►
From YouTube: Weekly e-NABLE Town Hall Meeting - April 21, 2023
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
All
right,
let's
see,
doesn't
look
like.
We
have
John
with
us
yet
so
we'll
leave
that
one
next
action
item
was
for
me
to
create
a
new
badge
for
those
printing,
assistive,
Tech
and
I.
Finally,
did
get
a
chance
to
do
that.
Just
did
it
this
morning.
So,
let's
see,
if
it's
showing
up
there
is
a
a
delay
in
publishing
those
to
our
site
and,
yes,
it
did
so
there.
It
is
down
here.
A
So,
just
a
heads
up,
Rick
that
you
might
see
those
badge
requests
coming
in
and
that's
really
all
you
got
to
check
just
just
some
photos
to
see
that
they
printed
some
of
those
assistive
devices
and
some
kind
of
evidence.
Maybe
an
email
or
you
know,
could
be
a
a
photo
of
the
shipping
label.
Anything
like
that.
That
shows
that
they-
actually,
you
know,
sent
these
off
to
one
of
our
state-based
affiliate
Affiliates
for
this
program
and
then
go
ahead
and
award
that
badge.
A
A
Let's
see,
we
don't
have
any
special
guest
presentations
lined
up.
Currently
here's
our
metrics
for
the
week
I
don't
think
there
was
anything
really
that
stood
out
here,
pretty
much
status
quo,
so
we'll
just
move
on
okay
posts
from
The
Hub.
This
is
always
fun
and
thanks
to
Sarah
for
putting
this
together,
Josh
new
volunteer
that
we
have
who
is
from
Canada
but
has
been
in
Turkey
for
the
last
eight
years
and
he's
really
doing
his
best
to
try
to
help
out
with
the
devastating
situation
there.
A
As
a
result
of
the
earthquakes
in
February
and
as
I
read
this.
Obviously
my
immediate
thought
was
wow.
We
got
to
make
sure
to
connect
him
with
zainab
and
I
was
happy
to
see
that
she
was
the
first
one
that
commented
there,
so
they
are
connected
and
I.
Think
that's.
The
very
best
thing
that
we
could
do
here
is
just
connect,
those
two
and
I'm
sure
they're
already
working
together,
because
he
said
he
was
going
to
reach
out
by
direct
message.
So
I
think
that's
the
most
important
thing.
A
Vakil
also
had
some
really
interesting
comments
here,
just
about
some
general
approaches
and
that
I
had
to
kind
of
skim
it
over.
But
it
looks
like
there
is
some
good
discussion
happening
here,
which
is
always
a
welcome
thing.
Adam
also
chimed
in
with
some
some
good
observations
and
and
noticed
that
zainab
is
already
connected.
A
Okay,
well
I
think
Josh
is
in
good
hands
with
saying
up
then
so,
we'll
move
on
and
I
I
hope
that
they're
able
to
make
some
forward
progress
with
their
local
resources.
Of
course,
we
have
lots
of
volunteers
standing
by
to
help,
but
it
does
seem
to
be
a
situation
that
might
be
best
addressed
from
the
feet
on
the
ground
and
they'll
have
to
let
us
know
where
we
can
pitch
in
if
they
need
additional
support.
A
Here's
a
message
from
Kristoff
is
asking
for
a
passive
hand,
design
something
similar
to
the
gripper
thumb
terminal.
He
wants
a
small
hand
passive,
the
size
of
which
is
similar
to
the
smallest
hand,
from
the
quavo
project.
I
asked
for
some
clarification,
I'm,
not
quite
clear
on
what
he's
looking
for
is
this.
Is
he
looking
for
a
wearable
device
that
doesn't
require
a
socket?
Is
he
looking
for
something
else
that
is
Socket
connected,
but
you
know
an
alternative
to
the
gripper.
Is
this
for
an
actual
person?
A
Is
this
a
demo
I
just
I'd
like
to
understand
a
little
bit
more,
so
we
could
maybe
offer
a
recommendation
and
SO
waiting
to
hear
back
on
that.
Anybody
else
know
of
any
passive
hand,
designs
that
maybe
we
could
Point
him
to
okay
on.
We
go
here's
a
message
from
I:
don't
know
how
to
pronounce
this
these
or
or
Tice
I'm,
sorry,
I'm,
sure
I'm,
not
pronouncing
that
right,
he's
in
South,
Africa
and
looking
to
get
involved.
A
He
had
a
question
about
how
he
gets
his
test
device
approved
and
so
I
just
posted
a
response
this
morning
explaining
there's
no
need
to
send
that
device
anywhere
that
we
do
that
all
remotely
and
pointed
him
to
the
badging
page
where
he
can
get
the
details
and
each
badge
has
a
list
of
what
we're
looking
for
as
evidence,
and
you
just
need
to
fill
out
the
form
and
submit
that
evidence
which,
in
this
case,
would
involve
some
photos
and
a
video
so
that
we
can
see
print
quality,
see
how
it
was
assembled,
see
how
it
moves
and
that
sort
of
thing.
A
Next,
one
is
from
our
enable
France
Chapter
leader
Terry,
and
he
was
asking
if
we
have
a
number
of
the
total
Global
number
of
enable
volunteers
which,
as
John
pointed
out,
is
always
been
sort
of
the
great
mystery.
We
really
don't
know.
We
can
take
some
educated
guesses
based
on
membership
in
our
old
Google
Plus
Community,
which
to
some
extent
has
migrated
over
here
to
the
hub.
A
But
you
know
there
there's
how
many
people
have
sort
of
joined
the
community
at
any
level
who
have
ever
sort
of
signed
up
for
an
account
who
have
joined
our
mailing
list
and
that's
a
very
big
number.
That's
probably
Beyond
15
000
at
this
point.
I
I
know
that
through
3D
Universe,
we've
shipped
out
over
15
000
of
our
project
kits
and
of
course
not
everyone
uses
those
kits.
A
So
we
know
there's
a
lot
of
device
production
going
on,
so
we
would
guess
there
are
probably
multiple
tens
of
thousands
of
people
involved
at
some
level.
But
then,
if
you
look
at
how
many
are
really
actively
involved
on
an
ongoing
basis,
that
number
is
certainly
much
much
smaller.
I
I
do
not
know
what
the
number
is.
A
I,
don't
even
know
if
we
have
a
guess,
I
think
as
as
Rick
pointed
out
here,
you
know,
the
chapter
audit,
which
is
ongoing,
is
one
way
that
we
might
approach
a
number,
because
if
we
can
get
data
back
from
all
our
chapters,
that
would
include
a
rough
count
of
how
many
members
are
in
each
chapter,
and
we
would
assume
that
those
are
more
active
than
sort
of
just
individuals
that
just
kind
of
join
the
Hub
which
some
of
which
might
be
out
of
curiosity.
