I
think
the
community
is
really
going
through
a
very
interesting
growth
spurt
right
now.
I
think
it
has
to
do
with
the
with
the
reduction
of
you
know
the
kovic
era,
but
I
think
enable
is
actually
is
doing
good,
and
I
think
this
attempt
by
us
to
step
back
and
give
new
leaders
a
chance
to
step
forward
is
being
is
really
a
good
thing
for
all
of
us
yeah.
A
Yeah
bring
some
fresh
energy
into
the
mix
that
always
helps.
I
I
don't
want
to
go
off
on
too
much
of
a
tangent
here,
but
that
you
got
me
to
think
about
something
that
I
just
want
to
mention
here.
John
this
10-year
anniversary,
we've
talked
about
working
on
kind
of
a
video
compilation
of
you
know,
collecting
videos
from
people
throughout
our
community
chapters,
sharing
whatever
they
want
to
share
about
their
experience
about
people
they've
helped
about
what
enable
means
to
them
about
anything.
A
I'm
saying
this
for
anybody
who
might
be
watching
more
than
anything
else.
First
of
all,
have
we
gotten
anything
yet
ben?
Do
you
know
if
anyone
has
submitted
any
videos
or
shared
anything.
D
A
D
In
the
hub
post
and
every
time
somebody
commented,
I
I
just
put
it
back
up
into
the
poll,
so
there
I
think
there
was
a
video
from
eric
bubar
and
there's
two
videos
from
somebody
else.
I
can.
I
can
pull
it
up.
A
Okay,
so
the
thought
I
had
first
of
all,
I
think
I
can
that's
one
thing
that
I
even
though
I'm
trying
to
reduce
my
involvement
in
some
areas,
I
think
I
can
help
with
parts
of
the
video.
I
do
a
lot
of
video,
editing
and
stuff
like
that,
so
I
could
probably
do
it
more
quickly
than
some
others
I
I
will
need
others
to
help
kind
of
submitting
all
the
the
the
clips
and
everything,
but
I
could
then
help
with
with
things
from
there.
A
But
the
other
thing
that
occurred
to
me
is:
I
use
a
platform
with
my
business
called
riverside,
which
is
a
recording
platform.
It
works
a
lot
like
zoom,
where
you
get
in
a
meeting
with
with
one
or
more
people,
and
you
can
interview
them
and
stuff
like
that,
but
you
can
record
it
and
the
way
it
records
is
different,
unlike
zoom,
where
you're
recording
you
know
from
the
cloud
it's
actually
recording
directly
from
their
camera
and
microphone
and
uploading
in
the
background,
so
you
get
a
nice
recording,
regardless
of
internet
quality.
A
So
it's
really
good
for
doing
kind
of
you
know
remote
interviews
and
things
like
that.
So
it
occurs
to
me
that
I
could
use
that
platform.
It's
already
paid
for
to
interview.
You
know
people
in
our
community,
john
ben
alexander.
Basically
all
the
people
here
in
this
meeting
plus
other
key
volunteers
we
could
get
on
do
an
interview.
I
could
record
that
and
then
take
clips
from
that
as
part
of
the
video
too.
So
that
would
be
an
easy
way
to
get
some
additional.
You
know
little
interview
clips
for
this
compilation.
A
Riverside.Fm
yeah,
that's
the
platform,
so
just
keep
that
in
mind
ben,
maybe
you
and
I
could
work
on
that.
That's
something
that
you
could
maybe
help
me
with.
As
far
as
doing
the
interviews
I
could,
I
could
work
with
you
on
that
and
I
think
we
could
gather
more
more
content
that
way.
Even
if
people
don't
have
videos
that
have
already
been
done,
we
could
invite
them
in
ask
them
some
questions.
You
know
and
just
just
get
a
recording
that
way.
D
Sure,
and,
and
actually
we
might
as
well
partner
that
up
with
the
monthly
meetings
that
we're
already
doing
so
depending
on
you
know
who
we
ask,
there's
there's
different
meetings
that
they
could
present
in
or
we
could
have
the
conversations
in.
