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From YouTube: Weekly e-NABLE Town Hall Meeting - November 19, 2021
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
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Meeting ID: 738 892 697
Passcode: 885810
A
Okay,
we
should
be
live
now.
Let
me
just
share
my
screen:
we'll
get
our
notes
up,
keep
going
here
morning,
everyone
or
afternoon
or
evening,
depending
on
where
you
are
welcome
back
to
another
town
hall
and,
of
course,
big
news
of
of
the
day
is
the
news
of
tomorrow.
Our
big
event
is
tomorrow,
we'll
be
talking
about
that.
A
Let's
see
introductions,
I
thought.
Oh,
you
know
what
I
had
somebody
new
earlier,
but
I
don't
see
him
now.
Let
me
just
make
sure
I
have
everybody
in
my
view
here:
okay,
so
now,
right
now,
I
do
not
have
anybody.
Nude
introduced,
so
move
on
action
items
bob
and
I
have
not
done
our
stuff
yet
bob
still
tied
up
this
move,
and
so
his
stuff
is
going
to
wait
a
little
while
longer
too
john
any
updates.
Well,
I
know
we
have
a.
We
have
a
meeting
right,
so
is
that
that's
tied.
B
A
B
Well,
yes,
so
vibe
from
maker's
assignment
mumbai
is
meeting
with
you
and
me,
and
bob
and
ben
tomorrow
morning
at
remember
correctly
10
o'clock,
eastern
and.
B
That's
what
I
mean
by
tomorrow:
yes,
okay,
technical
technical
point
and
we're
gonna
try
to
discuss
creating
an
enabled
presence
with
them.
They
have
quite
a
reputation
and
reach
in
india.
They've
done
some
very
interesting
work
and
they
would
be
very
important,
so
we're
gonna
try
to
kick
start
that
process.
Surprise.
B
The
alliance
currently
known
as
iko
priya,
don't
even
ask
me
what
it
stands
for,
but
it's
a
group
of
people,
including
makers,
making
change
and
a
group
in
italy
of
occupational
therapists
who
are
trying
to
produce
a
superset
of
what
we
do
with
prosthetics
to
deal
with
assistive
technologies
and
to
critically
involve
occupational
therapists,
who
would
be
a
resource
for
the
whole
larger
network.
So
that
could
be
a
really
nice
enrichment
of
what
we
do.
A
A
Excellent
okay,
I'll
get
back.
Where
were
we
action
items?
Okay?
So
that's
it
for
those
I'm
going
to
go
ahead
and
take
this
one
off
now.
I've
got
it
on
the
agenda
down
below.
So
we
can
talk
after
the
meeting
make
sure
enable
guadalajara
gets
the
money
they
were
promised.
John,
any
updates.
B
C
A
We'll
keep
it
on
the
list
until
it
gets
done,
then
we
know
what
gets
done
all
right.
I
don't
have
any
special
guest
presentations
on
the
schedule
right
now,
though,
I
think
there
are
likely
to
be
some.
We've
got
some
cool
topics
brewing
so
more
to
come
on
that
we've
got
our
metrics
here.
I
don't
think
there's
anything
worth
spending
time
on,
except
I
guess
I'll
mention
that,
apparently
what
was
the
one
that
jumped
out
at
me?
Oh,
yes,
the
the
likes.
A
A
All
of
our
recurring
meetings
are
here
with
the
next
one.
Coming
up
highlighted,
that's
going
to
be
today
the
new
member
meet
up
an
hour
after
the
end
of
this
meeting
link
in
the
hub
and,
of
course
the
big
event
is
tomorrow.
Do
we
have
ali?
Yes,
ellie,
want
to
tell
us
about
tomorrow.
D
Yes,
so
we
are
really
excited,
the
schedule
is
all
set.
The
student
chapter,
networking
event
is
going
to
start
at
10
a.m
and
john
is
going
to
be
giving
a
presentation
on
enable
past
present
and
future,
and
then
eric
bubar
from
marymount
university
is
going
to
be
presenting
on
chapter
takeaways
for
an
hour
after
that,
and
then
we're
going
to
have
a
really
fun
badge-a-thon,
where
we're
going
to
introduce
two
new
badges.
D
That
chapters
can
win
for
a
30
minute
period
and
I
believe
that
bob
is
going
to
be
available
to
approve
those
in
real
time
and
then
we're
going
to
take
a
30
minute.
Zoom
break
or
lunch
break
enables
subsidizing
five
up
to
five
dollars
per
person
for
student
chapters,
who
are
going
to
do
who
are
going
to
have
a
hybrid
version
of
the
event
and
meet
in
person.
D
So
that's
a
really
awesome
opportunity
and
he's
gonna
touch
on
that
a
little
bit
at
the
beginning
of
the
event,
just
to
remind
chapters
of
that
and
then
for
30
minutes,
we're
going
to
have
a
speed
round
chapter
introductions
where
all
the
chapters
that
are
participating
can
take
a
couple
minutes
to
answer
a
few
questions,
and
just
you
know
we
can
get
to
know
who's
actually
there
and
present,
and
then
ian
roy
from
brandeis
university
is
going
to
be
giving
us
a
maker
lab
tour
from
1
to
2
p.m.
D
This
is
all
eastern
standard
time
and
then
ananya
from
moreau
catholic
high
school
is
going
to
be
with
her
chapter
speaking
about
chapter
third
chapter,
introducing
their
chapter
more
in
depth
and
also
having
a
little
q
a
about.