A
But
it's
still
a
guess,
and
we
don't
even
have
that
number
yet,
because
that's
an
ongoing
audit,
so
does
anybody
else
have
any
thoughts
on
this
or
any
any
suggestions
or
guesses
at
how?
What
number
you
know
he
might
use?
He
says:
they've
been
using
fifteen
thousand
in
their
communication
documents.
I
suspect
he
said.
I
suspect
it's
way
higher.
Now,
I
I
wouldn't
suggest
it's
I
wouldn't
suspect.
It's
way
higher
because
I
think
people
come
and
go
so
my
gut
tells
me
we're
still
probably
somewhere
in
that
ballpark,
but
I
don't
know.
C
C
Could
I
interrupt
for
for
a
minute?
Okay,
I
wanted
to
to
to
make
a
small
donation
yesterday,
okay
and
of
of
of
of
one
one
one
hundred
dollars.
C
C
A
Well,
unfortunately,
we
don't
have
the
right
person
here
for
this
John
Shull
is
the
one
that
runs
our
enable
fund,
but
to
my
knowledge,
100
of
donations
do
go
to
the
enable
fund.
I
wonder
if
that's
just
a
faulty
message.
We'd
have
to
have
John
look
into
that,
but
I
I
I'm
fairly
certain
that
nothing
is
going
to
open
Collective
itself.
That's
just
the
platform
that
we
use
to
collect
these.
A
These
donations,
but
100
of
the
donations
have
always
gone
directly
to
the
enable
fund,
so
I
will
have
to
have
John
Shull,
follow
up
with
you
on
that
and
figure
out.
Why
you
received
that
message?
Do
you
have
a
copy
of
that
that
you
could
forward
to
us?
Was
it
an
email
that
you
received.
A
If
you
could
forward
that
to
me,
I'm
going
to
put
my
email
address
in
the
chat
for
you,
it's
Jeremy
at
3D,
universe.org,
that's
I'm!
Just
going
to
give
you
my
work,
email
because
I
get
that
more
quickly.
So
I
put
my
email
there
in
the
zoom
chat
and
if
you
could
just
forward
that
to
me,
I
will
get
it
to
John
Shull
and
we
can
get
you
a
an
answer
about
exactly
what's
going
on
there.
But
100
of
your
donation
definitely
should
have
gone
to
the
enable
fund.
B
I
just
have
another
potentially
complicating
element,
less
a
solution,
but
something
that
I've
been
kind
of
fiddling
around
with
is
attempting
to
find
any
and
all
on
published
articles
about
a
3D
printed
hand
that
some
classmates
made
somewhere,
most
of
which
don't
seem
to
be
attached
to
enable
members,
or
at
least
the
names
mentioned,
the
Articles
don't
appear
in
the
hub.
B
So
I
think
that
the
number
is
going
to
be
Beyond,
even
what
you're
describing
so
I
think
I
think.
Maybe
the
the
my
point
here
is
that
the
the
goal
of
attempting
to
get
a
census
of
some
kind
of
our
community
may
in
itself,
even
if
it
were
entirely
accurate,
fall
short
of
the
true
number
of
people
who
are
making
use
of
the
without
resource
designs.
And
so
there
might
be
another
approach
for
the
purpose
of
messaging
to
speak
to
Terry's
kind
of
core
question
here.
B
It
might
be
more
effective
to
to
talk
about.
You
know
number
of
countries
where
these
kinds
of
things
have
been
printed.
Maybe
I
I,
don't
know
what
exactly.
A
A
A
You
know
how
many,
how
many
makers
do
we
have,
how
many,
how
many
people
in
the
educational
Community
are
are
leveraging
enable
and
in
a
learning
capacity
you
know
student
groups
and
classrooms
and
things
like
that,
how
many
partner
organizations
you
know,
there's
a
lot
of
different
ways
that
you
can
look
at
participation
in
the
community,
all
of
which
have
some
different
different
levels
of
meaning.
B
A
And
it
always
will
be
we're
never
going
to
have
an
accurate
number
but
I
think
finding
ways
that
we
can
sort
of
measure
and
report
on
impact
and
how
many
sort
of
folks
are
are
are
involved
in
different
ways
might
might
provide
some
value
anyway.
Let's
move
on,
so
we
can
get
into
our
our
main
topics
here:
Courtney
Knowles,
our
partner,
one
of
our
partners
from
the
Illinois
assistive
technology
program,
commented.
What
is
this
on?
So
this
was
a
post
from
Daniel
at
Southside,
Middle
School.
A
Looking
for
someone
to
give
a
phoenix
hand
to
someone
in
need
and
Courtney
is
interested
in
more
information
working
on
a
fabricated
sleeve
for
a
12
year
old
boy
with
congenital
limb
difference
and
let's
see
she's
her.
They
have
some
restrictions
where
their
makers
program
is
only
allowed
to
print
devices
that
do
not
already
exist.
Interesting,
okay
and
she
really
wanted
to
be
able
to
provide
him
a
hand
for
functional
and
bilateral
use.
A
So
looks
like
they've
connected
I,
see
that
Daniel
responded,
I
I,
don't
see
anything
explicitly
saying
that
they
were
going
to
connect
via
private
message
or
anything
like
that,
but
I'm
hoping
they
have.
A
A
Anyone
else
have
any
comments
or
thoughts
on
this
okay,
I'm
just
going
to
keep
us
going
here,
so
we
can
get
through
a
couple
more
Osman,
trying
to
understand
how
to
resize
models
before
3D
printing
okay.
So
we
do
have
tutorials
on
this
I'm,
going
to
point
him
to
our
devices
page
and
on
that
devices
page
right
here
in
the
sidebar
there's
an
article
that
says
enable
device
sizing
and
there
are
several
methods
given
there.
A
You
can
use
this
virtual,
fitting
method
using
Fusion
360
and
where
you're
actually
overlaying
it
onto
scaled
photos
from
the
top
and
the
sides
and
using
that
as
a
visual
scaling
methodology.
There's
a
second
virtual,
fitting
methodology
that
uses
blender,
which
is
an
open
source,
CAD
software,
and
this
one
has
been
well
documented
with
videos
which
are
all
linked
here.
So
you
can
follow
along
with
those
videos
and
learn
how
to
do
that
and
then
there's
a
basic
sizing
method
which
we
kind
of
you
know
see
as
a
less
effective
but
an
easier
method.
