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From YouTube: Weekly e-NABLE Town Hall Meeting - March 31, 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
B
C
A
Welcome,
maybe
it
just
does
because
I
don't
think
unless
I'm
mistaken
I,
don't
believe
any
of
us
here
have
met
you,
so
you
want
to
give
us
a
quick
introduction
and
let
us
know
how
you
found
us
and
your
background,
maybe
and
and
what
your
interests
are
all.
D
Right
sure,
I'm
Timmy,
Osborne
I
go
to
DuPont
manual
in
Louisville
Kentucky
and
we
recently
started
3D
printing,
the
Phoenix,
V2
hands
and
I
was
just
interested
in
learning
more
so.
A
E
A
Good
to
have
you
both
here,
just
so
that
you
know,
because
I
don't
want
either
of
you
to
be
disappointed.
Here,
you
are
more
than
welcome
to
to
hang
out
with
us
and
contribute
to
these.
The
town
hall
meetings
are
usually
a
little
bit
more
oriented
towards
kind
of
the
operational
aspects
of
the
community.
We're
going
to
be
talking
about
some
of
the
Outreach
efforts
and
trying
to
form
Partnerships
and
some
of
the
infrastructure
work
that
we're
doing
and
like
I
said.
A
You're
absolutely
welcome
to
join
us
for
that
discussion,
but
if
you're
looking
more
for
guidance
and
how
to
get
started
and
things
like
that,
we
also
have
a
new
members
Meetup
that
meets
monthly
and
that's
at
a
different
time
and
that's
geared
specifically
to
address
those
sort
of
new
member
questions
and
and
help
get
you
in
the
right
direction.
But,
like
I,
said,
you're
completely
welcome
to
join
us
here
and
we'll
just
be
going
through
our
usual
topics
and
you're
more
than
everyone's
very
welcome
to
contribute.
A
We
welcome
all
your
your
input
on
these
things.
All.
B
All
right
so
I
was
just
going
to
say
that
before
you
bail,
if
you
bail,
one
of
our
regular
topics
is
the
calendar
of
meetings
but
you'll
be
of
interest.
So
stick
around
for
that.
But.
A
And
we're
going
to
talk
about
some
of
those
here.
There
are
definitely
areas
where
help
is
needed.
We
have
a
number
of
projects
very
important
ones
this
year
that
we
have
not
yet
found
people
to
help
kind
of
take
the
lead
on.
So,
if
you're
looking
for
maybe
getting
involved
in
ways
other
than
just
making
devices
stay
tuned
all
right,
so
quick
review
of
action
items,
John
I,
don't
think
this
one
is
a
priority,
but
we
have
a
note
here
about
writing
up
something
about
the
fiscal
sponsorship
agreement,
not
a
problem.
A
A
Okay,
we'll
leave
it
on
there,
but
I
don't
want
to
pester
you
about
this
every
week,
so
I
might
take
it
off
eventually,
and
just
let
you
kind
of
monitor
that
on
your
own
and
then
the
rest
of
these
are
for
me
and
the
only
one
I've
had
time
to
get
to
is
the
first
one
I
did
draft
a
letter
for
the
Littleton
Colorado
chapter.
Most
of
you
here
have
seen
it
I.
We
will
be
talking
about
that
shortly
here
discussing
how
to
proceed.
A
So
these
are
sort
of
the
metrics
that
we
track
on
an
on
a
weekly
basis.
I,
don't
think,
there's
really
much
to
call
attention
to
here,
just
kind
of
shows
for
those
here
that
are
new
some
of
our
key
metrics
that
we
track
over
time.
How
many
members
we
have
on
the
Hub,
how
many
new
people
joined
over
the
last
week
and
sort
of
the
different
post
activities
what's
happening
on
enable
web
Central
various
help
desk
tickets,
that
we're
handling
and
maybe
of
most
importance,
is
the
lower
right
corner.
A
As
opposed
to
you
know,
we
don't
usually
use
it
for
things
like
you
know,
hey
I
need
a
new
3D
printer
or
things
like
that.
It's
it's
more!
You
know,
projects
that
would
address
some
need
that
the
community
has
ideally
and
and
there's
a
process
for
putting
forth
proposals
on
a
platform
called
lumio
and
the
community
can
vote,
and
if
the
voting
approves
it,
then
it
gets
funded
so
for
our
new
members
here
just
know
that
that
is
available
and
we
can
provide
more
details
as
needed.
A
There
are
a
lot
of
new
posts
from
The
Hub
this
week,
because
we
didn't
have
time
to
get
into
this.
Last
week
and
Sarah
added
some
new
ones
for
us
I
hate
to
put
this
off
again,
but
I
don't
want
to
run
out
of
time
on
the
topics
that
I
want
Adam
to
be
able
to
cover.
So
I
am
going
to
skip
this
again
just
for
now,
and
if
we
have
time
later
in
the
meeting,
we'll
come
back
to
this
and
look
at
these
posts.
A
We
don't
yet
have
the
full
calendar
of
events
for
the
coming
month
of
April.
Sarah
is
working
on
that,
but
I
knew
I
do
know
that
the
next
meeting
we
have
coming
up
is
the
chapter
leaders
meeting
which
will
be
on
the
10th
of
April.
That's
a
Monday
and
then
on.
The
third
Friday
will
be
the
one
that
I
mentioned.
A
The
new
members
meet
up,
which
is
also
an
educational
sort
of
focused
meeting,
so
that'll
be
perfect
for,
for
you,
guys,
Timmy
and
Amy,
and
any
of
the
others
from
your
team
that
would
like
to
join
so.
Let's
see,
third
Friday
would
be
what
let
me
get
into
April
here:
I
guess
that
would
be
Friday,
that
is
it
the
21st
yeah.
That
sounds
right,
so
that
would
be
Friday.
A
The
21st
and
I
hope
you
guys
will
will
join
again
for
that,
because
that
they'll
talk
about
other
projects
and
other
opportunities
to
get
involved
there
as
well,
but
I'd
like
to
get
right
into
the
discussion
topics.
We
have
one
one
follow-up
from
last
week
that
we
have
to
attend
to
and
then
I'm
going
to
hand
things
over
to
Adam.
So
last
week
we
talked
about
a
situation
involving
the
Littleton
Colorado
chapter
and
their
their
chapter
leader.
A
Their
current
chapter
leader
is
is
no
longer
an
active
member
of
the
community,
and
so
we
were
thinking
about
reaching
out
to
them
to
say
hey.
We
really
need
to
have
you
pick
a
new
chapter
leader
so
that
we
can
keep
you
as
an
active
chapter
on
our
list,
but
as
we
were
looking
into
it,
we
found
that
actually,
the
only
web
page
they
have
listed
is
their
Facebook
page
I
could
not
find
any
other
websites
and
their
Facebook
page
has
had
no
posts.
In
almost
three
years.
A
A
A
A
I
know
the
idea
was
that
we
were
going
to
send
out
this
chapter
audit
request,
asking
them
for
data
and
that
if
you
know,
if
we
didn't
get
any
response
after
so
many
attempts
that
we
were
going
to
go
ahead
and
make
a
chapter
inactive
as
and
I
think
there
was
also
a
policy
in
there
about
needing
to
have
recent
activity
showing
I.