I
guess,
sort
of
like
finding
cases
and
challenges
around
that
and
then
lindsay
wells
is
going
to
be
presenting
educational
resources
associated
with
enable
for
30
minutes,
and
then
jeremy
is
going
to
be
doing
a
presentation.
D
Thank
you,
jeremy.
We're
very
excited
to
have
you
present
and
then,
after
that,
for
15
minutes
enable
tech
from
I'm
gonna.
I
don't
know
if
I'm
gonna
be
able
to
say
this,
but
technology.
D
D
Let
me
finish
and
then
I'll
get
to
you,
then
from
four
to
five
we're
going
to
have
three
different
virtual
networking
breakout
rooms.
The
different
topics
are
one
presenting
cases
and
challenges:
finding
recipients
and
the
moderator
is
orinze
from
rice
university
and
then
two
cross
chapter
collaboration,
ben's
gonna,
be
the
moderator
for
that
and
then
three
establishing
and
running
a
university
chapter,
also
discussing
fundraising
techniques
with
john
and
then
we're
going
to
wrap
up
with
ben
who's,
going
to
talk
about
continuing
connections
and
collaboration
and
do
the
event
closing
so.
B
C
A
Is
this
I
just
want
to
ask
real
quick:
is
this
the
actual
zoom
link
to
the
for
people
that
want
to
join
in
okay?
Just
that
I
know,
because
that's
on
the
actual
hub
calendar,
do
you
want?
Do
you
want
me
to
stop
my
screen
sharing,
so
you
can
share
something
or
do
you
want
me
to
pull
something
up
sure.
D
Yeah,
so
it's
quite
long,
but
this
is
the
schedule.
The
zoom
link
is
on
the
schedule
which
has
been
emailed
out
to
all
of
the
registrants.
We
have
41
registrants,
but
the
registrants
don't
reflect
the
number
of
participants,
because
a
lot
of
the
registrants
are
representing
their
chapters
who
have
said
that
they
have
anywhere
between
like
three
to
twenty
students
in
the
chapter.
So
I
mean
also
since
we're.
A
D
The
location
portion
because
it
didn't
seem
it
seemed
repetitive,
but
I
did
tag
the
event.
I
will
definitely
share
it
again
and
make
a
couple
more
videos.
C
D
C
Is
an
update,
that'd
be
great.
The
other
thing
and
you're
still
sharing
your
screen,
which
is
fine,
no.
C
D
C
Coming
so
that
would
be
another
thing
that
we
can
add
as
a
comment,
I
think
if
we
can
figure
out
all
the
chapters
that
are
represented
and
if
you
can
send
me
that
I
can
or
or
if
you
want
to
post
it,
we
can
share
the
chapters
and
then
link
to
their
information,
because
there
could
be
people
that
are
interested
in
a
specific
chapter
or
maybe
there's
somebody-
that's
perfectly
involved
in
the
chapter
and
they
want
to
join
because
they've
got
colleagues.
D
A
D
Thank
you,
yeah.
Thank
you.
Yeah,
it's
been
fun
and
then
just
since
we're
all
here
briefly,
I
created
a
master
pitch
deck
for
or
just
slide
deck
for
the
event.
So
if
ben
and
john
and
potentially
jeremy,
I
know
you-
and
I
already
talked,
but
if
you
wanted
to
add
any
slides
to
that
feel
free
to.
If
you
want
to
just
share
your
own
screen
and
use
your
own
powerpoint
presentation,
that's
fine
too,.
C
Okay
and
thank
you
goes
back
to
to
you,
jeremy.
I
think
it
was
your
mailing
list
that
doubled
our
pre
purchase,
yeah.
A
Okay,
so
let's
go
onward
to
our
discussion
topics
just
glancing
around
to
see
if
anyone
knew
is
joined,
doesn't
look
like
it:
okay,
so
onboarding,
and
this
is
an
area
of
focus
for
kevin.
So
I
have
some
discussion
topics
here.
Let
me
just
take
a
moment
to
ask
kevin
how
things
are
going
and
see
if
there's
anything
that
you'd
like
to
discuss
or
anything
that
we
can
help
with
related
to
the
onboarding
process.
E
Well,
the
new
launch.
E
A
B
So
are
we
prepared
to
promote
this
so
that
it's
is
it
now
the
default.
A
And
I
don't
know
that
we
I'm
not
sure
that
we
need
to
necessarily
I
you
know
we
have
to
talk
about
how
best
to
do
this,
because
one
option
is
that
we
just
take
the
content
and
we
make
that
kind
of
the
home
page
in
the
existing
new
members
space.
So
you
know:
do
we
create
a
new
space?
You
know
we
ought
to
talk
about
how
best
to
handle
that,
but
let's
definitely
get
that
out
there
as
soon
as
we
can.
A
A
Yeah
hold
on
one
second
folks:
I
lost
my
zoom
window
here
somehow
and
there
we
go
okay.
Let
me
get
back
to
my
screen
share.
That's
why
I
was
disoriented
all
right,
so
anything
else
on
onboarding
now,
right
now,
okay,
so
I
added
a
new
topic
off-boarding,
because
we
had
somebody
that
reached
out
and
said,
please
remove
all
of
my
information
and
it
occurred
to
me
that
that's
not
as
easy
as
one
would
think,
because
we've
got
a
lot
of
different
platforms.