A
So
as
a
starting
point,
you
can
simply
refer
to
a
sort
of
a
matrix
like
this
by
taking
a
couple
of
basic
measurements
of
the
residual
limb
and
using
that
to
determinate
flat
scaling
percentage
and
whatever
slicing
software
you're,
using
whether
it's
Cura
or
slicer
or
any
number
of
the
other
slicing
programs
out
there.
They
all
include
the
ability
to
scale
devices
by
a
percent
or
scale
Your
Parts
by
a
percentage.
So
all
you
have
to
do
is
bring
in
the
STL
files
for
the
design.
A
A
If
you
take
the
time
to
learn
one
of
our
virtual
fitting
methods
where
you
can
really
kind
of
see
how
the
limb
is
fitting
within
the
cavity
of
the
device
case
and
see
how
it
corresponds
to
the
to
the
size
of
the
the
rest
of
the
anatomy
Etc.
So
it's
worth
checking
out
those
videos
and
and
giving
that
a
try.
A
A
And
last
but
not
least,
let's
see
Juniper.
A
Oh
I
guess
this
was
a
comment
on
Nicole
Chen's
post
Nicole
is
with
Aragon
robotics
team
from
San
Mateo
California,
and
they
are
basically
looking
to
help
how
they
can
and
Juniper
is
introducing
herself
sing.
She
lives
in
the
Bay
Area
looking
for
information
on
a
middle
left
finger
having
it
amputated
in
July,
after
an
unfortunate
run
in
with
an
ax.
Very
sorry.
A
Obviously,
the
only
comment
I'd
make
here
is
obviously
work.
Make
sure
that
you're
working
with
your
medical
professionals
on
this
to
make
sure
they're
comfortable
with
anything
that
is
done
here
and
make
sure
you
give
yourself
time
for
proper
healing
before
you
try
to
put
anything
on
there.
That's
a
big
part
of
why
it's
important
to
be
working
with
your
with
your
doctors
on
this.
A
A
So
that's
something
to
look
into,
but
again
make
sure
that
you're
coordinating
with
your
with
your
medical
professionals
on
that
Adam.
Any
comments.
A
Okay,
all
right
on
we
go
then
so
we
don't
have
any
upcoming
one-time
events,
although
we
will
mention
that
Adam
is
right.
Now,
as
we
speak
at
the
aota
conference,
we'll
get
a
report
from
him
momentarily.
Let's
see,
we
just
did
I
didn't
update
this,
so
we
just
did
our
education,
new
members
Meetup.
Let's
take
a
look
at
April
events
and
see
if
we
have
anything
else
coming
up
we're
on
the
21st.
A
So
the
bionics
team
meeting
is
the
next
one
up
and
it
says
here
first
Friday,
but
it's
not
so
that's
what
is
it
now?
The
fourth
Friday
is
that
what
we're
doing.
A
Fourth
Friday,
so
that's
the
next
one
coming
up.
You
can
check
this
out
in
the
hub
for
details,
that's
led
by
vivec
and
if
you're
interested
in
getting
into
the
more
interesting
side
of
you
know,
powered
devices
and
using
you
know
things
like
raspberry,
pies
and
linear
actuators
and
all
that
kind
of
cool
stuff.
That's
the
place
to
be
all
right
into
our
discussion
topics.
A
Actually,
let's
just
start
with.
Maybe
a
quick
report
from
Adam
how's,
the
conference
going
going.
B
Great
I'll
give
you
a
little
teaser
I,
actually
am
just
getting
back.
I
forgot
something
at
home
and
I
had
to
run
back
to
my
house
and
I'm
just
pulling
back
into
the
conference
center
now,
but
yeah
it's
it's.
It's
been
going
phenomenally
well.
I
have
made
contact
with
a
couple
of
dozen
of
researchers
and
clinicians.
Here
already
huge
number
of
people
have
had
questions
well,
I
should
I
shouldn't
overstate.
A
large
number
of
people
have
had
questions.
B
I've
been
walking
around
with
the
devices
that
were
very
generously
donated
by
Arjun
Shah
and
Emma.
Koltoff
Emma's,
with
the
Helping
Hand
Project
Arjun
I
believe,
is
with
the
Forsyth
County
enable
chapter
but
I've
tied
them
to
my
bag.
I've
been
walking
around
with
them
all
over
the
conference.
People
are
stopping
me
and
asking
about
them.
It's
been
a
great
great
little
Icebreaker,
but
they're.
B
Both
fabulous
devices,
they're
I,
believe
Phoenix
Prince,
they're
they're
Palmer
devices,
and
they
were
made
very
very
well
and
they
look
very
attractive
and
they
function
very
well.
So
it's
been
a
really
good.
Showcase
of
what
enable
can
provide
I
am.
B
Oh
yeah
yeah,
actually
Emma
sent
a
a
a
second
one
with
Dr
Collins,
who
is
an
occupational
therapist
I
believe
she's
at
Eastern,
Caroline
University
I
could
be
have
forgive
me
if
I'm,
if
I'm
wrong
there
but
she's
an
OT
who
is
you
know
known
to
The,
Helping,
Hand,
Project
and
I
think
assist
them
here
and
there
and
Dr
Collins
is
here
at
the
conference.
B
So
she
she
dropped
off
that
device
for
me
today
or
yesterday,
but
I'm
going
to
put
together
a
quick
slide
deck
to
show
next
week,
but
in
short,
there
have
just
been
I
attended.
A
poster
presentation
yesterday
ran
into
a
number
of
folks
who
I
think
could
be
potential
collaborators
who
were
very
interested
in
speaking
with
us
and
positionally
joining
The
Hub.
As
clinician
members
really,
that
was
my
primary
goal
here
was
to
bring
in
more
clinicians
raise
our
profile.
B
Among
you,
know
the
the
Healthcare
Community
and
see
if
we
can
get
more
people
to
steer
the
ship
into
some.
Some
more
research
based
and
patient,
based
approaches
to
delivering
our
devices.
B
So
all
in
all,
very
successful
I've
got
a
couple
of
seminars
and
things
today,
I'm
going
to
be
walking
the
floor
once
again,
the
the
exhibition
floor
I
will
say
that
I'm
also
getting
a
lot
of
insight
into
the
kinds
of
booths
that
seem
to
attract
attention
so
that
if
we
were
to
dedicate
an
annual
budget
to
conference
attendance,
I
think
that
setting
up
a
couple
of
printers-
and
then
you
know,
printing
off
some
little
toys
and
things
to
hand
out
to
passersby,
would
be
a
pretty
great
way
to
attract
some
attention.
B
At
events
like
these
other
events
coming
up
this
year
are
resna
in
the
summer.