Don't
remember
what
the
specific
you
know
term
was,
but
I
know
it
was
less
than
three
years.
A
A
You
know
fairly
recent
activity
showing
on
their
website
and
or
Facebook
page
and
that
they
need
to
respond
to
those
annual
requests
for
information
and
since
neither
of
those
things
has
happened,
I
think
we
probably
need
to
just
go
ahead
and
Mark
this
chapter
as
inactive
as
soon
as
you
know,
we'll
go
ahead
and
send
out
the
letter
that
we've
put
together,
along
with
an
invitation
to
to
please
go
ahead
and
reapply
and
we'd
be
happy
to
get
them
right
back
on
the
map.
A
We
just
need
to
I
think
have
them
go
through
that
process
again.
Does
everyone
feel
comfortable
with
that
approach,
or
should
we
talk
about
other
options.
C
When
we,
when
we
discussed
the
audit,
we
talked
about
doing
this,
not
not
specifically
for
any
one
chapter,
but
all
chapters
right.
That's
how
we're
going
to
dig
out
the
the
ones
that
weren't
we're
no
longer
either
active
or
or
responding.
F
A
I
think
I
think
that's
the
intent,
Adam
I.
This
is
just
one
that
we
have
to
deal
with
because
of
the
fact.
No
for
sure
I
just
mean
they
don't
have
an
active
chapter
leader
but
I
I
think
with
Rick
being
the
chapter
manager
I
think,
even
if
we
don't,
if
we
never
finalize
that
policy,
I
think
Rick
you're,
probably
in
the
best
position,
to
make
a
call
on
this.
A
So
I
think
we
should
go
ahead
and
do
that,
let's
just
mark
them
as
inactive,
we'll
look
again
at
that
letter
and
maybe
adjust
the
wording
just
a
little
bit
to
make
sure
that
it's
it
that's
explained
in
there
and
that
we're
giving
them
an
open
invitation
to
submit
a
new
chapter
formation
request
and
hopefully
we'll
get
them
back
on
the
map.
So
if
anybody
anybody
have
any
concerns
or
or
opposition
of
this
well.
C
We
were
also
doing
a
bounced
email,
okay,
so
what
we
were
doing
was
part
of
the
audit.
If,
if
we
had
bounced
emails
from
every
single
person
from
any
chapter,
we'd
go
the
secondarily
we'd
go
to
the
Facebook
page
to
see.
If
anything
had
happened,
then
we
try
to
contact
them
there.
If
nobody
got
us
from
there,
we
were
talking
about
setting
them
as
temporarily
inactive
until
we
can
figure
out
who
to
contact.
C
I,
don't
I,
don't
I
have
to
go
back
to
my
records
to
find
out,
which
ones
actually
were
bounced
okay
and
which
ones
were
no
response,
but
we
we
pay
more
attention
to
the
bounce
ones,
because
if
that
just
means
the
email
is
not
there
anymore,
exactly
we've
been
trying
to
remove
those
from
the
from
the
the
chapter
list
with
a
notation
of
the
of
the
bounced
emails
in
case
there
was
a
misspelling
or
something
of
that.
A
Nature
got
it
okay,
so
I
think
what
we'll
do
if
it's,
okay
with
you
Rick,
is
I'll,
go
ahead
and
and
just
double
check
the
wording
on
the
letter
that
we
drafted
make
sure
that
it's
okay,
I'll
have
I'll,
ask
you
to
go
ahead
and
send
it
as
the
chapter
manager
and
I
do
have
I
mean
I,
don't
know
that
I
could
identify
everyone,
but
I
have
five
names
here
of
people
that
are
in
that
chapter.
A
The
chapter
members
other
than
the
prior
chapter
leader,
so
I
could
send
you,
those
email
addresses,
and
maybe
we
just
kind
of
CC,
all
of
them,
and
one
of
them
will
get
it
and
share
it
with
the
appropriate
people.
You
know.
C
D
C
A
Sounds
good,
so
I
will
take
that
as
an
action
item
to
finalize
letter
and
send
to
Rick
with
email
addresses
for.
A
F
Okay,
cool
well
hi,
everyone
for
those
of
you
who
are
new
to
our
group.
My
name
is
Adam
Jennings
I'm,
a
physical
therapist
and
the
quasi-official
Outreach
director
for
outreach
coordinator.
If
you
prefer,
for.
F
So
I've
been
really
interested
in
solving
a
couple
of
problems
well
in
capitalizing,
a
couple
of
opportunities,
we'll
put
it
that
way,
that
enable
has
to
expand
its
reach
and
impact
if
you're
not
already
familiar
with
with
this
issue,
the
the
real
the
sticking
point
for
a
lot
of
people
new
to
the
e-nable
community
is
that
there's
generally
an
expectation
that
you're
going
to
hop
in
and
there's
going
to
be
a
huge
backlog
of
residual
recipients
that
have
a
huge
need
for
devices
to
be
printed,
which
is
not
currently
the
case.
F
There
are
millions
of
amputees
worldwide
that
don't
have
ready
access
to
Prosthetics
and
orthotic
services
and
you're
going
to
hear
me
refer
to
that
as
pmo
services
for
this
call
and
future
calls,
but
right
now,
because
enable
is
primarily
not
exclusively,
but
certainly
during
these
10
home
meetings,
primarily
U.S
Centric,
really
we're
we're
butting
up
against
the
sort
of
existing
Prosthetics
infrastructure
that
you
know
that
exists
in
sort
of
commercial
Prosthetics
industry,
which
is
really
filling
most
of
the
need
in
the
US.
F
Now
I
think
there
are
gaps
that
we
could
do
a
better
job
of
addressing,
but
most
of
my
efforts
have
been
to
identify
pockets
of
potential
recipients
and
establish
more
consistent
pipelines
so
that
people
in
this
community
have
more
to
do
so.
That
kind
of
brings
us
to
my
Outreach
efforts
for
the
past
couple
of
weeks.
Obviously
we
didn't
have
a
chance
to
run
through
this
last
week,
given
the
more
pressing
items
that
we
covered
then,
but
I
want
to
just
sort
of
walk
down
this
list.
F
Let's
see,
let's
see,
let
me
zoom
in
on
your
list.
There
Jeremy,
all
right
so
I
have
been
prioritizing
a
meeting
with
piano
leaders
for
the
the
past
month
or
so,
and
I've
had
two
meetings
with
leaders
in
the
field
and
I've
got
one
coming
up
that
I'm
really
excited
about
next
week.
Michael
Leach
is
a
retired
process.
Recently
retired
process
in
Washington
State.
F
He
and
I
had
a
really
productive
conversation
about
how
enable
can
better
position
itself
as
a
sort
of
part
of
the
fabric
of
the
U.S
Healthcare
System
thing
not
being
a
you
know:
health
care
provider,
ourselves
or
an
organization
that
produces
officially
recognized
you
know,
Medical
Products
is
a
bit
of
a
bit
of
a
hurdle
for
us.