A
Was
a
tangent
I'm
sorry
back
to
what
we
were
talking
about,
so
there
have
been
some
great
discussions
with
people
that
seem
to
be
interested
in
in
taking
on
some
of
these
areas
of
responsibility.
So
what
was
our?
Where
do
we
leave
things
off
with
eric
and
jeff?
Is
there
a
follow-up
conversation
there?
John?
I
don't
remember
where
things
were
left
with
them.
C
D
There
is
a
a
meeting
I
think
next
thursday
in
the
morning
that
ian
proposed
it
sounds
like
alexander,
is
available,
so
just
keep
an
eye
on
that
email
chain.
A
Okay,
all
right,
let's
see
so
where
do
we
go
from
here.
A
So
today,
we're
going
to
have
the
new
members
meet
up
and
we'll
run
through
this
full
list
of
sort
of
open
needs
that
we
have.
Where
is
that
over
here
and
we'll
be
talking
through
each
of
these
things?
Maybe
it's
worth
taking
a
look
at
this
since
we
haven't
for
a
while
and
asking
ourselves
do
we
have
everything
on
here
that
we
want
to
be
talking
about,
so
we
have
the
needs,
analysis
and
plan
development
for
the
matching
platform.
A
That's
the
one
that
we're
talking
about
with
deloitte,
but
it's
still
an
open
need,
we're
looking
for
a
web
development
and
software
development,
leader
or
coordinator,
not
necessarily
somebody
to
do
all
the
development,
but
somebody
to
coordinate
and
make
sure
that
the
different
people
doing
that
kind
of
work
are
in
sync,
with
one
another,
not
duplicating
efforts
and
coordinating
things.
A
Revising
our
web
presence
to
bring
together
new
the
new,
enable
france
website,
design,
enabling
the
future
and
the
hub
potentially
ewc,
but
we
seem
to
be
leaning
more
towards
the
direction
of
the
the
french
site,
design
for
matching
we're
looking
for
an
event
planner
now
this
might
be
outdated.
This
was
for
the
10-year
anniversary
celebrations
and
we're
focusing
more
now
on
a
video
than
events.
Do
we
want
to
sort
of
change
this
into
a
video?
Well,
I
mean
now
that
I
just
offered
to
help
with
that.
C
A
Someone
to
develop
international
partnerships
and
collaborations
an
outreach
coordinator,
so
this
is
getting
the
word
out
more
to
the
people.
That
would
need
our
help
getting
the
word
out
about
enable
and
what
we
can
do.
We're
looking
for
organizers
for
recurring
meetings.
Somebody
to
do
like
what
ben
has
been
doing
to
help
arrange
for
the
guests
and
topics
and
coordinate
the
meetings
and
share
the
links
and
notes
and
all
that
good
stuff.
A
An
r
d
department,
tech
leader
coordinator,
so
similar
to
the
development
coordinator
up
above.
But
this
is
somebody
that's
overseeing
and
coordinating
amongst
our
research
and
development
efforts
again
to
make
sure
that
we're
not
recreating
the
wheel
make
sure
that
we're
building
off
of
one
another's
work
and
sharing
our
progress
with
one
another
and
that
sort
of
thing
somebody
to
manage
the
enable
help
desk
and
respond
to
incoming
inquiries,
which
now
rick
williams,
has
taken
on
and
is
doing
that
work.
So
we'll,
hopefully
get.
A
He
is
also
helping
us
now
to
monitor
incoming
badge
requests
and
and
taking
care
of
those
badges
and
bob
for
the
time
being,
is
still
monitoring
our
enable
web
central
cases
for
case
facilitation,
but
we
may
need
somebody
to
take
that
over,
depending
on
where
we
go
with
enable
web
central
fundraising.
A
So
I'm
going
to
take
the
lead
on
fundraising,
reviewing
new
chapter
submissions
and
improving
chapters
that
may
likely
end
up
going
to
rick
williams,
but
we
wanted
to
kind
of
just
take
things
one
at
a
time
not
dump
everything
on
him
at
once,
maintain
weekly
enable
metrics
and
reports.