In
the
early
part
of
the
year,
January
February
is
the
combined
sections
meeting
for
physical
therapists.
There
are
a
couple
of
other
events,
a
couple
of
makers
fairs
and
Prosthetics
Association
events
that
I
think
would
be
good
to
consider,
but
we
can
we
can
address
all
those
in
due
time.
D
B
Questions
generally
about
what
I'm
doing
here
or
anything
else,
I
can
do
to
kind
of
focus.
My
efforts.
F
D
B
F
Think
you
and
others
will
be
quite
impressed
by
the
the
Aesthetics
of
that
device
and
the
fact
that
it
also
can
be
made
by
our
volunteers.
A
B
F
B
B
No,
it's
yeah,
no
problem.
I
think
that
these
are
small
and
lightweight
enough.
That
they're
they're,
pretty
pretty
easy
to
just
whip
out
and
demonstrate,
but
I
agree.
I
think
Connecticut
would
be
would
be
a
good
choice
for
future
conferences.
If,
if
we
have
the
chance
to
attend
them
so.
A
D
A
B
I
I
just
wanted
to
say
thanks
again
for
for
allocating
funds
for
business
cards,
because
I've
been
handing
them
out
like
popcorn
they're
at
the
people,
every
single
person
who
takes
one
to
go.
Oh
my
gosh,
this
is
a
beautiful
car,
so
yeah
thank
you
again
for
for
devoting
those
funds.
A
Before
we
move
on
just
because
John
has
joined,
I
want
to
just
take
a
moment
to
go
back
to
something
we
discussed
before
you
were
here.
John
Marty
here
has
joined
us
and
he
pointed
out
that
he
he
made
a
100
donation
the
other
day.
A
But
he
he
got
a
message
saying
something
about
twenty
dollars
went
to
enable
and
the
rest
went
to
open
Collective
or
something
no
that
doesn't
sound
right
yeah.
It
doesn't
sound
right
to
me
either.
So
I
asked
him
to
forward
that
to
me
and
I
was
going
to
share
it
with
you,
but
maybe
you
just
do
yeah
so
Marty.
Did
you
get
my
email
address
when
I
provided
it
in
chat?
Did
you
see
that
there.
A
F
D
F
This
Martin
Lundquist
yeah,
yes,
yes,
hello,
Martin!
First
of
all,
thank
you
very
much
I
see
here
that
it
went
into
the
enable
fund
and
if
you
forward
the
message
we'll
disambiguate
it,
but
I
am
confident
that
if
perhaps
10
goes
to
open
Collective
anyway,
we'll
we'll
clarify
it
for
you,
yeah.
A
Great
okay,
so
back
to
this
topic
of
of
kind
of
connecting
with
clinicians
before
we
move
on
to
the
next
topic
here
on
the
agenda,
I
want
to
point
out
that
I
did
have
a
a
really
nice
discussion
earlier
this
week
with
one
of
Adam's
contacts
in
in
the
clinical
Community.
A
Oh,
no,
that's!
Okay!
No,
not
a
problem
at
all.
We
had
a
really
nice
discussion,
I'm,
not
going
to
mention
names
because
she's
going
to
be
working
with
us
kind
of
you
know
under
the
under
the
table
a
little
bit
so
to
speak,
just
because
she's
new
in
her
current
role.
A
But
we
had
a
great
discussion
about
possibly
partnering
on
on
a
research
project
specifically
focused
on
comparing
outcomes
where
our
volunteers
are
working
closely
with
people
in
the
clinical
Community
versus
when
they're
doing
things
on
their
own,
which
I
would
love
to
see.
I
think
that
would
really
open
up
some
valuable
insights.
We
have
as
I
shared
with
her.
We
have
chapters
like
the
one
in
Brazil
and
other
areas
where
they
are
very
much
engaged
with
the
medical
community,
be
throughout
the
process.
A
They've
built
very
robust
standard
practices
for
including
them
throughout
both
the
the
front
end
of
the
process
of
evaluating
the
need
and
providing
a
prescription
and
then
on
the
back
end
of
fitting
and
follow-up
and
I.
Think
that
if
we
compare
the
outcomes
of
those
with
the
alternative,
where
you
know
just
some
amateur
volunteer,
you
know
makes
a
device
and
sends
it
off
and
you
know,
does
their
best.
But
I
think
we're
going
to
see
a
pretty
big
difference
in
in
the
outcomes
and
I
would
love
highly
valued.
A
Course
absolutely-
and
you
know
I
I-
think
by
connecting
our
volunteers
with
you
know,
people
in
the
in
the
clinical
Community,
like
Adam,
is
working
to
do
it's
only
going
to
make
their
work
so
much
more
valuable
and
we'll
be
able
to
have
so
much
more
of
an
impact.
So
this
is
good
for
all
of
us
and
so
I
I
do
want
to
follow
up
with
with
her
and
with
Adam
and
hopefully
have
some
more
discussion
about
how
we
could
get
something
like
that
going.
A
But
it
sounds
like
a
great
opportunity
to
to
start
working
together
on
something,
and
maybe
that's
a
good
point
to
lead
us
into
the
next
Point
here
on
the
agenda.
Adam,
you
want
to
talk
to
us
about
your
thoughts
of
tainara
dos
Santos
Bina,
as.
B
Oh
screen,
yeah
I,
was
just
about
to
head
into
the
conference.
I'll
hang
outside
in
the
lobby
for
a
minute
yeah,
so
tainara
is
a
an
occupational
therapist
based
in
Brazil
I
brought
her
up
a
few
times.
She
led
a
couple
of
Healthcare
discussions
last
fall
and
she
is
just
a
very
talented
person
who
is
skilled
in
design,
3d
design
and
Fabrication
of
devices
for
individuals
with
all
manner
of
disability.
B
She
designed
a
couple
of
gripper
tools
that
are
specifically
for
use
by
amputees
using
upper
extremity
prosthetic
devices,
because
there
are
some
unique
challenges
that
the
devices
have
in
terms
of
moderating
grip
strength
so
because,
where
she
lives,
having
a
water
bottle
is
a
sort
of
constant
companion
to
most
people
in
that
area.
B
B
She
is
very
interested
in
taking
on
more
responsibility
and
helping
to
guide
the
ship
for
our
push
into
more
coordinated
efforts
among
clinicians,
so
I
invited
her
to
sorry
I'm
a
little
distracted
here,
but,
in
short,
I
think
that
she
would
be
an
excellent
candidate
to
be
I,
I
think
more
officially
in
a
position
with
enable
as
our
clinical
coordinator
or
lead
clinical
liaison.