It
opens
up
a
lot
of
doors
and
freezes
from
some
restrictions,
but
it
also
kind
of
shuts
us
out
from
getting
to
the
table
to
to
talk
to
some
of
the
leaders
in
this
field.
F
So
we
had
a
pretty
productive
conversation.
I
I
got
a
number
of
interesting
ideas
that
came
from
that
conversation.
That
I
think
would
warrant
more
discussion
further
on
for
now.
Let
me
just
skip
down
to
Dr
Gracie
finco
Dr
finko
is
a
a
PhD
from
Baylor
down
in
Texas.
She
formerly
worked
and
in
your
neck
of
the
woods
Jeremy
at
the
Shirley
Ryan
ability
lab
in
Chicago
where
she
worked
as
a
prosthetist.
She
now
is
in
addition
to
her
work
as
a
faculty
member
at
Baylor.
F
F
So
I
will
just
say
just
generally
that
there
is
a
perception
in
the
Prosthetics
community
that
there
is
sort
of
an
Old
Guard
which
was
very
low
to
adopt
additive
manufacturing,
3D
printing
techniques,
and
there
are
newer
prosthetists
coming
in
kind
of
taking
their
place,
who
are
very
much
more
on
board,
with
the
idea
of
what
enable
does
and
I
think
that
we
will
find
that
the
environment
is
much
more
amidable
to
coming
to
the
table
with
us
than
it
was.
F
Maybe
when
we
initially
found
it
10
years
ago
or
even
five
years
ago,
what
some
additional
language
were
made
so
I'm
very
excited
to
partner
with
her.
She
has
some
really
really
great
ideas
about
out
how
we
can
engage
in
research
studies
through
Baylor
and
how
she
could
maybe
Shanghai
some
students
into
working
with
our
members
to
preach
the
papers
and
also
help
us
to
develop
some
guidelines
to
be
a
little
bit
more.
F
In
line
with
some
clinical
standards,
that
I
think
would
be
a
benefit
not
only
to
our
recipients
but
to
our
members
in
terms
of
raising
everyone
to
a
sort
of
Baseline
standard
for
how
we
approach
and
deliver
devices.
It's
pretty
exciting
stuff,
I'm
going
to
pause
there,
because
I
realize
I've
covered
a
lot.
If
there
are
any
comments
or
questions.
F
And
then,
next
week,
I'm
meeting
with
Dr
taiwo
akinsanya
he's
a
prosthetist
in
the
family.
Actually,
it
might
not
be
doctor.
I
need
to
double
check
his
credentials,
not
that
it
matters,
but
he's
the
founder
of
dynolim
Technologies
in
Nigeria
I
think
that
this
would
be
a
huge
opportunity
to
not
only
expand
our
our
relationships
with
prosthetists,
but
also
there
is
an
enormous
need
for
just
material
in
devices
in
this
region.
F
So
I
think
that
we
could
potentially
through
taiwo.
We
might
have
a
really
large
opportunity
for
members
of
our
community
to
start
printing
a
lot
more
devices
and
I
think
that
the
the
thing
that's
kind
of
exciting
I've
been
for
the
past
month
or
so
trying
to
build
up
my
LinkedIn
presence,
which
is
something
that
I
have
been
allergic
to
in
the
past,
but
I'm
trying
to
throw
myself
into
it.
F
F
So
it's
been
pretty
exciting
yeah,
so
I'll
be
meeting
with
Tyler
next
week
and
we'll
talk
more
about
that.
There's
one
more
individual
who
is
a
a
loud
voice
and
I
think
a
good
voice
in
the
Prosthetics
Community.
Who
is
not
on
this
list.
It's
Mr
Brent
Wright
he's
a
prosthetist
who
is
based.
Oh
my
gosh.
Where
is
he
based?
I,
don't
recall,
but
he
is
really
active
in
LinkedIn
he
does
a
ton
of
3D
printing,
as
well
as
like
integrated
bionics
with
3D,
printing
and
I.
F
He's
kind
of
my
white
whale
at
the
moment
he's
some
that
I'd
really
like
to
kind
of
bring
to
the
table
to
get
his
Insight,
but
yeah
he's
got
like
thousands
of
followers
online
and
he
posts
really
cool
media
content.
F
So
I'd
like
to
get
his
Insight
too.
Beyond
that
I've
made
some
interesting
connections
outside
the
Prosthetics
Community
John.
You
were
on
that
email
chain
with
Mr
Sebastian
Schmidt
out
at
PP
print
in
Hamburg.
He
had
as
the
survey
where
he's
trying
to
get
some
more
insight
about
how
a
Corporation,
not
Corporation
organization,
could
serve
individuals
in
the
developing
world
with
3D,
printing
and
I
offered
him.
My
insights,
obviously
that's
very
near
and
dear
to
my
heart,
but
John.
B
F
I
wanted
to
mention
that
in
just
a
minute,
so
Dr
finco
is
one
who
has
already
agreed
to
join
one
of
our
upcoming
town
halls
this
month
and
then
Stan
Hudson,
who
I'm
going
to
talk
about
in
a
moment.
Here
is
another
great
one
and
Chad
Lehman
with
makers.
Making
change
is
another
who
I
think
would
be
has
already
agreed
to
to
present
his
Insight
for
what
it
is.
F
He
does
with
the
Neil
Squire
Institute,
so
yeah
lots
of
lots
of
opportunity
to
be
here
for
for
some
exposure.
Speaking
of
Chad
he's
The
Innovation
director
at
makers,
making
change
he's
based
up
in
Canada,
as
is
the
the
organization
itself.
F
They
are
I'm
gonna,
go
and
call
them
a
sister
organization
to
enable
it's
not
official,
but
I
think
that
philosophically
we're
very
closely
aligned,
they
do
a
lot
more
in
the
line
of
assistive
technology,
specifically
working
on
switches
for
individuals
with
disabilities,
and
it's
very
similar
to
what
we're
recently
trying
to
do
Jeremy
by
partnering
with
atps.
Those
are
for
our
new
folks,
these
technology
programs
that
are
state-run
programs
in
every
single
state
in
U.S
territory.
F
What
I'm
trying
to
do
there
is
establish
a
state
champion
that
is
one
enable
member
or
chapter
assigned
to
each
a
state
and
territories
ATP
to
try
to
get
a
better
handle
on
how
we
can
not
only
Supply
devices
to
people
who
are
currently
paying
a
small
nominal
fee
for
these
simple
tools:
things
like
bag
holders
and
key
Turners
and
door
openers
things
like
that
wheelchair
attachments,
but
also
I,
think
there's
a
really
big
big
chance
to
offer
a
lower
threshold
for
entry
for
people
who
are
new
to
3D
printing.
Some.
F
A
No,
please
do
there's
another
interesting
connection.
That
kind
of
goes
with
this
one
a
little
bit
through
a
an
odd
chain
of
events.
So,
as
you
mentioned
makers,
making
changes
is
tied
in
with
that
assistive
technology,
partnership
that
we've
been
working
on
and
expanding,
and
when
I
did
I
mentioned
this
before,
when
I
did
a
Blog
article
about
that,
I
also
found
and
featured
a
curriculum.