So
that's
what
I
do
before
these
meetings
having
to
put
all
these
these
numbers
in
here,
masby
felt
like
he
might
be
able
to
automate
some
of
this,
at
least
to
some
extent.
So
there
is
some
work
being
done.
A
Going
live
with
the
new
design
for
our
device,
catalog,
which
is
still
sitting
there
in
a
kind
of
a
pending
state,
need
to
go,
live
with
those
pages
and
then
start
porting
our
other
designs
in
the
catalog
over
to
that
new
design
and
then
going
forward.
Maintaining
that
enable
device
catalog
getting
new
designs
in
there,
and
it
occurred
to
me
that
this
is
not
just
a
matter
of
waiting
for
people
to
submit
a
new
design
using
the
form
that
we
have.
A
People
are
welcome
to
do
that,
but
a
lot
of
times
they
won't
we'll
come
across
something
on
the
hub,
like
the
one.
I
showed
you
earlier
today
where
there's
some
new
designs
that
come
up
in
a
link.
We
need
somebody,
that's
going
to
catch
those
grab
them
and
if
it's
an
open
source
license,
let's
bring
them
in
and
add
them
to
our
catalog.
A
You
know,
I
don't
think
we
want
to
wait
for
people
to
submit
things
necessarily
if
it's,
if
it's
a
relevant
design
and
then
somebody
to
help
document
additional
ways
that
school
chapters
can
contribute,
contribute
to
enable
like
the
device
testing
that
we
talked
about
r
d.
That
again,
this
might
be
something
that
eric
ubar
and
his
team
take
on.
But
we
wanted
to
capture
that
as
as
a
need
put
that
down
as
a
medium
effort.
So
that's
what
we
have
so
far.
A
D
I
had
social
media
on
there.
I
think
I
keep
my
eye
on
the
hub
I
post
on
facebook
from
time
to
time,
but
I
feel
like
that's
kind
of
as
far
as
as
I
get
most
the
time
with
sort
of
my
bandwidth.
I
think
it
would
be
great
to
you
know.
I
actually
had
a
conversation
with
john
earlier
this
week
about
some
work,
he's
doing
to
try
to
coordinate
social
media
stuff
with
his
eco
restoration
project,
but.
A
Email
newsletters.
On
that
note,
I
added
that
too,
because
that's
that
could
be
another
right.
D
F
I've
got
two
quick
suggestions.
First,
one
is
little
on
the
second
item.
The
web
developer
thing.
Yes,
adding
the
phrase
project
manager
might
be
helpful
because
I
think
that
and
the
industry
would
be
the
closest
job
title
that
matches
what
we're
expecting
there.
F
The
second
suggestion
I
have
would
be
I'm
not
sure
if
it's
intentionally
supposed
to
be
a
little
bit
unclear,
but
when
you've
got
skill,
effort
ongoing
it
makes
sense,
because
this
is
going
to
be
a
perpetual
obligation-
or
at
least
until
they
hand
it
off
to
somebody
else,
but
people
might
not
have
a
clear
indication
of
how
much
time
is
being
expected
from
them.
So
perhaps
something
like
a
estimated
hours
per
week
number
or
something
like
that-
might
help
people.
A
F
A
So
this
is
what
we'll
go
through
in
the
meeting
in
about
an
hour
and
15.
we'll
go
through
in
some
detail
and
then
share
that
recording
and
see
what
that
yields.
But
I
look
forward
to
then
you
know
starting
to
hand
that
process
over
to
others
we're
just
trying
to
get
the
ball
rolling
here.
A
Okay,
so
I
guess
let
me
just
ask
if
anyone
has
any
other
thoughts
right
now,
just
on
the
kind
of
the
bigger
picture
topic
of
what
we're
doing
here
in
the
us,
our
path
forward,
the
people
we're
arranging
discussions
with,
I
mean
I
think,
we're
we've.