B
Whatever
terminology
we
want
to
use
so
that
she
could,
you
know,
present
herself
as
a
representative
free,
enable
and
help
to
coordinate
some
efforts
globally.
My
intention
here
is
to
assume.
D
B
You
hear
me
yep
no
yep
I'm
walking
back
outside
yeah,
so
my
intention
is
to
establish
some
protocols
and
guidelines
so
that
our
Engineers,
whom
obviously
I
I
love
very
much
and
I'm,
very
grateful
for
all
of
the
work
that
this
community
has
done.
But
so
the
devices
that
are
created
here
and
distributed
to
folks
are
distributed
in
a
way.
B
That's
safe
and
effective,
I'd
like
to
maximize
the
functional
outcomes,
not
just
the
device
outcomes
for
the
people
who
are
will
hopefully
be
using
our
devices
for
the
you
know
years
to
come
so
I
think
that
bringing
OTS
and
prosthetists
and
others
into
this
community
to
you
know,
produce
some
guidelines
produce
recommendations
in
terms
of
reaching
out
to
clinical
care
teams
whenever
a
recipient
is
a
match
through
our
platform.
B
I
think
that's
the
the
way
to
ensure
that
people
are
not
only
using
the
devices
but
will
continue
to
use
them
after
initial
receipt.
B
So
that's
where
China
era
comes
in,
that's
where
I
think
she
would
be
most
most
helpful
to
us
in
terms
of
leading
that
charge,
helping
to
coordinate
monthly
meetings
for
clinicians
and
producing
documentation
and
guidelines.
For
our
community
members
to
make
use
of
whenever
a
new
recipient
is
identified,.
A
B
I
did
and
then
I
realized
that
I
forgot
to
invite
her
this
week
with
the
conference
coming
up
but
I
intended
to
to
have
her
come
to
speak
a
little
bit
about.
You
know
her
her
work
in
Brazil
and
what
she
might
be
doing
with
us
she's
very
excited
about
the
prospect
of
being
engaged
in
that
capacity,
but
yeah
I
think
that
she
would
be
an
excellent
candidate.
B
D
A
A
Okay,
yeah
I'm
not
seeing
specific
links
to
recordings,
but
people
oh
shoot.
Hopefully,
people
can
find
their
way
to
that.
I
won't
spend
time
on
it
right
now,
but
they're,
probably
on
the
YouTube
channel.
I
guess
maybe
there's
a
playlist
for
it.
A
Okay,
I
think
I
already
covered
this
next
one
yeah,
so
I
I
didn't
remember
that
I'd
put
this
on
the
agenda,
but
this
is
the
the
research
study
that
I
had
just
talked
about
comparing
outcomes
from
cases
where
medical
professionals
were
involved
in
cases
where
they
were
not,
and
that's
something
that
I
I
look
forward
to
following
up
with
Adam
on
with
with
one
or
more
of
his
clinical
colleagues,
and
we
will
hopefully
be
able
to
get
something
going
on
that
it
sounds
like
it
would
be
highly
valuable
and
that's
a
perfect
thing
for
10
hour
to
maybe
take
the
lead
on.
A
It
sounds
like
so
we'll
we'll
explore
that
together,
Adam
I
know
you
want
to
get
into
the
conference.
Do
you
have
any
updates
that
you'd
like
to
go
through
under
the
Outreach
category,
or
we
can
always
come
back
to
that
next
week?
If
you
prefer.
B
A
Okay,
so
this
next
topic
has
to
do
with
a
recent
discussion
that
we
had
about
how
do
we?
How
do
we
make
best
use
of
the
enable
fund?
What
kinds
of
things
should
we
be
supporting?
A
That
would
have
the
the
broadest
impact
that
address
needs
that
the
community
has
that
maybe
are
things
that
we're
not
going
to
get
from
our
volunteers,
and
we
took
as
an
action
item
for
ourselves
to
have
a
separate
sort
of
a
brainstorming
session
and
talk
about
maybe
some
potential
paid
roles
and
or
paid
projects
that
we
might
want
to
explore.
Not
saying
that
these
are
all
things
that
we
want
or
intend
to
do,
just
really
starting
with
a
laundry
list,
and
so
we
had
that
meeting.
A
It
was
John
and
Adam
and
myself
and
just
want
to
kind
of
share
some
of
the
notes
from
that
meeting
here.
This
came
out
of
some
comments
that
that
Adam
had
in
our
discussion
in
last
Town
Hall
about
the
idea
that
there's
a
lot
of
potential
to
greatly
expand
what
we're
able
to
do
increasing
our
footprint
and
impact
by
bringing
some
people
into
certain
paid
positions
and
that
led
into
this
whole
discussion.
A
So,
as
we
talked
we,
we
came
up
with
a
few
things.
You
know,
one
of
the
things
that
we
talked
about.
First
was
honestly
the
the
idea
of
sort
of
an
Outreach
director,
which
is
very
much
the
role
Adam
has
been
fulfilling.
A
We
do
feel
like
that's
a
critically
important
role
and
he's
already
demonstrated
a
lot
of
success
and
is
already
starting
to
have
impacts
in
the
community,
as
we
can
see
with
the
already
Live
program
that
we
have
partnering
with
assistive
technology
act,
programs
throughout
the
U.S
and
that's
already
expanding
what
our
volunteers
are
able
to
do
and
and
getting
their
especially
those
people
just
have
kind
of
idle
3D
printers,
and
they
want
to
be
able
to
do
something
that
has
some
impact.
Maybe
we
don't
have
you
know
prosthetic
recipients
for
them
right
now.
A
This
is
a
great
way
for
them
to
just
jump
in
and
print
stuff
and
and
get
it
into
the
hands
of
people
that
could
benefit
from
them.
So
you
know
we
Adam
has
been
putting
in
a
lot
of
hours
and
it's
it's
the
kind
of
thing
that
is
it.
We
want
to
it
to
be
sustainable
and
we
we
actually
tossed
around
some
interesting
ideas
about
how
we
might
be
able
to
partner
with
he's
actually
working
on.
A
Excuse
me,
starting
up
a
a
new,
consulting
firm
with
a
partner
of
his,
which
would
probably
be
in
the
form
of
a
benefit
Corp,
and
we
thought
about
you
know,
maybe
there's
a
way
of
instead
of
this
being
a
paid
role
through
an
individual.
Maybe
it's
sort
of
like
an
engagement
that
we
could
have,
where
enable
partners
with
this
firm
and
through
that
we're
able
to
leverage
not
only
Adam
but
also
his
his
partner,
who
sounds
to
be
equally
skillful
in
different
areas.
A
So
that
was
one
of
the
things
that
we
talked
about.
We
have
not
gotten
into
any
specifics
about
numbers
or
anything
like
that.