A
A
free
online
curriculum
that
makers,
making
change
developed
in
partnership
with
another
organization
called
printlab,
and
they
have
a
whole
curriculum
for
assistive
technology
and
it's
available
for
free
to
anyone
which
I
shared
in
the
hub.
But
now
somebody
from
printlab
the
partner
organization
that
worked
with
makers
making
change
they
reached
out
to
me
because
they're
doing
a
I
had
never
heard
of
this,
but
they're
doing
the
makeable
assistive
technology
challenge
in
partnership
with
Autodesk,
it's
something
they
do
every
year
and
so
they've
invited
me
to
be
a
judge
for
this
year's
competition.
A
Yeah,
so
that's
happening
in
mid.
It's
actually
already
happening.
It's
coming
to
a
close
in
mid-may,
so
just
there
might
be
some
interesting
connections
there
as
well.
It's,
oh,
that's
great
yeah,
because
there,
those
are
some
big.
You
know
between
makeable
and
and
Autodesk,
and
and
Print
Lab
and
makers.
Making
change
I
mean
there's
a
really
interesting
group
of
organizations
there
focusing
on
assistive
technology.
F
Yeah
there's
a
whole
community
of
sort
of
like
higher
level
community
of
the
organizations
themselves,
I
feel
like
could
be
meeting,
or
at
least
communicating
on
some
level
to
try
to
coordinate
efforts,
and
it's
that
higher
level
collaboration
that
I'm
primarily
interested
in
seeing
how
we
can
work
that
out,
but
yeah
Chad
brought
up
printlab.
Also,
it's
a
UK
based
company
make
3D
design
training
opportunities
in
the
UK
that
they've,
you
know
just
sort
of
made
exportable
wherever
it's
pretty
cool.
F
Is
that
the
we
are
Print
Lab
assistive
device
Academy.
Is
that
what
you're
yeah
it's
pretty
cool?
Yeah?
It's
it's
very
interesting
stuff.
Let's
see
so
Stan
Hudson
is
former
professor
of
mine.
He
is
a
Health
policy
wonk
up
in
Wisconsin.
He
currently
works
at
a
non-profit
that
is
dedicated
to
expanding
health
literacy
at
policy
levels
in
national
state
local
government.
He
also
is
interested
in
making
sure
that
there
are
policies
that
require
accessible
Health
language
in
health
technology
and
Health
Products.
F
The
reason
I
reached
out
to
him
is
that
I
am
very
interested
in
working
well,
first
of
all,
expanding
the
number
of
clinicians
in
our
Network
Beyond.
Just
me,
and
a
couple
of
ot's
to
include
more
prosthetists
and
Physicians
and
therapists
of
all
Stripes.
But
tainara
and
I
have
been
kicking
around
some
ideas
for
establishing
some
care
guidelines.
That
would
be
the
expected
standard
for
anyone
who
delivers
a
device
through
enable
in
terms
of
like
ensuring
continuity
of
care,
making
sure,
there's
follow-up,
providing
surveys
to
get.
F
You
know
pre
and
post
functional
assessments
so
that
we
have
some
actual
data
and
we
can
improve
how
we
are
you
know
if
we're
going
to
be
making
any
kind
of
impact
in
people's
lives,
making
sure
that
it's
a
positive
one,
and
we
can't
do
that
without
collecting
the
data,
so
Stan
I'm,
hoping
we'll
be
able
to
work
with
us
to
better
Define.
You
know
how
we
can
communicate
those
guidelines,
especially
when
language
and
other
barriers
might
might
present
themselves.
F
So
yeah
I
think
there's
there's
a
lot
of
potential
there
for
some
interesting
conversation,
I'm
really
going
to
try
to
blast
the
risk
versus
list
quickly
Nate
with
koala.
He
is
one
of
the
founders
I
believe
of
koala,
which
is
a
soft
socket.
F
Prosthesis
company
me
I,
don't
know
if
they
make
the
terminal
devices
themselves.
I
know
they
have
the
attachment
and
the
soft
wraps
that
are
used
in
place
of
like
the
hard
plastic
or
you
know,
whatever
material
silicone
liners
that
are
used
in
traditional
Prosthetics.
F
A
And
I
did
meet
with
them,
I
don't
know
it
was
probably
a
year
and
a
half
or
two
years
ago,
at
least
at
this
point,
and
we
met
with
Nate
and
his
partner
and
really
nice
guys.
A
Yeah
they've
come
a
long
way
since
then
I
think
but
I
know
we
had
talked
about
trying
to
get
our
hands
on
one
of
their
socket
devices,
their
flexible
sockets,
and
so
that
we
could
start
looking
at
modifying
some
of
our
designs
to
be
able
to
attach
to
their
connection
points,
and
it
never
came
to
fruition.
But
if
you
you
do
reconnect
with
them,
let's
see
if
we
can
maybe
get
them
to
send
a
couple
our
way
so
that
we
could
work
on.
You
know
tying
our
devices.
F
Yeah
I
think
he'd
be
another
good
one
to
speak
at
a
town
hall
or
you
know
a
one-off
meeting.
He
did
offer
a
hub
in
a
post
to
make
the
attachment
mechanism
open
source
so
that
people
can.
B
F
Know
obviously,
he's
not
offering
it
to
give
away
the
devices,
of
course
yeah
I
hope
to
search,
because
you
know
you
know
and
and
I
would
want
him
to,
but
yeah
the
the
fact
that
the
attachment
could
be
made
available
could
really
open
up
a
lot
of
doors
to
using
that
soft,
socket
I,
don't
know
if
the
socket
was
the
right
word
but
sort
of
I.
Don't
know
if
there's
a
good
word
for
it.
Actually.
A
Yeah
I
don't
either,
but
it
it
really
was
interesting
to
me,
because
I've
worked
with
a
couple
of
people.
Excuse
me
and
I
have
another
one.
Now
that
a
prosthetist
came
to
me
about
helping
that
where
they
have,
you
know,
there's
still
some
residual
swelling
in
their
in
their
sort
of
their
plan,
and
it
can
make
it
really
challenging.
When
you
put
one
of
our
devices
on
them,
it
ends
up
being
way
too
large
for
their
to
to
their
for
their
body,
and
this
would
I
think
something
like
this
would
work
much
better.
F
A
couple
of
other
things
you
know
in
addition
to
the
swelling
problem,
but
just
you
know
getting
new
amputees
use
to
the
the
concept
of
using
a
a
new
device
to
replace
their
their
missing
limb.
F
That's
something
that
you
really
can't
do
immediately
post
surgery,
a
because
it
takes
a
while
in
traditional
fabrication
to
to
make
a
socket
and
B,
because
it's
not
safe
it
can,
you
know,
break
open
the
wound,
something
like
this
could
really
acclimate
someone
to
the
concept
and
there's
some
some
hard
Prosthetics
that
are
safer
and
are
just
like
simple.
F
You
know
simple
devices
to
do
that
now,
but
I
think
this
would
be
a
really
interesting
step
in
the
right
direction
to
make
it
more
more
ubiquitous.