A
So
when
somebody
responds
to
an
email
and
says
please
erase
all
my
info
per
gdpr
or
whatever,
that
doesn't
just
mean
taking
them
out
of
our
mailing
list,
I
think
we
need
to
talk
about
what
our
process
is.
I
think
that
means
taking
them
out
of
the
hub
taking
them
out
of
the
enabling
the
future
website.
You
know
list
enable
web
central.
I
mean
it.
Is
that
our
up
do
we
need
to
remove
them
from
all
of
our
platforms
or
is
that
up
to
the
end
user
to
go
and
unsubscribe
from
each
platform?
C
A
Well,
that's
see,
I
don't
think
we
do.
I
don't
think
we
do.
We
have
to
maybe
talk
to
masby
about
this,
because
I
don't
think
content
goes
away,
but
I
think
there's
a
way
of
sort
of
archiving
or
whatever,
so
it
would,
it
would
just
show
up.
As
you
know,
I
don't
know,
archive
user
or
something
it
wouldn't
show
up
under
their
name
anymore.
C
A
C
Before,
okay,
we
did
have
a
guy
that
messaged,
he
was
an
older
guy,
he
messaged
and
said
he
just
couldn't
keep
up
with
it.
He
wanted
us
to
remove
his
information
and
I
forget
all
the
steps
that
we
took,
but
we
did
go
through
this
and
I,
in
my
messages
on
the
hub,
I've
got
some
information
about
the
steps
we
took.
So
let
me
see
if
I
can
dig
that
up.
A
B
Matt
masby
is
in
europe
and
he's
actually,
I
think,
quite
familiar
with
the
gdpr
regulations
and
he's
going
to
be
the
provider
of
whatever
solution
we
come
up
with
so.
A
Unless
it's
I,
I
don't
think
this
can
be
fully
automated
because
it
goes
across
so
many
different
platforms.
So
I
think
we're
going
to
end
up
with
somebody
needing
to
do
a
manual
process
of
going
here
and
then
here
and
then
here
to
do
something.
So
that's
that's
not
going
to
be
mads.
He
might
tell
us
how
to
do
it,
but
we're
still
going
to
need
somebody
to
do.
C
A
C
C
A
Exactly
I
like
that
approach,
I
think
it's
best
to
inform
them
and
let
them
do
it
themselves.
Like
you,
said
it's
a
volunteer
community,
that's
very
reasonable.
As
long
as
we
give
them
the
information
and
the
links
they
need
to
do
so
good
approach.
Okay,
so
we'll
work
on
on
getting
that
written
up
and,
and
we'll
add
that
in
where
it
needs
to
go
on
the
hub
so
on
to
enable
infrastructure.
We've
had
some
really
exciting
activity
going
here
around
this.
A
This
first
item,
this
new
app
that
we've
been
working
on
for
capturing
measurements
and
generating
truly
parametrically
scaled
stl
files
for
a
design
currently
in
development,
and
hopefully
many
more
of
our
designs
in
the
future
andrew.
I
don't
want
to
go
too
far
into
this
today,
but
do
you
want
to
give
us
like
a
short
update
on
on
just
kind
of
what
you're
working
on
and
where
things
are
at.
E
Sure
so,
since
last
week
we
have
taken
the
export
service,
which
is
responsible
for
taking
taking
all
the
derived
configuration
parameters
for
each
of
our
models
and
turning
that
into
the
actual
stl
files.
C
E
Was
previously
a
very
rapidly
built
prototype,
not
good
practices
and
such
so
we've
taken
that
and
we've
fully
rewritten
that,
following
best
practices
and
stuff
added
tests,
added
lots
of
error
handling
and
such
so
that
the
quality
of
that
service
has
been
taken
from
just
scraped
together
to
pretty
close
to
mvp,
including
tracing
and
logging
and
such,
and
that
service
has
also
had
a
major
extension
added
two
major
extensions.
E
E
So,
instead
of
clicking
a
button
and
just
waiting
for
like
30
seconds
with
no
feedback
before
a
download
dialog
pops
up
now
you
get
this
interactive
little
flow.
That
shows,
you
shows
you
the
current
state
of
the
export
job,
the
other
major
extension
on
there
is
not
something
that
shows
up
on
the
front
end.
It
is
a
redo
of
how
how
the
actual
output
for
download
is
generated.
E
Previously,
it
just
kind
of
threw
a
bunch
of
stls
into
a
buffer
and
zipped
it
up
and
kicked
it
off
now,
they're
actually
written
out
to
the
file
system
in
a
manageable
way,
so
that
we
can
do.
We
can
do
caching
of
exported
artifacts,
and
it
also
has
excuse
me-
has
support
for
including
extras
in
the
folder
that
you
download,
which
would
probably
include
things
like
instructions
for
assembly,
recommended
printing
settings.
E
We
could
even
do
like
full
slicer
projects
so
that,
if
you
had
a
given
slicer
and
printer,
we
could
give
you
a
ready
to
go
project
and
you
just
need
to
like
pick
a
material
or
something,
so
we
have
significantly
upgraded
how
we're
handling
exported
artifacts
and
then
on
the
web
app
side
of
things.
A
lot
of
a
lot
of
pages
that
were
super
bare
bones
and
just
minimal
have
been
fleshed
out
a
little
bit.
E
Given
a
few
more
details,
we
added
the
website
of
that
export
status,
monitor
that
I
discussed
so
we
showed
the
ui
for
that
implemented
and
then
the
last
big
things
we
have.