It
is
worth
noting
that
Adam
has
been
putting
in
15
to
20
hours
a
week
on
enable
which
is,
as
you
you
all
understand,
quite
a
large
amount
of
work,
and
it's
greatly
appreciated,
but
I
would
say,
that's
probably
not
sustainable
on
a
volunteer
basis
as
as
John
and
I
have
both
experienced.
So
it's
something
worthy
of
further
discussion,
and
that
was
one
of
the
things
that
we
identified
as
worth
exploring.
A
We
also
talked
about
a
fundraising
coordinator
right
now:
we're
we're
in
a
pretty
healthy
shape,
with
the
enable
funds
sitting
around
thirty
six
thousand
dollars.
But
if
we
decide
to
move
forward
on
some
of
these
initiatives
and
or
paid
roles,
that's
not
going
to
go
all
too
far
and
we
are
going
to
have
to
be
able
to
replenish
that
fund.
As
we
make
progress
on
these
things.
A
Adam
actually
feels
that
he
might
have
something
to
contribute
here,
not
as
a
primary
focus
and
it's
not
necessarily
his
specialty,
but
he
does
have
a
lot
of
meaningful
connections
and
he
might
be
able
to
play
a
part
in
this
fundraising
activity
and
and
in
doing
so
might
there
might
be
opportunities
to
sort
of
pay
for
his
own
work
in
in
different
ways,
and
that
was
something
that
we
talked
a
little
bit
about,
but
ultimately
we're
going
to
need
somebody
that
can
sort
of
take
the
lead
on
fundraising,
hopefully
working
with
a
team
I.
A
Don't
think
this
should
fall
on
one
individual
and
we
will
need
volunteers,
but
I
think
we
need
somebody
that
really
is
managing
the
process
and
keeping
you
know,
keeping
our
fundraising
game
going
and
that
might
be
worth
exploring
as
a
paid
rule.
We
talked
about
social
media
and
marketing
coordinator.
This
is
work
that
Sarah
is,
is
currently
helping
with
as
well
as
Adam
Adam
has
sort
of
Taken
on
LinkedIn.
A
Sarah
is
doing
a
lot
of
helping
us
with
with
you
know,
sharing
some
of
our
successes
and
connecting
people
in
our
community
and
and
doing
some
things
with
social
media,
which
also
leads
into
the
next
role
here:
media
and
Communications
manager,
which
currently
is
Sarah
and
she's.
Putting
in
about
15
to
20
hours
a
week
as
I
understand.
It
is
that
right,
Sarah.
E
It's
so
it's
I,
15
hours
a
week
is
what
I
have
been
have
been
doing.
So
the
the
there's,
a
document
that
states
that
the
this
role,
which
was
Ben's
role,
is
10
to
20
hours
a
week,
so
I
have
been
aiming
for
for
15
hours
per.
A
We
really
appreciate
the
work
you're
doing
you've
done
a
great
job
for
us
and
we
certainly
feel
that's
a
role
that
that
needs
ongoing
funding.
So
that's
on
the
list
and
again
we're
not
getting
any
specifics
here,
nobody's
proposing
anything,
no
changes,
we're
not
getting
into
any
kind
of
discussion
of
amounts
here,
yet
we're
just
kind
of
talking
about
what
are
the
roles
that
seem
like
things
that
we
should
be
funding
to,
to
keep
them
going
and
to
keep
them
sustainable.
We
talked
about
data,
Gathering
and
Reporting.
This
is
something
we've
always
struggled
with.
A
You
know
how
do
we
measure
our
impact?
How
do
we
know
how
many
devices
have
been
delivered?
How
how
long
it
takes
on
average
to
complete
a
case?
What
are
the
you
know
the
results
from
follow-up?
How
long
are
these
devices
being
used?
How
many
of
them
end
up
sitting
in
a
drawer
which
designs
seem
to
be
more
effective?
More,
you
know
just
so
many
different
data
points
that
would
be
valuable
to
our
community
and
we
have
so
little
visibility
right
now
into
most
of
these
areas.
E
E
Have
a
spreadsheet
I
would
love
to
collect
all
of
this
data
too
and
help
to
make
sense
of
it.
So.
A
A
I'm
glad
to
hear
that
you're
interested
in
it's
that's
often
the
hardest
part
about
any
one
of
these
things
that
we've
listed
here
is
finding
somebody
who
is
interested
and
qualified,
and
so
you
give
us
a
great
head
start
on
that.
Just
by
having
that
interest
and
having
the
right
skills,
we
talked
about
a
chapter
coordinator,
which
right
now
is
a
a
role
that
Rick
is
handling,
but
you
know
again.
A
This
is
this
is
something
that
we
want
to
make
sure
is
sustainable
and
ongoing,
and
that
we're
not
you
know,
burning
people
out
and
expecting
too
much
from
volunteer
roles,
and
so
this
is
one
that
we
put
on
the
list.
You
know
somebody
needs
to
stay
on
top
of
getting
regular
updates
on
chapter
activities,
getting
feedback
from
them,
getting
statistics
data
about
what
they're
doing
connecting
them
with
each
other,
if
they're,
maybe
working
on
similar
activities
or
there's
opportunities
for
them
to
collaborate.
A
There's
just
you
know,
there's
the
need
for
somebody
to
be
the
kind
of
the
glue
that
connects
all
of
our
chapters
with
the
broader
community
and
and
so
that's
an
important
role
that
we
talked
about
medical
community
coordinator,
which
I
guess
is
the
same
as
what
do
we
call
it
up
here,
a
clinical
coordinator?
Why
don't
I
use
that
name?
A
So
that's
the
one
that
we
talked
about
earlier
as
tainara
being
a
good
possible
candidate
for
making
sure
that
each
chapter
has
designated
clinical
contacts
that
they
can
work
with,
establishing
those
standardized
and
documented
practices
that
Adam
was
describing
so
that
both
our
chapters,
as
well
as
our
independent
volunteers,
have
the
benefit
of
that
guidance
and
can
on
better
understand
how
they
can
engage
with
the
clinical
community
and
incorporate
them
into
the
process.
And
so,
as
the
note
says
here,
10
hours,
a
great
great
potential
candidate
there,
another
one
is
matching.
A
We
are
working
on
trying
to
get
our
new
matching
platform
up
and
running.
This
was
the
platform
that
our
enabled
France
Chapter
is
using
as
I
understand.
It's
been
very
successful
for
them.
It's
a
map
based
platform.
Very
simple:
you
submit
a
form
if
you're
looking
for
a
device
or
or
if
you're,
a
maker
and
depending
on
your
you
know
what
kind
of
of
entity
you
are
or
a
pin,
goes
on
the
map
and
then
somebody
on
the
back
end.