The
other
person
that
I'm
hoping.
B
Yeah
I
just
wanted
to
say:
I
I,
agree,
I,
think
they're
great
people
they've
got
a
fantastic
product
which
is
a
natural
match
for
our
devices,
and
so
you
know,
I've
been
pinging
him
every
year
or
two
since
I
met
him
in
Berlin
and
in
London
a
few
years
ago.
B
I
think
it's
a
great
relationship
to
develop.
In
my
regards
sure,.
E
B
A
little
trip
to
Berlin
in
London
you
all
you
have
to
do
is
is
that
I
think
I
think
what
you're
doing
is
just
right.
Absolutely
I
appreciate.
F
I
appreciate
it
I
think
there
are
a
lot
of
big
opportunities
in
Monaco
and
Osaka
and,
let's
see
where
else,
where
else
do
I
want
to
go,
I
mean
oh
shoot.
Where
do
I
need
to?
No
that's
great
I
appreciate
the
office
so
really
quickly.
F
Valentine
sumalini
is
a
therapy's
director
for
the
International
Red
Cross
of
East
Africa
I
hesitated
even
putting
her
on
this
list
because
she
hasn't
yet
responded,
but
I'm
just
I
I
decided
to
add
it
here,
because
I
once
note
that
I
really
think
The,
Who
and
icrc
will
be
really
great
resources
for
identifying
new,
targeted
relief
opportunities,
and
so
that
is
an
area
that
I'm
going
to
be
devoting
some
time
specifically
in
the
the
months
ahead.
F
The
rest
of
these
things
are
really
just
one-off
things,
not
quite
as
detailed
Afghan
initiative
were
right
on
the
the
cusp
of
being
ready
to
test
our
shipping
line.
Juliet
chapter,
who
posted
in
the
hub
this
week
offered
to
print
some
devices.
I,
remember
them
on
Wednesday,
and
they
are
really
excited
to
help
out.
There's
some
others
who
have
reached
out
and
are
offering
to
send
some
hands
specifically
for
the
aota
conference,
so
I
just
wanted
to
put
out
there.
F
Thank
you
to
everyone
who
has
offered
to
help
in
that
way.
F
F
So
Christopher
Applegate
of
the
Louisville
chapter
he
reached
out
to
me
and
offered
to
assist
with
providing
a
phoenix
hand,
then
Arjun
Shah
is
going
to
be
sending
he's
with
the
Forsyth
County
chapter
they're
Printing
and
assembling
a
hand
specifically
for
the
aota
conference
to
my
specifications,
which
I
really
appreciate
because
I
was
being
finicky
about
it.
F
So
thank
you
to
everyone,
including
the
Juliet
chapter,
of
course,
for
your
help
here,
because
that
that
that's
tremendous
and
obviously
my
job
is
writing
checks
that
other
people,
cash
and
I
fully
recognize
that
fact
so,
I
I
really
really
do
rely
on
you.
All
to
anyone
listening
to
this,
after
fact-
and
it's
you
know
this-
this
community
letting
me
steer
some
efforts.
F
I
I
hope
that
will
be
the
benefit
to
the
benefit
of
the
entire
community.
So
thank
you.
Speaking
of
new
community
initiatives,
the
atps,
the
ATP
World
that
I
mentioned
earlier.
F
I
I
still
want
to
I'm
going
to
put
out
another
call
for
state
champions
on
the
Hub
I
think
at
the
beginning
of
next
week.
I
really
do
want
to
have
a
chapter
or
rep
for
every
state.
Eventually
I
want
that
maintained,
I'm
going
to
set
a
personal
goal
of
getting
15
by
the
end
of
the
summer
whenever
that
is
I,
think
that's
achievable,
but
right
now
we've
got
Illinois.
We've
got
Missouri
and
I.
F
Think
we've
got
Texas
settled,
so
that's
just
12
more
that
we
need
to
get
over
the
next
six
months
or
so
so
I
think
we
can
totally
get
that
done,
but
I'd
like
to
sort
of
establish
a
little
bit
of
a
protocol
and
some
standards
of
communication
to
ensure
that
we're
you
know
representing
ourselves
well
and
actually
providing
service
and
not
just
checking
a
box
to
that
end.
Scout
Mary
who's
the
lead
of
the
Missouri
ATP.
F
He
is
really
excited
because
they
just
got
their
first
3D
printers
a
couple
of
weeks
ago
and
they
are
exploring
some
possibilities
there.
No
one
at
the
Missouri
leadership
team
has
a
lot
of
experience
with
3D
printing
I
invited
him
to
join
the
Hub
and
share
some
of
the
issues
that
he
can
he's
having
some
extruder
problems.
F
Things
are
getting
stuck
in
the
extruder
and
he's
not
able
to
clear
it
out
easily.
So
I
invited
him
to
share
some
pictures
and
seat
some
guidance
weeks.
Obviously,
for
those
of
you
who
don't
know,
I
am
nearly
completely
ignorant
about
the
ins
and
outs
of
3D
printing
itself,
so
anyone
who
can
help
Scout
I
think
he's
one
of
the
the
neatest
guys
kindest
and
most
interesting
guys,
I've
ever
talked
to
so
I
encourage
you
to
communicate
with
them.
F
Speaking
of
the
aota
conference,
that's
the
American
Occupational
Therapy
Association
conference
coming
up
in
just
three
weeks.
I
am
ordering
finally
settled
on
design
bordering
business
cards.
Hopefully
they
get
here
in
time
for
the
conference,
but
I'll
be
submitting
requests
for
reimbursement
for
those
just
as
a
heads
up,
but
I'm
really
excited
to
share
what
enable
is
doing
out
and
about
with
some
people
in
the
world.
F
There
are
going
to
be
leaders
and
representatives
from
major
rehab
organizations,
teaching
hospitals,
Health
I.T
companies
from
all
over
the
US,
it's
in
Kansas
City,
where
I
live,
which
is
why
I
decided
to
go
because
obviously
the
bar
was
quite
a
bit
lower
than
some
conferences
that
are
happening
in
the
spring.
It's
common
season
right
now.
F
So
so
there
are,
you
know,
events
happening
all
over
the
place,
but
this
one
I
felt
like
was
particularly
aligned
with
what
we
wanted
to
do
in
the
coming
couple
of
years
in
terms
of
partnering
with
clinicians
and
expanding
our
footprint
and
I
think
that
this
is
a
way
to
kind
of
elevate,
our
our
brand
a
bit.
If
you
will
you.
A
Know
what
I
hadn't
thought
of
before
this,
but
we
I
we
gotta.
We
should
get
you
some
enabled
shirts
too
I,
don't
know
if
you've
had
anything
yeah.
A
F
Of
the
yeah
that's
a
great
idea:
man
I
should
have
thought
of.
A
F
A
Just
get
a
couple
for
you.
Do
me
a
favor
just
after
the
meeting
email
me,
your
your
address
so
I
know
where
to
ship
them
and.
E
A
To
go
back
real,
quick
on
the
assistive
technology
programs.