We
have
finished
what
we
think
will
be
the
first
iteration
of
the
measurements
taking
workflow.
E
So
when
you
go
to
start
a
new
set
of
measurements,
you're
brought
to
a
screen
where
you
can
flick
through
multiple
slides,
each
of
which
have
configurable
inputs
for
you
to
provide
those
measurements.
That
also
includes,
like
text
and
image,
instructions
on
how
to
take
those
measurements
and
then
at.
E
A
Sorry,
let
me
just
point
out
also
that
I'm
gonna
be
talking
about
this
a
little
bit
tomorrow
and
that
presentation
I'll
be
giving
in
the
afternoon
three
p.m.
Eastern,
so
because
it
kind
of
falls
under
the
the
topic
of
cross
chapter
collaboration
and
how
we're
thinking
that
this
is
going
to
be
useful
going
forward,
and
so
I
will
be
covering
this
project
a
little
bit
andrew's
going
to
help
me
with
some
screens
and
stuff
so
I'll
be
able
to
do
a
little
bit
more
show
and
tell
tomorrow.
A
I
hope
you
guys
will
join
for
that,
but
bottom
line
is
it's
coming
along
way
way
faster
than
we
expected
thanks
to
andrew
and
his
team.
They're
doing
amazing
amazing
work.
So
thanks
to
andrew
and
right
now
I
think
it's
mainly
lucas
lucas
and
andrew
right.
Yes,
big
thanks
to
lucas
who
we
don't
haven't,
had
the
pleasure
to
meet
yet,
but
we
know
he's
working
hard
behind
the
scenes.
A
So,
thanks
to
both
of
you
and
excuse
me,
we
I
I
just
you
know
this
is
what
was
I
going
to
say
the
the
we
are
working
right
now
as
this
this
team.
That's
meeting
weekly
we're
we're
making
also
a
lot
of
progress
on
this
new
hand,
design
that
we
look
forward
to
rolling
out,
I
think
in
the
not
too
distant
future,
and
this
is
what
we
hope
will
be
the
first
fully
parametric
hand
device
for
the
community,
that
is,
everything
can
be
scaled
parametrically.
A
You
can
keep
the
holes
for
the
screws,
the
same
size,
the
channels,
the
same
size,
the
gaps
between
moving
parts,
the
same
size
but
scale.
Everything
else
is
needed.
It's
something!
We've
never
really
pulled
off
to
my
knowledge
before,
but
we're
not
only
doing
that,
but
we're
building
a
platform
that
will
allow
others
to
do
that
more
easily
and
and
make
those
designs
available
more
easily
to
others.
It's
very
exciting,
and
I
think
it
really
is
a
big
step
forward
for
our
our
design,
the
design
part
of
our
community.
A
So
definitely
I'll
look
forward
to
sharing
a
little
bit
more
about
that
tomorrow.
A
E
Jeremy,
I
saw
in
the
hub
like
a
week
or
two
ago
you
asked
if
anyone
was
a
ux
designer.
That's
right
is
that
for
that
project
or
the
app.
A
It
is
for
that
it
is
for
that
project
and
just
as
an
update
there,
we,
what
we're
looking
for,
is
not
even
necessarily
somebody
to
do
the
design
as
much
as
a
consultation
and
excuse
me
in
the
interim.
I
did
reach
out
to
our
friends
at
deloitte
uk
because
they
have
a
a
team
of
ux
and
ed
grigg
actually
was
kind
enough
to
reply
and
say
that
our
timing
is
good.
He
has
somebody
available
and
he's
hooked
up
a
meeting
for
us,
so
we
do
have
a
lead
there.
E
I'm
gonna
drop
my
guys
he
would
love
to
get
help
from
anybody,
be
it
aesthetic
or
more
concerned
with,
like
big
picture
user
flows,
kind
of
stuff,
both
sides
of
the
web
application
design.
We
would
appreciate
any
assistance
with
because
we're
more
focused
on
getting
the
implementation
functional
right
now.
C
E
C
Quick
heads
up,
we
do
have
it
under
the
volunteering
needs
in
the
pinned
post.
So
what
I'll
do
is,
instead
of
jeremy's
a
contact
person,
I'll
switch
it
to
andrew?
Does
that
make
sense?
Thank.
A
You
yeah
yeah
andrew's
managing
the
whole
whole
effort,
great
okay,
as
long
as
we're
kind
of
doing
project
updates
here,
let's
go
to
alexander,
I
think
he's
got
some
updates
to
share
on
the
work
he's
been
doing
with
this
ico,
create
collaboration
right
alexander
you
with
us
yep.
F
As
a
recap
about
icocriad,
we
are
a
group
or
a
consortium,
if
you
will,
that
was
started
last
month
in
october,
with
the
korean
to
receive
a
microsoft
grant
centered
around
low-cost
assistive
technologies.
So
this
is
not
just
prosthetics.
This
is
assistive
tech
in
general.
F
The
project
that
we're
proposing
is
the
creation
of
a
worldwide
resource
platform
and
community
of
open
source,
assistive
tech
that
aggregate
solutions
from
various
various
sources.
So
it
aggravates
solutions
that
we
have
here
in
enable
also
from
makers
making
change
from
different
fab
labs
and
so
on.
Also,
the
platform
will
probably
involve
using
medical
professionals
such
as
otis
to
rate
and
contribute
to
the
devices
along
with
the
users
and
the
makers
and
the
second
important
part
of
the
project.