A
A
human
being
goes
in
periodically
reviews
all
the
open
requests
and
by
just
clicking
on
each
one
of
these
things
on
the
map,
you
get
a
drop
down
with
the
available
makers
sorted
by
distance,
making
it
very
easy
to
connect
a
recipient
with
somebody,
that's
ideally
in
their
area,
and
once
we
have
that
platform
up
and
running
we're
going
to
need
somebody
to
help
us
with
that
of
actually
doing
you
know
this
is
not
an
automated
matching
process
and
we
actually
feel
through
our
years
of
experience
with
the
enable
web
Central.
A
You
know
that
platform
has
served
a
definite
need,
but
I
think
we've
learned
that
the
self-service
approach
leaves
a
lot
to
be
desired.
I
think
there
needs
to
be
a
human
involved
here
to
to
connect
people
in
a
in
a
you
know.
C
A
Of
a
custom
Manner,
and
so
this
platform
will
allow
that
for
that
opportunity,
I
do
have
one
candidate
a
volunteer
lined
up
to
speak
with
about
potentially
helping
us
to
get
this
platform
up
and
running.
We
have
had
to
reschedule
several
times
due
to
things
that
come
up
as
tends
to
happen
in
life,
so
I
have
not
yet
had
that
meeting.
A
As
of
now
it
had
to
get
pushed
out
by
about
a
month
before
she's
going
to
be
available
again
and
therefore
I
did
put
the
call
for
a
volunteer
back
up
on
the
Hub
I,
still
very
much
hope,
I'll
be
able
to
connect
with
with
Morgan,
and
she
might
be
able
to
help
with
this.
But
meanwhile,
I
am
kind
of
putting
the
call
back
out
there,
because
there's
a
little
bit
of
time.
Sensitivity
on
this
I
really
would
like
to
see
this
up
and
running
as
soon
as
possible.
A
So
if
there's
anyone
out
there
that
would
like
to
help
us
get
this
new
WordPress,
sorry
WordPress,
based
site
up
and
running
it
involves
some.
You
know
it's
it's
built
off
of
PHP,
but
I.
Don't
think
we're
really
talking
about
any
kind
of
significant
custom
coding.
The
code's
already
been
done.
It's
really
just
a
matter
of
customizing
the
intake
form
to
gather
the
info.
We
want.
A
You
know
reactivating
with
some
Google
Maps
API
Keys,
getting
a
plug-in
activated
or
two,
and
then
the
main
task
is
going
to
be
updating
the
actual
content
throughout
the
site
to
make
it
a
little
bit
more
General
enable
oriented
and
less
specific
to
enable
France
and
then
once
we've
got
the
site
updated
the
way
we
want
to
act
as
kind
of
a
main
enable
landing
page
which
would
link
off
to
the
hub
and
Link
off
to
enabling
the
future
and
our
other
resources.
A
Then
it
would
be
a
matter
of
doing
translations
into
other
languages
and
we
have
a
plug-in
for
that.
I
think
we
could
use
some
of
the
currently
available
AI
tools
to
facilitate
that
translation.
So
it's
really
a
lot
of
copying
and
pasting
and
then
having
people
that
speak
those
languages
natively
maybe
do
some
minor
corrections,
but
I
think
we
could
do
a
lot
of
the
initial
work
ourselves.
So
I
am
looking
for
a
volunteer
to
help
with
that
project.
A
It's
not
an
insignificant
amount
of
work,
but
it
would
be
a
hugely
impactful
project
for
the
community.
It
could
help
a
lot
of
people
with
this
so
reach
out
if
you're
interested.
A
So
those
are
some
of
the
roles
that
we
identified.
We
also
identified
some
projects.
That
might
be
things
more
with
a
discrete
start
and
end.
So
an
example
would
be
the
one
I
just
talked
about
setting
up
that
matching
platform
and
updating
the
website
content.
So
I
just
described
that
adding
the
translations
for
those
different
languages
and
then
starting
to
really
revise
our
web
presence
to
bring
all
these
things
together,
bring
together,
enabling
the
future
and
the
Hub
probably
not
enable
web
Central.
A
If
we're
able
to
get
the
new
matching
platform
up
and
running,
that
would
go
away,
but
those
are
those
are
projects
not
insignificant
projects,
but-
and
it
might
be
one
project-
ideally
it
would
be,
but
it
doesn't
have
to
be,
but
those
projects
have
to
happen
before
this.
A
This
matching
role
can
be
put
in
place,
so
lots
of
opportunities
to
help
here
I
think
there
are
many
more
we
kind
of
ran
out
of
time
here
when
Adam
and
I
have
time
to
regroup
on
our
Trello
initiative,
we'll
find
that
we
already
have
quite
a
few
additional
projects
in
here
that
we
might
feel
the
need
to
add
into
that
list.
A
We're
hoping,
of
course,
that
the
bulk
of
these
would
be
volunteer
tasks
volunteer
projects,
but
we
might
feel
that
some
of
these
weren't
a
discussion
about
being
paid
initiatives,
and
so
we
might
find
ourselves
expanding
this
list.
So
this
was
just
an
initial
pass,
an
initial
discussion
to
kind
of
think
about
what
are
some
of
the
potential
things
we
might
want
to
think
about,
supporting
with
our
funding
and
there's
a
lot
more
discussion
to
have.
But
let
me
open
it
up
to
comments
and
questions.
John,
I.
F
One
might
be
concerned
that
if
you
were
to
fill
all
of
these
positions
with
paid
positions,
we
would
very
much
change
the
character
of
the
community
and
the
character
of
the
organization.
It's
not
something
I
would
undertake
lightly
or
all
at
once.
Absolutely
this
is
just
the
first
pass
to
figure
out
what
we
can
do
to
make
things
more
reliable
and
and
of
better
service
I
think
we
would
do
it
incrementally
and
we
would
do
it
with
Community
guidance
as
per
votes.
Please
that's
right.
Just.
A
A
cautionary
note,
yeah
and
I
should
have
mentioned
that
any
nothing
here
is
going
to
happen.
Unless
something
gets
written
up
on
lumio.
The
community
is
going
to
vote
on
whether
or
not
any
one
of
these
things
gets
funded
and
and,
like
John
said,
we
have
no
intention
of
trying
to
do
all
of
this
at
once.
This
is
sort
of
a
laundry
list
that
we
could
then
use
to
say
which
one
or
two
or
three
of
these
do.
A
E
I
also
I
act
that
you
know
some
of
these
really
overlap
like
Communications
data,
Gathering
and
Reporting.