I
just
wanted
to
put
a
thank
you
out
there,
because
that
was
the
first
one
that
we
launched
was
for
the
Illinois
assistive
technology
program
to
invite
our
volunteers
to
print
those
the
the
devices
in
their
catalog
and
one
of
our
our
Representatives
over
there
at
the
iatp.
Her
name
is
Courtney.
A
She
was
kind
enough
to
actually
Post
in
the
hub
to
say
that
they
received
the
first
donation
and
she
thanked
Alexander
and
Clint
East
White
for
sending
them
a
whole
bunch
of
of
printed
devices.
So
I
want
to
thank
both
those
volunteers
who
did
the
printing
and
also
thank
Courtney
for
giving
us
that
feedback
and
letting
us
know
that
the
program
is
starting
to
work.
It
was
exciting
to
see
that
yeah.
F
Definitely,
no
that
was
awesome
and
I'm,
hoping
that
we'll
start
getting
more.
You
know
more
people.
What
I
really
want
to
challenge
people
to
do
and
encourage
people
to
do
is
as
they're
printing
you
know,
take
video
take
photos
because
Lee
eating
into
this
is
my
push
to
establish
more
of
a
social
media
presence
for
enable
I
created
an
enabled
group
on
LinkedIn.
They
know
an
official
enable
org.
F
F
So
yeah,
that's
great
I
encourage
people
to
join,
join
that
on
LinkedIn.
If
you
haven't
already
follow
it.
F
G
Out
to
me,
hi
here,
I'll
turn
my
video
on
someone
has
reached
out
to
me
on
LinkedIn
as
well
asking
about
it.
So
I
will
respond
to
their
their
message,
but
that
was
exciting.
So
I
just
wanted
to
tell.
F
F
Awesome
well
I'm,
going
to
make
a
post
every
week
at
least
once
a
week
and
I
just
wanted
to
get
this
group's
permission.
To
do
that,
I
was
gonna
run
if
you
buy
just
by
email,
no
off
the
call
about
the
the
scope
and
content
I
wanted
to
be
really
focused.
I,
don't
want
to
just
like
put
stuff
out
there
for
the
sake
of
putting
stuff
out
there.
I'd
really
like
to
you
know
announce
our
presence
at
upcoming
events,
and
you
know:
share
photos
and
videos.
F
I
really
would
love
members
of
the
community
to
share
more
multimedia
stuff
so
that
we
can,
you
know,
kind
of
package
that
up
and
raise
our
profile
with
it.
I
think.
A
Great
Adam,
I
think
number
one
you're
you're
exactly
the
right
person
to
be
handling
that
platform
and
I
also
think
it's
the
perfect
platform
for
the
kind
of
connections
you're
trying
to
make
so
I
would
encourage
you
to
keep
the
posts
oriented
towards
you
know.
Opportunity
is
for
partnering
with
other
organizations
and
people
in
the
medical
community.
You
know
stay
on
on
that.
What
you're,
already
working
on
I
think
that's
the
right
platform
for
that
yeah.
F
Well,
thank
you.
Yeah
I
thought
so
too
I
think
Tick,
Tock,
provided
isn't
banned
in
the
coming
months
would
be
another
good
one,
but
just
because
what
you
know,
3D
printing
is
so
visual
yeah.
A
And
I
think
that
could
that
could
be
a
good
one
for
kind
of
getting
the
word
out
to
the
general
Community
about.
You
know:
hey
we're
here
we
can
help,
whereas
LinkedIn
might
be
better
for
making
those
strategic
connections
yeah.
F
I
think
that's
in
terms
of
fundraising
and
getting
new
members,
especially
like
college
students.
Having
some
kind
of
tick,
tock
presence
will
be,
will
be
important,
and
you
know
if
Tick
Tock
again
dissolves,
whatever
the
next
Divine
successor.
F
We'll
be
I
still
miss
mine.
It
still
tells
me
that
it
doesn't
it's
not
around
anymore,
but
anyway,
yeah
the
last
one
Speaking
of
social
media
and
and
sort
of
mixed
Communications
I
used
to
have
podcasts
I
mean
I'm
a
you
know:
white
guy,
a
white
middle-aged
guy.
F
So
of
course,
I
had
a
podcast,
but
the
the
focus
of
it
was
ergonomics
back
in
my
days
as
a
industrial
ergonomist,
but
I
thought
it
was
pretty
good
and
in
the
early
covet
days,
I
bought
a
bunch
of
equipment
to
facilitate
that
I
wanted
to
float
the
idea
of
having
a
podcast
for
enabled
that
released
some,
you
know
maybe
a
monthly
basis.
F
A
It's
a
wonderful
idea:
Adam.
Would
you
be
willing
to
sort
of
host
those
and
do
the
interviewing,
oh
shucks,
sure
I'll?
Do
it
I
mean
I,
think
you're
the
you're,
the
right
one
for
it
and
if
I
mean
if
willing,
because
that's
I,
think
that's
the
only
thing
standing
in
our
way
of
you
know
why
we
haven't
done
it
sooner.
We
just
need
somebody.
That's
going
to
kind
of
take
the
lead
on
that
I.
If
you
need
any
help
with
the
infrastructure
side.
I
already
have
a
membership
on
podcast
on
pod.
A
E
F
As
my
Drama
teacher
told
me,
in
high
school,
I've
got
a
face
for
radio,
so
maybe
just
the
pure
audio
side
would
work.
F
I'm
excited
about
too
I
think
that
this
warrants
a
little
bit
of
planning
and
discussion.
Instead
of
this
is
one
area
where
I
might
not
jump
in
feed
first,
of
course,
but
I.
E
E
G
I,
you
know
used
to
do
future
stories
for
Minnesota's
NPR
affiliate
and
you
know
I
know
how
to
audio
edit
and
and
throw
together
a
podcast.
Oh.
G
Audio
editing
software
is
expensive
and
editing
audio
well
like
when
you
listen
to
podcasts
when
it
sounds
like
just.
G
G
F
You'd
be
the
expert
here.
You
know
I
I
use
audacity
for
my
short-lived
podcast,
okay
and
I
I'm,
very
familiar
with
how
difficult
it
is
yeah
by
virtue
of
how
poor
the
outcome
usually
was.
G
So
please
yeah
I,
use
Adobe,
Audition
I!
Think
that's
the
most!
It's
it's
expensive,
but
it's
it's
user
friendly
and
it
you
can
sort
of
do
the
most
with
editing
to
get
the
best
results.
So
if
you
want
to
talk
about
that
and.
G
You
did
that
I
haven't
used
it
in
a
my
last
audio
client,
I'd
edited
my
last
podcast
for
them
a
few
months
ago.
So
it's
it's.
A
G
A
Well,
I
I
do
have
a
pot
a
license
to
the
full
Adobe
Creative
Suite,
which
I
believe
includes
that.
So,
if
you'd
like
to
use
mine,
we
can
probably
arrange.
G
That
but
yeah
I've,
just
we
should
talk
about
that
and
I.
F
B
A
A
G
Just
say
the
word
I
think
I
mean
I'm
happy
to
co-host
Adam
you
you
make
a
a
great
host
I
I!