We've
got
some
good
good
progress
here
and
I'm
happy
to
just
kind
of
let
that
play
out.
Is
there
anything
else
that
we'd
like
to
discuss
on
that
now.
D
You
know-
maybe
I
can
just
add
on
to
what
you
mentioned
before
in
the
hub.
There
was
a
post
from
a
person
who
would
be
a
potential
device
user,
and
you
know,
interestingly,
their
introduction
was
basically
saying.
I
don't
think
this
is
the
right
place
for
me.
You
guys
are
doing
wonderful
stuff,
but
I'm
out
of
here
I
got
an
email
this
week
from
another
device
user
asking
permission
you
know,
can
I
be
involved
in
the
community
events?
D
I
said,
of
course
you
know,
you'd
be
you're
more
than
welcome
you're
really
encouraged
to
come
to
all
of
them,
but
it
is
interesting
that
you
know
we
we've
managed
to
figure
out
a
very
comfortable
place
for
makers,
but
I
do
think
you
know
people
like
jeff
powell
and
others
other
chapters
that
have
sort
of
long
relationships
with
device,
users
and
and
their
families.
It
really
would
be,
I
think,
really
valuable
for
us
to
think
about
how
we
can
create
community
with
device
users
and
that's
something
that
you
know.
D
I've
tried
individually
to
come
up
with
kind
of
community
meetings
through
enable,
but
I
think
really,
the
sweet
spot
is
going
to
be
locally.
Having
groups
like
jeff
powell's,
helping
hands
or
paraguay's
team
in
paraguay
pulling
those
communities
together,
and
then
you
know
how
do
we
get
some
of
those
community
members
involved
in
the
hub?
What
are
they
looking
for?
A
Maybe
it
occurs
to
me
also,
though,
ben,
that
that
those
two
might
be
related,
that
if
somebody
like
jeff
powell
is
coordinating,
say
a
get
together
in
his
area
with
families
that
he
might
be
in
a
good
position
to
sort
of
educate
them
about.
You
know
the
hub
and
encourage
them
to
get
involved
and,
and
he
might
be
able
to
in
turn,
share
materials
and
kind
of
a
model
of
hey
here's.
A
How
we're
doing
these
gatherings
and
here's
the
stuff
I
share
with
them
and
here's
the
stuff
that
we
we
talk
about
and
do
and
that
sort
of
thing
so
that
others
in
their
communities
could
sort
of
start
to
duplicate
that,
in
other
words,
kind
of
give
us
a
template
of
how
he's
doing
these.
That
might
be
useful.
D
Right,
yeah
and
if
there
was
some
sort
of
like
community
group
where
different
chapters
were
as
part
of
their
feedback
process,
encouraging
members
to
to
join,
you
know
a
space
on
the
hub
that
where
people
could
be
sort
of
sharing
their
their
explorations
using
devices
and
that
kind
of
stuff
that
could
be
a
way
to
kind
of
build
this
up.
From
their
perspective.
A
Okay,
well,
I
I
don't
think
it
makes
sense
to
move
on
to
some
of
the
other
topics
in
here,
because
there's
nothing
really
time
sensitive
on
that,
and
I
would
rather
give
myself
some
extra
time
to
get
ready
for
the
next
meeting.
So
let
me
just
ask
if
anybody
else
has
anything
that
you'd
like
to
discuss
on
any
topic
today.
Otherwise
we
can
wrap
a
little
early.
F
Super
quick
update
on
upfront,
yes
about
10
minutes
ago
alexander
and
I
were
able
to
figure
out
how
to
get
our
first
exported
assembly
out
of
onshape.
F
F
It's
a
it's
an
it's
not
even
a
feature.
This
isn't
integrated
into
the
app.
This
is
just
a
set
of
requests
in
an
application
called
postman
that
I've
been
able
to
string
together
to
figure
out
how
to
export
this
stuff.