F
Is
they
we
want
to
leverage
ai
to
auto,
translate
the
website
enabling
access
in
non-english
speaking
countries
the
update
for
for
this
week
we
had
another
two
meetings
and
we
are
currently
preparing
for
a
chat
with
microsoft
before
the
before
before
the
final
proposal,
and
we
have
discussed
how
to
approach
tracking
metrics
about
the
devices
and
the
use
cases
through
the
use
of
questionnaires.
F
B
So
the
lead
of
this
group
is
a
guy
named
roon
thorson,
he's
danish,
but
he
works
with
an
italian
ngo
that
involves
occupational
therapy
and
it
was
so
he
has
a
stable
of
occupational
therapists
who
will
be
reviewing
these
devices,
but
those
same
people
he
agrees
will
be
very
eager
to
get
feedback
from
various
users
of
these
devices
and
the
makers
of
these
devices
and
will
therefore
be
available
as
ot
consultants
to
the
larger
volunteer
and
non-volunteer
community
who
makes
use
of
this
database.
B
So
that's
that's
an
interesting
development
that
it
would
be
a
nice
way
of
connecting.
B
A
C
C
Reference
really
quick,
so
we
do
have
a
fundraiser
that
john
posted
last
week.
I
can
be
updating
that
on
a
weekly
basis,
until
we
get
to
is
it
the
27th
is
giving
tuesday.
I
believe.
C
A
The
hub
social
media,
I
think
you've
got
our
you've,
got
our
twitter
and
our
instagram
now
and
let's
just
get
it
out
on
all
of
our
social
platforms
and
the
hub,
and
we
probably
should
think
about
doing
an
email
campaign
through
benchmark
for
this.
Why
not
do
an
email,
specifically
for
kind
of
the
giving
tuesday
effort
share
with
your
friends,
sort
of
a
thing
sure.
B
Do
we
have
a
we,
don't
have
a
badge
for
donated
to
the
enable
fund?
Do
we.
A
Well,
we
do
have
an
enabled
supporter
badge.
I
think
it's
called.
Let
me
look,
let's
see
what
is
that
under?
I
think
that's
under
down
here
partner.
No,
that's
for
the
website
stuff.
I
think
it's
up
here
under
community
here.
Enable
community
supporter
is
those
who
share
stories,
help
behind
the
scenes.
Nope
there's
another
one
hold
on
speaker.
A
I
just
saw
it
the
other
day,
organizer
community
creator.
You
might
be
right,
john.
I
thought
I
had
seen
one.
Maybe
we
don't
have
one
for
a
monetary
donation.
I
could
have
sworn
we
did.
Maybe
I'm
thinking
of
the
the
partner,
the
sponsor
badge,
but
that's
more
for
those
who
have
helped
to
grow
the
three
of
us
that
donated
three
free
3d
printable
devices
and
tools
donated
funds
to
enable
volunteer,
fundraising
campaigns.
A
A
Exactly
it
almost
feels
like
it's
better
for
a
business
than
a
person,
so
should
we
just
maybe
we
could
just
change
this
badge
into
you
know
enable
community,
we
say
financial,
support
or
donor.
What
do
you
guys?
What
would
you
guys
call
this
this.
A
B
Personally,
I'd
give
it
to
any
one
who
donates
anything
and
the
proof
would
be
just
provide
evidence
of
your
donation
to
the
enable
fund
or
a
chapter
or
an
enable
project.
Okay
and.
B
We
can
mention
it
tomorrow
and
it's.
A
It's
okay,
I
was
just
gonna
say:
are
we
in
favor,
then
of
just
changing
the
name
of
this
current
badge
to
enable
community
donor,
and
then
I
think
it
would
probably
also
change
categories.
It
wouldn't
be
under
the
partner
category.
It
would
just
move
to
the
community
category
and
it
would
be
called
enable
community
donor.
Is
that
what
we
want
to
do.
A
That's
a
good
point
ben.
That
might
be
a
good
point
because
this,
because
this
is
in
the
partner
category,
maybe
we
leave
this
one
for
organizations
that
provide
support,
and
then
we
create
a
new
one
that
goes
in
the
community
category
for
enable
community
donors
just
individuals
if.
B
You
have
time
to
create
a
new
one
for
tomorrow,
jeremy,
then
we
can
it'd
be
a
nice
part
of
the
badge
and
presentation
thing,
because
there's
a
facebook
link,
they
can
click
in
order
to
earn
the
badge,
etc,
etc.
A
Okay,
so
then
I'll
do
two
of
those
today,
because
we
had
an
email
going.
What
did
we
decide
on
the
event
badge?
Did
we
agree
that
a
generic
name
is
okay,
that
we're
just
going
to
go
with
the
enable?
I
don't
remember
what
we
talked
about,
enable
event
attended,
enable
event
or
something
like
that,
or
do
you
want
one
specific
to
this
event,
john.
B
Personally,
I
think
that
if
we
have
another
event
next
year,
a
return
visitor
might
like
to
get
a
second
batch,
and
so
that
would
suggest
that
this
badge
should
be
specific
for
the
events.
A
A
We
have
a
badge
for
particip,
it's
not,
we
don't
have
one
for
participate,
but
we
have
organized
an
enable
event,
enable
event
organizer
enable
event
volunteer,
but
we
don't
have
one
for
somebody
that
just
attended
or
just
participated
in
an
event.