Don't
want
to
take
that
away
from
you,
but
I'm
happy
to
like
work
with
you
on
putting
it
together
and
editing
and
producing
also
okay.
A
Great
yeah
I
mean
it
sounds
like
a
meeting
between
you.
Two
would
be
worthwhile
cool,
yeah
I
love
that
great
well
anything
else
that
you
wanted
to
share.
Adam.
F
I,
don't
think
so
I
I'm
trying
to
think
I've
got
a
couple
of
things
coming
up
next
week,
but
I
will
say
that
next
week's
updates
will
be
a
lot
lighter
than
this
one.
This
just
happened
to
be
a
really
enable
heavy
Fortnight
for
me:
okay,
okay,
so
yeah,
it's
it
for
those
of
you
if
you're
still
on
the
call
or
new
members.
It's
not
usually
quite
this
much
for
me,
but
no
thank
you
for
telling
Jeremy.
A
B
My
only
caution
is
that
if
all
of
these
things
come
right
at
the
same
time,
you're
going
to
be
overwhelmed,
yeah
and
so
keep
an
eye
out
for
the
possibility
that
there
are
I'm
looking
at
you
Timmy
and
Amy
student
interns,
for
example,
who
could
be
involved
in
some
of
these
activities
in
a
way
that
reduced,
rather
than
increased
the
amount
of
work
you
had
to
do
just
keep
an
eye
out
for
that
you're
doing
absolutely
terrific.
We
don't
want
you
to
overheat.
A
E
But
yeah
yeah,
it's
part
of
our
mechanical
engineering
course
here
at
school.
I
think
one
of
the
units
was
just
about
like
Prosthetics,
and
this
happened
to
be
an
opportunity
that
we
saw
and
decided
to
run
with
it.
A
Got
it
wonderful,
okay,
well,
I'm,
going
to
go
back
here!
Sarah
we
skipped
over
last
week
we
had
to
skip
the
post
from
The
Hub,
because
we
we
just
didn't
have
time
and
this
week
I
again
skipped
it,
because
I
wanted
to
make
sure
Adam
had
time
to
go
all
through
that.
So
we
were
going
to
come
back
to
this
and
now
we're
left
with
just
under
10
minutes,
which
is
not
even
going
to
be
enough
to
go
through
these.
So.
E
G
G
Please,
okay,
so
I
have
left
Minnesota
and
I
will
be
traveling
around
the
country
for
the
next
few
months.
G
Excuse
me
and
I
I
spoke
to
John
about
this,
but
I'm
in
I'm
in
Portland
today
and
on
my
way
to
Eugene
this
afternoon
and
I'll,
be
in
Seattle
next
week,
I
reached
out
to
Portland
and
Seattle
enable
chapters
I
don't
know
how
active
they
are.
I
haven't
gotten
a
response,
but
if
there's
any
opportunity
for
for
meeting
face
to
face
with
people
that.
A
There
definitely
should
be
in
Portland,
Siri
Sarah.
We
have
a
a
very
good
friend
there
named
Shashi
Jane,
who
is,
is
the
leader
of
the
Portland
chapter
last
I,
checked
and
also
runs
a
very
large
kind
of
maker
group
there
that
that
goes.
You
know
Way
Beyond,
just
what
we
do
in
enable,
but
he's
he's
a
great
guy
and
I
I've
connected
with
him
out
there
in
person
and
and
they
do
events
and
things
so
I
can
send
you.
His
contact
info
like
he'd,
be
a
good
one
to.
G
Reach
out
send
me
send
me
his
contact
info
I'm,
leaving
today,
but
I'll
be
back
just
for
Sunday
evening
and
Monday
morning.
So
if
there's
something
that
can
happen
in
there.
B
A
Think
that's
a
great
idea
for
the
new
for
the
new
members
in
here.
We
do
have
a
policy
where
this
group
here,
whoever
happens
to
be
here
on
any
given
week,
does
have
the
authority
to
approve
up
to
a
thousand
dollars
in
discretionary
spending
from
the
enable
fund.
So
I'd
say
let's
just
come
up
with
some
limit
for
this.
What
do
you
think
is
for
this
for
her
for
Sarah's
travel?
Should
we
just
say
anything
up
to
a
total
of
five
hundred
dollars?
A
A
Yes,
I
see
yes
from
Rick,
yes
from
John,
Timmy
and
Amy,
you
guys
get
to
vote
too
thumbs
up
from
Timmy
Amy
feel
free
to
use
chat
there
you
go
thumbs
up.
Okay,
it's
unanimous,
so
you're
approved,
obviously
use
your
discretion.
I
know
you
won't
go
beyond
what
you
need
to
Sarah,
but
you're
you're
covered.
G
Great,
thank
you
so
I
I
will
contact.
I
will
reach
out
today.
If
you
can
send
that
contact
information,
and
thank
you
so
much.
This
is
great.
This
will
be.
E
A
G
Will
be
wonderful
and
then
next
week
I'll
be
in
Seattle.
So
if
anyone
comes
to
mind
there
well.
G
G
G
This
month's
bionic
design
meeting
was
wonderful.
It
was
a
special
meeting.
It
was
not
recorded.
It
was
very
well
attended
in
a
very
Lively
and
interesting
presentation
on
Osseo
integration,
so.
A
I
was
I
had
a
question
about
that.
Actually,
I'm,
just
I'm,
not
I,
wasn't
able
to
be
part
of
it.
I'm
not
used
to
seeing
enable
meetings
not
recorded.
We
try
to
be
as
transparent
as
we
can
was.
There
did
was
that
somebody's
request?
Yes,.
G
It
was
the
the
the
presenter
requested
that
it
not
be
recorded.
You
know
newer
technology,
he
showed
footage
from
you
know,
of
recipients
and
of
of
the
process
of
you
know,
making
all
SEO
integration
work
and
he
requested
that
it
not
be
recorded.
B
D
A
Well,
I,
don't
think
we're
gonna
get
far
here.
I'll
just
pull
up
a
couple
of
these
posts
and
see
what
we
can
get
to,
but
I
I
am
going
to
have
to
kind
of
cut
us
off
at
the
top
of
the
hour
here.
Well,.
B
G
A
If
I
can
find
the
details
for
this,
the
challenge
that
I
mentioned
with
Autodesk
the
assistive
technology
challenge,
it
sounds
like
it's
still
going
on,
so
maybe
we
could
share
that.
I'll
have
to
look
into
it
to
see
if
there's
still
time
for
people
to
join
in
on
that.
But
if
it
is
I'll
send
you
the
details.
Okay,.
A
Okay,
well,
the
first
email
I
pulled
up
here
is
a
question
that
we
get
quite
a
lot,
which
is
basically
I've
got
some
devices
that
I
printed.
Where
can
I
send
them?
How
can
I
get
them
to
people?
This
is
a
challenge
that
we're
still
trying
to
work
on.
We
used
to
have
a
collection
and
distribution.
Point
never
really
came
to
full
fruition.
A
We
still
need
to
figure
that
out.
We
don't
know
if
we
can
effectively
establish
a
system
for
Gathering
devices
that
have
not
really
been
customized
for
anyone
in
particular
and
get
them
to
people
who
can
actually
make
use
of
them.