A
F
It
appears
that
anything
in
onshape
can
be
exported
if
you
bang
your
head
on
the
api
hard
enough.
There's
no
documentation
for
any
of
this,
so
it's
very
exploratory.
But
it
says
that.
C
So,
listen!
Let
me
let
me
point
out
that
you
and
jeremy
are
the
only
people
who
really
understand
what
that's.
A
What
I
was
just
gonna
say
I
was
just
going
to
explain
what
we're
talking
about
here,
so
we,
this
is
relation
to
a
project
that
we
have
going
on,
which
we
hope
to
share
soon,
where
we're
developing
an
application
to
make
it
much
easier
to
parametrically
scale
and
get
all
the
files
that
you
need
for
3d,
printing
for
initially
one
design,
then
a
second
and
then
other
designs.
It's
something
that
will
build
over
time.
A
The
onshape
platform
is
being
used
as
kind
of
a
middle
ground,
that's
where
the
designs
get
hosted
and
then
parameterized
and
then
exported
from,
and
we
ran
into
a
challenge
where
in
trying
to
do
a
particular
aspect
of
one
of
our
designs
using
chain,
mail
alexander
figured
out
a
way
to
build
out
this
chain
mail
as
an
assembly
in
onshape,
which
is
different
from
a
part,
and
we
we
hit
a
roadblock
because
the
api
andrew
was
using
only
lets
him
export
parts.
It
doesn't
let
him
export
assemblies
and
that's
what
we're
talking
about
here.
A
He
found
a
workaround,
which
is
very
good
news.
Now
we
can
move
forward
with
this
project
and
share
it
that
much
sooner
with
the
community,
it's
going
to
be
very
cool.
It's
going
to.
Let
you
get
not
just
scaled,
not
just
you
know,
150
scale
but
scale
to
whatever
size
you
need,
including
potentially
non-uniform
scaling,
but
keep
certain
features
the
same,
so
keeping
screw
holes
the
same
size,
keeping
our
tolerances
between
moving
parts
the
same
size.
A
C
Indeed,
the
first
installment,
the
first
alpha
or
beta
of
this,
will
be
delivering
the
print
in
place,
phoenix,
which
is
a
phoenix
hand
that
won't
need
assembly,
except
for
the
the
sleeve
all
parametric
that
will
set
the
stage
for
the
evo
hand
being
delivered
through
this
whole
thing
and,
interestingly
and
disturbingly
we
can
now
see
our
way
towards
a
print
in
place
evo
hand
that
would
be
delivered
through
this
same
channel
and
for
that
matter,
a
potentially
print
in
place
evo
gripper
hand.
A
The
technical
challenge,
the
reason
you
haven't
seen
a
lot
of
print
in
place
stuff
before
is
because
everybody's
3d
printers
are
a
little
bit
different.
One
printer
might
do
a
certain
tolerance.
Have
a
you
know:
0.25
millimeter
tolerance,
another
one
might
have
a
0.35
millimeter,
and
so,
where
one
might
give
you
a
perfect
print
of
a
print
in
place,
design
the
same
thing
printed
on
another
printer,
the
parts
might
stick
and-
and
it
won't
work
now.
A
Different
filaments:
even
that's
right,
there's
all
kinds
of
variables
now
with
a
parametric
approach.
If
you
print
one
out
and
the
parts
don't
move
the
way
you
want,
all
you
have
to
do
is
go
in
and
adjust
that
parameter
for
the
tolerance
increase
the
gap
a
little
bit
print
another
one,
and
as
soon
as
you
get
one
that
works
now,
you
know
what
your
tolerance
value
is
for
your
printer
and
for
the
next
design
you
just
plug
in
that
same
value
and
you're
good
to
go.
So
this
is
a
very
powerful
thing.
C
A
Fair
point-
I
don't
know
they
are,
I
mean,
let's
see,
how
would
we
put
that
on
there
I
mean
I've
got
a
an
r
d
tech
leader
coordinator,
but
and
we
have
the
web
development,
you
know
project
manager,
but
we
don't
really
have
a
role
for
the
people.