So,
depending
on
the
people
that
you've
find
you
know,
one
one
person
could
they'll.
E
You
know
a
couple
of
different
different
roles,
so
these
are
a
lot
of
different
positions.
A
E
A
That's
obviously
going
to
require
a
lot
more
discussion.
It
was
just
a
starting
point.
I
think
it
was
a
good
starting
point.
It
was
helpful
just
as
always,
these
discussions
are
it's
just
helpful
to
brainstorm
and
and
to
at
least
get
started
thinking
about
where
we
might
want
to
focus
further
efforts,
and
so
that's
going
to
require
further
sessions
and
further
discussions
and
then,
as
we
kind
of
focus
in
on
you
know,
a
subset
of
this,
we'll
bring
it
up
in
these
meetings
for
further
discussion.
A
Let's
see
I
mentioned
the
Trello
initiative,
which
we
haven't
made
much
progress
on
only
because,
of
course,
Adam
is
is
focused
elsewhere,
as
he
should
be
right
now,
he's
been
doing
a
lot
of
very
important
work,
making
connections
in
the
clinical
community
and
and
the
conference
and
all
that,
but
we
will
be
regrouping.
We've
already
made
good
progress
in
setting
up
as
I
just
popped
it
up.
Here.
A
We've
we've
been
having
talks
about
probably
wanting
to
start
to
think
about
splitting
this
out
into
more
than
one
board
right
now,
you're,
looking
at
a
single
board
for
all
these
projects,
we
started
to
toy
with
the
idea
of
having
different
boards
to
cover
different
areas,
so
one
for
outreach,
one
for
you
know
maybe
web-based
stuff
another.
For
you
know
r
d
type
stuff.
You
know
we
haven't
figured
out
what
those
would
be,
but
just
from
a
point
of
view
of
of
just
as
as
simple
as
embedding
you
know.
A
If,
when
you
embed
one
of
these
in
the
hub,
we
don't
have
to
you
know,
keep
scrolling
through
these
these
long
lists
within
within
a
frame.
It
gets
to
be
a
little
bit.
You
know
non-user
friendly,
and
so
we
like
the
idea
of
breaking
these
out
into
smaller
pieces,
where
they
can
be
embedded
separately,
Within
The
Hub.
A
So
we
will
definitely
be
proceeding
and
working
forward
on
this
and
and
getting
this
rolled
out
to
the
community
as
soon
as
we
can
we're
just
not
there
yet,
but
I
think
it
will
be
a
very
helpful
tool
to
get
all
eyes
on
sort
of
a
set
of
of
of
ways
of
ways
of
you
know
that
people
can
help
out
in
meaningful
in
meaningful
ways.
A
Okay,
let's
take
a
quick
look
at
tickets.
Here
we
haven't
done
this
for
a
while,
but
since
I
have
the
benefit
of
having
Rick
here,
let's
see,
as
always,
it
looks
like.
Rick
is
really
on
top
of
things.
A
A
A
What's
the
question
just
an
inner,
you
know,
they're
looking
to
interview
somebody
about
enable
I
I
could
probably
find
time.
I
think
you
always
you
do
a
better
job
than
I
do
honestly,
just
talking
about
the
community.
So
if
you're
open
and
available
it
would
be
great
to
have
you
involved,
I
can't
see
who
that's
from
it
says:
Audrey
Johnson.
Does
she
say
where
she's
with?
Let's
see
this
is
just
she
was
chatting
with
our
bot
so
interested
in
3D
printers
and
how
they
change
the
world
and
make
it
better.
F
A
F
Although
Jeremy
and
you
know
I
gotta,
say
it's
more
about
3D,
printing
and
your
barrier
particular,
etc,
etc,
etc,
she
seems
to
be
interested
in
3D
friendships.
Why
not
you.
F
A
I'll
take
the
first
response
here:
I
can
send
her
my
calendly
link
and
we'll
do
it
that
way.
That
makes
it
easier
for
me.
I
will
try
to
remember
to
come
back
and
do
that
after
this
meeting
whoops.
Let
me
go
back
to
tickets
here.
I
think
the
other
one
is
just
one
that
just
came
in.
It
looks
like
let's
see
yeah.
This
is
just
a
chat
attempt
engineering
student
from
India,
currently
working
on
a
similar
project,
wanted
to
understand
the
exact
working
of
the
string
mechanism.
A
D
A
You
thank
you.
I'll
I'll
go
respond
to
that
one
after
this,
but
thank
you
as
always
for
staying
on
top
of
all
those
tickets,
especially
with
with
you
know,
stuff
that
you
have
going
on.
I
know,
you've
been
busy,
I,
think
that's
about.
As
far
as
I
want
to
go
here
on
topics,
we
have
just
a
few
minutes
left.
Let
me
just
ask
if
anyone
else
here
has
anything
you'd
like
to
share
any
questions,
you'd
like
to
ask
anything
at
all.
C
A
I'm,
just
looking
in
chat
here,
I
see
that
Rick
shared
some
a
very
nice
looking
finger
design.
You
say
it's
called
the
arcs
finger
and
you
attached
the
the
files
here
in
chat.
Those
are
going
to
be
lost
as
soon
as
I
close
down
this
session.
A
A
D
No
I
would
basically
I
was
working
with
this
early
on
with
the
ARX
hand,
and
what
what
was
done
was
we
put
the
ARX
finger,
the
hand
fingers
on
a
on
a
specific
attachment,
so
it
could
be
used
much
like
the
Nick
finger.
So.
F
D
D
Yeah,
it's
it's!
It's
on
our
it's
in
our
catalog,
wonderful.
A
So
if
you're
willing
to
it'd
be
really
nice
to
have
you
upload
those
the
the
arc's
finger
as
a
separate
design
on
you
know
wherever
you
want
thingiverse
or
something
like
that,
and
maybe
we
get
that
into
our
catalog
too
we're
a
little
bit
in
limbo
here,
because
we're
in
the
process
of
getting
our
catalog
ported
into
NIH
3D,
which
we'll
have
updates
about
soon.
But
it
would
be
really
good
to
get
this
shared
in
a
way
that
other
people
can
download
and
use
those
files.
I.
D
A
That
no
it's
okay,
that's
that's
I!
Don't
know
if
you've
used
thingiverse
to
share
your
designs
before,
but
it's
really
easy.
You
just
go
in
sign
into
your
thingiverse
account.
You
know
upload
a
new
design
and
you
just
fill
out
a
form.
You
can
upload
your
files.
Doesn't
matter
how
big
they
are.
You
can
type
in
a
description
instructions
it'll
only
take
you
some
minutes.