It's
a
little
tricky
because
somebody
needs
to
inventory
them.
Do
quality
checks.
You
know,
keep
track
of
what
we
have
and
and
they're.
A
A
So,
as
of
now,
I
I
regularly
get
people
emailing,
not
only
the
enable
help
desk,
but
also
at
3D
Universe,
saying
hey,
you
know:
where
can
I
send
devices
and
I
just
don't
have
a
good
answer
for
them
right
now,
so
I
don't
think
we
have
time
to
get
into
it
today,
but
that's
something
that
we'll
have
to
talk
about
in
in
an
upcoming
meeting
and
see
if
we
can
get
that
back
on
track
and.
F
I
I
know
we
don't
have
time,
but
maybe
a
storage
unit
would
be
something
that
enable
could
pay
for
that.
I.
Don't
know
I'm
just
spitballing
sure.
A
I
mean
I,
don't
think
the
physical
space
is
the
limitation
as
much
as
finding
people
who
are
willing
to
do
the
cataloging
and
QA
contouring,
and
all
that,
let's
see
chapter
band
new
chapter
from
enable
Venezuela
and
they're
sharing
some
pictures
of
somebody.
They
want
to
help
which
looks
like
it's
not
going
to
be
a
standard
device.
This
is
probably
somebody
that
will
need
multiple
finger
devices,
but
they
still
have.
It
looks
like
one
good
segment
of
those
fingers
intact,
so
they
need
partial
fingers.
C
A
Good,
oh
I,
see
that
here.
Yes,
you
responded,
I
got
a
comment
from
Terry,
also
with
a
similar
device
that
maybe
let's
see
what
he's
recommending
here.
Well
I
can't
get
to
it.
Okay,
well,
they've
got
some
good
suggestions.
I'm
gonna,
see
if
I
can
get
to
one
or
two
more
here.
Terry
also
has
a
device
request.
It
looks
like
is
anyone
in
contact
with
enable
Tunisia?
We
have
a
device
request
in
Tunisia,
but
can't
seem
to
get
an
answer
from
them.
Adam
responded,
Rick
responded.
A
Jones
we've
tried
to
contact
this
chapter
several
times.
Okay,
so
that's
I,
guess
this
is
for
you,
Rick
might
be
wonder.
It
looks
like
you've
already
tried
to
reach
out.
A
That
might
be
time
to
think
about
putting
them
in
inactive
status,
looks
like
multiple
people
have
tried
to
get
a
hold
of
them
with
no
success,
and
let's
go
on
to
one
more
here:
Daniel
Hand
resources,
South
Side,
Middle
School,
making
the
Phoenix
hand
and
if
anyone
is
interested
in
the
hand
or
has
any
resources
again
somebody
looking
at
what
they
can
do
with
this
hand.
So
I
will
mention,
I
mean
I,
don't
know
how
effective
it
is.
One
resource
that
we
do
have
is
on
enable
web
Central.
A
We
have
a
device
inventory
and
you
can
go
to
this.
You
don't
even
need
to
be
signed
in
to
access
it.
This
is
where
you
can
post
devices
that
you
have
made
that
are
available
for
anybody
to
request.
We've
had
pretty
good
usage
as
far
as
people
putting
devices
in
here,
as
you
can
see,
we've
had
very
very
poor
usage
in
terms
of
people
requesting
these
devices.
I
don't
know
if
any
of
these
have
actually
been
requested.
So
it
is
a
mechanism
we
have
available.
F
A
Are
in
the
process
of
sort
of
moving
towards
a
new
matching
platform
that
may
replace
enable
web
Central,
so
we'll
have
to
think
about
how
we
can
maybe
bring
this
over
and
and
house
it
there
instead,
if,
if
we
want
to
continue
with
that,
but
by
the
way
I
do
have
a
volunteer
that
responded.
My
request
on
the
Hub
actually
for
two
things:
I
put
out
a
request
for
an
Azure
consult
and
I
got
a
an
affirmative
reply
on
that,
so
I
think
it
was
Alberto.
Nevada
is
going
to
help
me
out
there.
A
We
have
a
meeting
scheduled
for
after
I
return
from
my
travels
and
I
also
got
a
positive
response.
Looking
for
help
with
the
new
matching
platform
and
website
from
Morgan
I,
don't
remember
his
or
her
last
name,
but
we
have
a
meeting
also
scheduled
for
after
my
travels,
so
really
excited
to
get
a
response
on
both
of
those.
So
we
can
get
moving
forward.
A
Jen
put
together,
Jen
Owen,
one
of
our
co-founders,
put
together
a
really
nice.
Thank
you
note
on
the
Hub,
after
all
of
the
students,
including
Timmy
and
Amy,
here,
introduce
themselves.
So
if
you
guys
haven't
seen
that
be
sure
to
check
it
out,
it
was.
A
It
was
a
really
nice
message
that
Jen
wrote
up
to
sort
of
all
the
excitement
of
what
she's,
seeing
with
how
far
we've
come
in
10
years
and
the
work
that
we're
doing
Kristoff,
disability
solution-
and
this
is
probably
going
to
be
the
last
one
I
can
do
today-
I'd
like
to
show
you
our
solution
for
specific
disabilities.
A
A
There
we
go:
oh
okay,
okay,
so
it's
basically
just
something
that
goes
over.
It
looks
like
a
very
nice
custom
fit
and
then
it
looks
like
it.
It
allows
them
to
put
different
types
of
utensils
and
or
other
attachments
in
there.
It's
a
very
creative
solution,
and
that
certainly
looks
like
it's.
It
would
be
functional,
I
mean
I'm.
Imagining
that
he
would
definitely
be
able
to.
You
know,
eat
a
bowl
of
cereal
and
things
like
that
that
he
probably
would
have
really
struggled
with
before.
A
That's
wonderful
yeah,
so
I
wonder
if
they
have
they
shared
I,
guess
I!
Guess
in
this
case
it
wouldn't
do
much
good
to
share
that,
because
it
was
completely
based
on
a
custom
3D
scan.
But
the
approach
is
is
definitely
one
that
might
be
duplicated,
so
I
wonder
if
they'd
be
able
to
write
up
sort
of
how
they
did
it
and
kind
of
walk
us
through
their
process.
A
Very
cool,
though
thank
you
for
sharing
that
Kristoff
I
am
going
to
have
to
cut
us
off
here.
So
what
I'm
going
to
do
is
I
will
just
Mark
the
ones
here
that
we
did
have
time
to
look
at
and
we
will
leave
the
rest
of
them
on
here
for
next
time.
Anybody
else
have
anything
real,
quick
before
we
wrap
up
today's
meeting.
A
Okay,
well,
thank
you
all
for
joining
a
special
thanks
to
our
new
members,
Timmy
and
Amy.
Thanks
for
joining
us
and
remember,
we
have
that
new
member
Meetup
coming
up
third
Friday
of
next
month,
so
hopefully
you'll
be
able
to
join
that
as
well,
and
I
see
everyone
next
week
at
the
next
town
hall.