Under
that
I
mean
we
actually
need
people
to
do
web
and
software
development.
We
need
people
to
actually
do
r
d
and
design
work.
So
maybe
those
should
be
roles
on
here
as
well.
Yeah.
A
Yeah
I
mean,
I
think,
that'll
probably
come
right
now.
Let
me
keep
it
general
and
generic,
and
then
we
can.
I
think
we
can
lay
out
different
types
of
of
skill
sets,
depending
on
what
platforms
we're
looking
for
help
with,
but
I
don't
think
I
need
to
go
into
that
today.
Necessarily.
D
Is
there
any
mention
on
the
the
document
about
the
chapter
management
toolkit.
D
That
was
something
that
masby
helped
to
provide
some
of
sort
of
the
skills
involved
with
that,
and
we
did
put
that
together
in
the
I.
A
We
only
have
we
have
where
is
it
here,
we're
just
reviewing
chapter
submissions
and
approving
them,
so
basically
the
badging
side
of
chapters?
That's
the
only
thing
we
have
reference.
Would
you
like
me
to
add
something.
D
Yeah
and
again
we
have
I
I
in
a
previous
email,
I've
got
the
skill
set
from
mazda
that
would
be
needed,
but
it'd
be
great
to
have
somebody
that
can
help
us
connect
the
dots
basically
allowing
chapters
to
edit
their
their
information.
So,
instead
of
doing
chapter
spotlights
that
and
chapter
updates
on
our
end,
it'd
be
something
that
each
chapter
could
update
their
information
and
then
that
would
automatically
update
it
on
the
map,
and
then
it
would
sort
of
maybe
show
like
that.
D
The
last
10
chapters
that
were
edited
it
would
just
kind
of
open
up
the
auditing
process
to
being
sort
of
do
it
yourself.
So
I
guess
that.
A
E
A
Maybe
we
split
these
out
into.
Let's
see,
help
me
out
andrew.
How
would
we
describe
if
we
wanted
to
specify
for
your
project?
What
kind
of
developer
are
we
looking
for?
Let's
separate
these
out,
we'll
have
one
for
the
hub.
F
Okay
yeah,
so
I'm
filling
two
responsibilities
that
I
think
could
be
advertised
separately
because
the
person
doesn't
need
that
both
skill
sets
to
contribute.
We've
got
the
back
end
api
stuff,
which
is
all
typescript
so
like
a
back-end
engineer
with
javascript
typescript
experience.
Ideally
in
sjs
also
bonus
points.
If
they
know
docker
doctor.
C
B
F
And
then
the
other
one
would
be
somebody
who
knows
react,
ideally
type
script,
and
ideally
they'd
have
experience
with
ionic.
A
Okay-
and
this
is
this-
one-
was
a
software
developer
for
back
end,
and
this
is
front
end
correct.
A
Okay,
that
helps
and
then
we'll
have
a
web
developer
for
the
hub
masby.
What?
If,
if
we
wanted
somebody
that
was
going
to
help
with
the
kinds
of
work
that
you've
been
doing?
What
would
those
skill
sets
be.
C
And
in
that
vein,
mazda,
you
know
ben
is
doing
this
really
interesting
article
about
dean,
rock
and
and
his
history,
and
to
do
it
he
was
able
to
use
some
of
the
tools
that
we
put
in
place
back
in
the
day
for
searching
back
into
the
original
google
plus
archive.
C
I
will
remind
us
both
that
there
was
that
interesting
visualization
that
I
prototyped
using
a
whole
weird
python
stack
that
you
did
a
very
strict
down
version
in
javascript
and
that
we
never
really
put
forward.
But
you
know,
as
I'm
thinking
about
the
continued
evolution
of
enable
a
a
visualization
of
all
of
this
stuff,
and
an
interface
to
all
of
this
stuff
remains
interesting.
So
today,
I'm
sort
of
feeling
that
that
project
should
also
be
put
on
the
front
burner,
even
though
neither
you
nor
I
apparently
feel
like
taking
it
across
the
finish
line.