A
A
C
Know
so
I
mean
the
problem
with
that
is
that,
in
all
honesty,
not
everybody
who
goes
to
the
event
is
going
to
get
the
badge.
So
it's
I
feel
like
if
you
have
something
that
shows
that
somebody's
active
in
certain
kinds
of
events
great,
but
if
you
have
the
the
sense
that,
by
clicking
on
this
you're
going
to
see
everybody
that
joined
that'd
be
wonderful
to
set
it
up
in
the
future.
A
E
A
And
masby
is
the
one
who
coded
the
interactive
so
he's
using
their
api
to
pull
the
information
down
and
present
here
in
the
hub.
So
this
is
getting
synced
automatically
from
what
we
have
on
badger,
badgers.
E
A
C
The
tricky
part
would
be
the
registration
making
sure
that
we
have
registration,
that's
integrated
right
now.
It's
we're
just
using
google
forms,
I
think,
and
it's
more
of
a
manual
process,
but
in
the
future
that
could
be
awesome
to
do,
but
I
think
until
we
do
that
having
individual
events,
you
know
again.
My
my
vote
is
just
one
vote.
I
I
I
hear.
B
B
I
don't
feel
strongly
about
this
ali
put
thumbs
down
you
put
thumbs
down,
I'm.
B
D
B
That
the
notion
of
eventually
automating
it
further,
especially
if
andrew
decides
he
can
juggle
40
things
at
one
time-
would
be
an
interesting
thing
to
pursue.
But
for
now
let's
go
with
the
simple
answer.
E
E
At
my
like
at
the
work,
I'm
doing
we're
making
something
that
automatically
assigns
badges
for
participation
and
like
online
courses
and
like
live
events
and
stuff.
So
this
is
this
is
very
doable.
I'm
actually
going
to
be
doing
something
like
this
pretty
soon.
It
would
probably
only
be
a
couple
hours
of
effort
to
get
something
like
that
stood
up.
If
that
was
something
we
wanted
to
do,
listen.
A
A
A
C
Off
the
topic,
just
a
really
quick
question
do
so.
It
sounds
like
we're
all
on
the
same
page,
more
or
less
with
what
to
do.
For
this
event,
do
we
want
to
consider
having
different
kinds
of
events
as
different
badges
or
just
leave
it
as
the
generic
ones
that
we've
got.
A
With
that,
there's
no
reason
to
split
it.
Yeah,
especially
as
we
move
into
this.
I
think
age
of
hybrid
events.
I
don't
think
we
need
to
distinguish
so
much
between
them
anymore,
all
right!
So,
let's
go
on
here
because,
as
luck
would
have
it,
we
were
just
now
joined
by
wes
breeden,
who
would
like
to
have
introduced
himself.
So
I
was
just
actually
going
to
share
some
news
about
him.
A
G
Hi
is
my
audio
coming
through.
A
G
Yeah,
my
wife
went
to
an
event
at
the
university
of
florida
a
couple
of
years
ago,
making
prosthetics
with
3d
printing.
We
got
interested
in
it
and
saw
some
of
jeremy's
videos
online
and
some
youtube
tutorials
and
looking
through
thingyverse
and
different
options
of
arms
that
can
be
built
and
we
we
practiced,
and
we
been
going
to
haiti
for
a
number
of
years
through
our
church
and
met
consuelo
here
she's
in
the
pink
shirt
she
runs.
G
The
only
professionally
trained
staffed
therapy
clinic
in
southern
haiti
and
charlo
is
in
the
white
shirt.
We
met
him
in
about
a
year
ago.
He
had
been
chopped
up
by
a
hasty
gang
and
he
lost
his
left
arm.
So
we
searched
around
and
wanted
to
do
something
to
help
him.
We
printed
him
a
couple
of
hands
and
took
him
down
in
late
2020,
and
this
photo
is
from
a
couple
of
two
weeks.
G
Two
weeks
ago,
he
he
came
back
to
the
clinic
and
has
been
coming
to
the
clinic
and
over
the
last
year
has
been
using
the
two
arms
we
made
for
him
really
well
so
much
so
that
one
was
broken.
G
The
other
one
looked
very
well
worn,
so
we
brought
another
set
for
him
down
and
he
is
very
happy
and
this
lady
to
my
right.
Her
name
is
queenie.
She
injured
in
a
bus
accident
in
2018
and
she's
gotten
to
know
the
folks
at
the
clinic.
So
we
got
cast
through
some
of
our
friends
sent
to
us
and
we
made
the
arm.
You
see
there
via
the
cast.
G
A
And
I
learned
you
know
from
exchanging
emails
with
us
he's
not
currently
associated
with
a
chapter,
and
I
thought
it
was
just
another
great
opportunity
to
highlight
that
you
know
our
chapters
are
doing
amazing
work,
but
we
also
have
individuals
not
associated
with
chapters
that
are
doing
equally
amazing
work.
So
thank
you
so
much
wes.
A
A
Not
right
now,
okay,
well
so
we'll
move
on.
I
don't
think
there's
anything
to
talk
about
with
animal
prosthetics
until
bob
is
able
to
rejoin
us.
So
unless
I
see
anyone
else,
no
okay,
we're
gonna
go
on
all
right.
A
We
already
talked
about
the
ico
cread
collaboration
here
under
outreach
and
partnerships,
we're
just
kind
of
gathering
a
collection
of
other
like-minded
organizations
here
and,
and
some
of
those
fall
in
under
that
ico,
create
collaboration,
but
I
think
we'll
have
more
to
report
on
the
maker's
asylum
potential
collaboration
after
our
monday
meeting
so
next
week.
A
Anybody
have
anything
else
to
talk
about
about
any
of
these
other
groups
or
ideas,
for
maybe
I
should
put
this
into
context.
The
goal
here
is
to
establish
partnerships
that
we
can.
You
know,
use
to
greater.
You
know
better
leverage,
our
existing
community.
A
We
have
right
now
we
have
honestly
more
volunteers
than
we
have
people
asking
for
devices,
and
so,
if
we
can,
you
know
sort
of
collaborate
with
some
of
these
others
to
you
know
through
them,
get
the
word
out
about
what
we
can
offer
and
get
access
to
more
people
or
help
with
some
of
the
other
types
of
assistive
tech
that
they
do
that's.
The
idea
here
is
to
sort
of
find
more
ways
that
our
our
volunteers
can
can
find
meaningful
ways
to
help
out.
Does
anybody
else
have
anything
to.
B
Well,
we've
talked
about
ico
of
create.
I
can
also
report
that
I've
been
part
of
a
recurring
meeting
group
on
open
data
for
health
european
based.
B
These
are
people
working
on
different
aspects
of
this.
They
tend
to
be
more
data
and
policy
oriented,
but
it's
it's
been
very
interesting
to
see
that
when
they
see
the
scope
of
enable
they're
they're
quite
impressed,
and
so
we're
we're
still
sort
of
spreading
the
word
about
what
we're
doing
and
it's,
it
continues
to
be
an
interesting
model
for
other
groups
that
are
recognizing,
as
we
recognized
early
that
there's
a
lot
to
be
said
for
open,
less
institutional
approaches
of
this
sort.
B
A
Okay-
let's
see,
I
don't
think,
there's
anything
to
talk
about
today,
I
for
what
it's
worth,
I'm
testing
out,
one
of
the
matter
and
form
version
two
scanners:
it's
a
tabletop
scanner.
I
you
know
nothing,
nothing
special,
but
I
guess
I'll
put
some
notes
in
here
after
I
test
it,
it's
just
another
option
for
somebody
that
wants
a
dedicated
hardware
scanning
solution,
it's
one
of
those
tabletop
scanners
and
pretty
pretty
high
resolution
and
pretty
quick
and
has
good
reviews.
But
you
know
it
is
yeah.
A
I
don't
remember
what
it's
five
six
seven
hundred
dollars:
it's,
not
it's,
not
a
cheap
scanner,
and
so
we've
talked
before
about
how
photogrammetry
is
becoming
more
and
more
of
a
viable
option.
I
was
super
impressed
with
this
five
dollar
trinio
app
for
the
iphone.
Apparently
it's
not
available
yet
on
android,
but
is.
A
No,
not
necessarily,
I
believe
it
makes
use
of
that.
If
available.
I'm
trying
to
remember
when
I
did
the
test,
if
it
used
yeah,
I
think
it
used
the
rear
cameras
so
because
I
was
previewing
it
while
it
went
yes,
so
it
probably
was
using
the
depth
camera
it's
been
a
while,
since
I
did
that
test.
All
I
know
is
it:
it
really
worked.
Well,
it
gave
me
comparable
results
to
this
600,
creality
scanner
or
so
cad
related.
A
Obviously,
we've
we're
we're
doing
a
lot
of
cool
work
here
and
one
one
of
the
interesting
things.
One
of
the
interesting
sort
of
side
benefits
of
what
andrew
has
been
doing
is
that
when
we
get
to
where
we
can
roll
out
these
new
fully
parametric
designs,
we're
also
going
to
be
able
to
make
them
accessible
with
people
without
people
having
to
get
into
these
cad
platforms
and
manipulate
stuff.
The
way
we
thought
they
were
going
to
have
to
before.
A
That's
really
the
most
exciting
part
about
this
to
me
is
not
only
being
able
to
do
this
very
challenging
thing,
but
then
make
it
very
easy
for
the
the
non-cad
users
of
our
community
to
take
advantage
of
of
the
the
end
results
of
that
work.
So
that's
very
cool
stuff
and
another
cool
thing
is:
we
had
originally
been
moving
in
a
direction
where
it
looked
like.
A
We
would
have
to
pick
sort
of
a
a
default
or
preferred
cad
platform,
and
it
was
kind
of
moving
more
and
more
towards
on
shape
and
thanks
to
andrew,
we
figured
that
we
now
are
going
to
be
able
to
support
both
onshape
and
fusion360,
probably
the
two
best
platforms
currently
available
for
our
community,
given
licensing
options
and
capabilities.
So
that's
very
exciting
as
well
that
we
have
two
strong
options
available
that
people
can
choose
from.
A
Okay,
so
does
anybody
else
have
anything
that
any
anything
technical,
related
tools,
software
hardware,
anything
like
that
that
the
community
might
find
useful?
No
okay!
A
I
don't
think
the
rest
of
this
is
anything
that
we
need
to
go
into
today.
Most
of
this
is
stuff
that
we're
gonna
be
talking
about
in
the
future,
with
andrew
or
alexander.
As
far
as
r
d
goes
alexander,
is
there
anything
here
under
r
d
that
you'd
care
to
talk
about,
or
did
you
want
to
give
any
updates
or
anything
about
the
work
on
your
the
design,
catalog.