C
E
Nope,
okay,
it
is
the
the
the
same
same
stack
same
developer
and
by
the
way,
as
as
I
mentioned
in,
I
can't
remember,
was
it
a
month
ago
or
something
the
macroscope
is
online.
It's
just
that
it
needs
some
tlc
and.
A
That's
right,
but
here's
another
one.
Here's
another
interesting
aspect
of
this:
the
web
developer,
we're
looking
for
php
in
javascript,
that's
pretty
much
the
same
skill
set
we
need
if
we
choose
to
adopt
this,
enable
france
platform
for
matching
it's
built
on
wordpress
and
php.
My
guess
is
that
same
person
could
help
us
get
that
going.
If
we
wanted
to
just
just
something
to
think
about.
E
Php
and
javascript
as
well
andrew
knows,
with
javascript,
is
a
very,
very
broad
languages,
with
many
different
frameworks
and
approaches.
So
just
the
boilerplate
php
dev
is
might
not
be
able
to
handle
everything,
but
it
could
be
start
to
to
figure
out
and
develop
at
least
some
bits
of
our
infrastructure
got.
It.
F
Francis
built
on
built
on
wordpress
right,
wordpress,.
E
D
D
Jeremy,
if
you
click
and
drag
and
make
a
square
around
one
small
part
of
that
timeline,
you
zoom
in.
E
Also
hamahab
at
some
point
made
an
update.
E
Link
to
a
specific
comment,
if
you
remember
john,
when
we
started
out,
we
had
an
issue,
we
could
not
link
to
a
comment,
and
so
instead
we
linked
to
a
post.
So
now,
after
whatever
update,
we
can
actually
link
to
the
specific
comment.
C
So
listen.
Can
we
take
a
step
towards
making
this
visible
by?
I
guess
the
right
way
to
do
it
would
be
a
space
you
could
also.
I
mean.
The
other
thing
is
that
the
colorful
version
of
this,
which
is
what
I
spent
a
lot
of
time
working
on,
is
an
impressive
piece
of
work
also,
and,
as
you
have
pointed
out,
it's
really
just
someone
who
understands
css
who
would
be
needed
to
port
the
styling
over
from
the
prototype.
E
It's
still
javascript,
it's
still
javascript,
it's
just
that
there
was
an
issue
that
the
python
version
of
your
library
had
some
features
that
the
javascript
didn't,
and
that
was
what
caused
the
pause,
because
I
didn't.
I
couldn't
figure
out
how
to
do
it
at
that
at
that
time,
and
then
we
got
sidetracked
and
you
know
life
goes.
D
E
It
needs
some,
it
needs
some
work
done,
but
I
mean
technically.
E
B
E
B
E
C
E
C
Personally,
I
think
this
would
be
the
the
10-year
anniversary
birthday
cake.
This
would
be
a
way
of
really
celebrating
and
exposing
10
years
of
enable.
D
And
again
I
did
use
it.
You
know
doing
doing
some
work
trying
to
to
dig
through
the
archives.
Our
search
in
the
hub
is
sort
of
like
non-chronological,
the
normal
search.
It's
helpful
but
kind
of
bizarre,
but
the
this
timeline
feature.
I
was
able
to
drill
down
really
fast
and
find
great,
the
very
first
post
between
john
curran
at
the
rotary
and
dean
rock
and
and.
A
E
I
just
updated
before
I
I
I
shared
the
link,
but
it
just
needs
to
be
added
to
a.
E
A
A
C
And
you're
going
to
be
going
through
thing
by
thing
by
thing,
but
it's
a
really
valuable
list,
if
it's
possible
for
me
to
share
a
screen
at
the
same
time,
and
if
you
send
me
a
link
to
the
spreadsheet,
I
might
try
to
do
it.
You
know
a
visual
diagram
sort
of
a
live
entertainment
so
that
people
don't
just
get
bored
hearing
an
enumeration
of
tasks.