F
The
design
catalog
is
well
it's
currently
under
testing
for
a
new
pages,
so
there
has
been
some
work
going
on
for
it,
and
the
project
might
even
be
done
in
two
weeks.
Maybe
we
are
currently
ironing
out
some
kinks
with
the
generation
based
on
the
google
sheets.
B
Excellent,
you
know
we
we
haven't
talked
today
about
so
just
to
bubble
up
a
little.
I
want
to
point
out
that
we've
got
the
new
osprey
hands.
We've
got
this
customization
and
adaptation
software
that
andrew
is
working
on.
We
have
the
catalog
that
alexander
is
working
on
and
those
are
all
interconnected
in
a
really
interesting
way.
The
osprey
hand
is
motivating
and
providing
the
prototype
for
the
ad
for
the
customization
system.
B
So
you
know
these
things
are
really
sort
of
coming
together
as
a
new
technical
ecosystem
and
infrastructure
for
cataloging
customizing
and
simplifying
the
process
of
creating
and
disseminating
devices.
It's
going
to
be
a
big
advance
and
I
suspect
actually
that
this
particular
combination
of
approaches
and
technologies
may
be
something
that
the
professional
prosthetists
find
worth
attending
to.
I
think
that
the
new
designs
we
have
and
this
open
source
infrastructure
we're
doing,
might
conceivably
break
through
and
become
something
that
professionals
make
use
of,
and
that
could
become
an
opportunity
to
re-engage
the
professionals.
A
And
I
the
other
part
of
it
that
I'm
excited
about
is
you
know?
For
a
long
time,
we've
been
working
towards
this
challenge
of
getting
more
of
our
designers.
You
know
move
towards
truly
parametric
design.
It's
not
an
easy
thing
to
do.
It's
definitely
challenging
and
it's
you
know
we
can
ask
all
day
we
can
recommend
all
day,
but
how
do
we
really
encourage
our
designers
to
make
the
extra
effort
to
go
down
that
path
of
truly
parametric
design?
A
So
I
really
feel
like
this
is
going
to
help
to
really
accelerate
that
that
progress
towards
the
trend
of
parametric
design
in
our
community
we'll
see,
but
that's
my
my
hope
and
my
feeling
is
that
it
will
so
that's
exciting
to
me.
B
Right
and
in
fact,
in
the
last
meeting,
we
took
a
step
towards
in
that
direction
by
realizing
that
we
have
an
opportunity
to
create
templates
for
fusion
or
for
onshape,
which
would
be
a
good
starting
place
for
new
designers
or
people
who
are
doing
the
design
work
and
it
will
have
the
the
parameters
and
the
hooks
built
in
so
that
it
will
be
pre-integrated
with
the
customization
system
once
the
design
is
worth
looking
at.
At
least
that's
the.
A
A
It's
a
nice
good
time,
and
this
is
a
good
time
to
mention
that
to
do
that,
one
of
the
things
that
we're
talking
about
is
establishing
sort
of
standard
sets
of
measurements
for
each
of
our
different
categories
of
design.
So
for
a
wrist
activated
design.
Where
do
you
take
measurements?
You
know
width
of
the
palm
width
of
the
wrist
diameter.
You
know
things
like
that.
What
what
are
those
specific
measurements?
A
Where
do
you
take
them
and
and
how
and
we
need
that
for
each
class
of
device,
the
wrist
activated,
the
elbow
activated,
the
shoulder
activated,
etc,
and
you
know
I
think
we
could
really
benefit
from
some
input
beyond.
Just
our
you
know,
cad
users-
and
you
know
folks
like
that
and
our
volunteers,
if
we
can
get
folks
from
the
medical
community
any
ots,
any
any
prosthetist
things
like
that
to
sort
of
advise
us
on
you
know
how
best
to
go
about
that.
A
A
We'll
be
making
a
plug
for
this
tomorrow,
we'll
have
some
great
student
chapters
with
us,
and
I
know
some
of
them
have
you
know
these
these
ot
prac?
You
know
schools
that
they're
tied
in
with
and
and
so
maybe
we'll
find
somebody
through
that
yeah
we'll
put
the
word
out
tomorrow,.
B
Okay,
you
know
jeremy,
this
discussion
that
we
just
had
where
we
talked
about
how
these
pieces
are
interconnecting,
including
the
the
sort
of
social
outreach
connections
which
are
facilitated
by
the
technology
and
would
be
further
facilitated
if
they
connected
to
the
to
some
professionals,
perhaps
through
students.
That
particular
story
that
we
just
told
is.
A
A
Okay,
I'd
love
to
include
it.
I
know
I
don't
have
time
to
build
it,
but
if
you
can,
I
think
it
would
be
helpful
and
we
are
coming
up
on
the
top
of
our
hour.
So
let
me
just
ask
if
anybody
has
anything
they'd
like
to
talk
about
or
sure
before
we
wrap
up
here
and
then
let
me
also
remind
us
that
we
have
our
new
member
meet
up
in
an
hour.
A
Anyone,
okay.
So
again,
one
hour
from
now
new
member
meetup
link
is
on
the
hub,
and
tomorrow
is
our
big
event,
which
I
want
to
remind.
Everyone
is
called
a
student
chapter
networking
event,
but
I
want
to
stress
that
anyone
is
welcome.
You
don't
have
to
be
part
of
a
chapter.
Join
us
just
jump
in
the
links
are
there,
everyone
is
welcome.
It
could
be
a
lot
of
fun.
You
might
learn
something.