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From YouTube: Weekly e-NABLE Town Hall Meeting - September 2, 2022
Description
This is a recording of the weekly e-NABLE Town Hall meeting.
The notes/agenda document can be found here: https://bit.ly/e-nable-town-hall-notes
If you want to join into the meeting itself, you are welcome to do so. You'll find the Zoom link in the events calendar on the Hub.
A
Okay,
I
believe
we're
live
so
welcome
everyone
to
another
town
hall
and
share
my
screen
here.
B
A
All
right,
as
usual,
we
got
the
youtube
chat
there
in
the
lower
right.
So
you
guys
can
help
me
keep
an
eye
on
that.
I
guess
we'll
just
dive
into
it
here.
So,
let's
see
it
doesn't
look
like
we
have
anyone
introduced
today,
so
action
items
I
didn't
get
to
this
one
yet
because
it
takes
a
little
bit
more
time.
A
I'm
gonna
be
redirecting
the
chapters
email
address
that
goes
directly
to
our
help
desk,
since
rick
is
managing
that
now
I
just
like
I
said
I
haven't
gotten
to
it
yet
because
it
requires
changing
a
bunch
of
dns
things
and
setting
up
routing
rules
and
stuff
that
I
haven't
had
time
to
do.
But
I
will
I
did
do
the
next
one.
A
I
created
an
enable.org
email
address
for
adam,
so
adam
adam
or
anything
enable
related
this
next
one
we
had
a
sort
of
an
action
item
collectively
to
coordinate
a
meeting
for
our
sort
of
emerging
leadership
team.
I
went
ahead
and
put
your
name
on
that
adam
only
because
you
were
kind
enough
to
start
the
scheduling
poll
and
are
doing
your
best
to
try
to
get
that
going.
So
I'm
not
putting
it
all
on
you.
I
just
I
need
to
have
somebody's
name
on
action
items.
C
Yeah
and
if
I
may
really
quick
eric
bubar
responded
there
and
made
a
couple
of
good
points
that
a
couple
of
people
on
that
team
are.
C
Oh
sorry,
is
that
my
echo,
or
is
that
something
else.
C
He
mentioned
that
the
school
year
is
starting,
and
so
some
people
might
be
a
little
bit
busy,
but
also
that
it
looked
like
they
weren't
getting
notifications,
so
maybe
ben
if
you
can
or
or
jeremy.
If
you
can
help
me,
I
thought
I
had
turned
on
notification.
A
A
I
actually
posted
about
that
in
the
space
here
suggestion,
because
you
can't
do
this
for
them.
They
have
to
do
this
for
themselves,
so
everybody
in
here
needs
to
come
in
to
this
space
if
they
click
here,
there's
a
little
bell
icon
here
that
says:
receive
notifications
for
new
content.
Each
individual
needs
to
click
that
for
themselves
to
get
notified
of
content
in
this
space.
A
Yeah,
I
don't,
I
don't
think
so.
Let
me
just
look
real
quick.
A
C
D
A
D
A
Well,
the
enable
form
has
always
been
the
default,
but
again
each
individual
controls
their
own
notifications.
So
if
anybody
doesn't
want
to
get
notifications
for
new
content
in
the
forum,
they
just
turn
it
off
for
that
they
just
click
the
bell
icon.
So
I
think
some
training
is
what's
needed,
because
all
we
have
here
is
we
have
a
default
set.
Everyone
is
welcome
to
set
up
notifications.
However,
they
want
they
can
get
notifications
or
not
get
notifications
for
any
space.
A
So
we'll
give
that
a
try,
but
we
still
have
to
try
to
get
everyone
in
there
and
get
them
to
fill
out
your
scheduling
poll
and
try
to
find
a
date
and
time
so
we'll
give
it
another
week
see
if
that
helps
maybe
post
something
else.
Now
that
we
supposedly
have
notifications
on
adam,
maybe
post
an
update
there.
C
A
All
right,
I'm
gonna,
leave
these
for
some
time,
because
I
think
these
are
actually
being
handled
by
different
people.
Now,
let's
come
back
to
that
later,
okay
on
we
go,
we've
got
our
metrics
here.
The
only
thing
that
seemed
unusual
was
zero
topics
and
I
think
that's
just
because
ben
has
been
tied
up
with
other
things.
I
think
he's
the
one,
that's
usually
adding
the
topics
to
posts.
A
A
Because
it
just
goes
to
show
us
that
you
know
we're
relying
entirely
on
ben
to
do
those
topic.
Flags
it'd
be
really
nice.
If
people
did
that
for
themselves,
but
again
kind
of
a
training
issue,
I
know
I'm
not
in
the
habit
of
doing
that.
D
You
know
I
I
still
have
this
pipe
dream
of
being
able
to
use
some
sort
of
ai
depending
on
you,
you
can
train
platforms
like
this
to
sort
of
self
sort
of
select
different
things,
but
yeah.
No,
it's
true
and
the
macroscope
that
john
built
really
uses
the
topics.
D
D
I
think
that
that
might
be
really
helpful,
but
until
then
I
will
just
in
the
same
way
that
people
follow.
This
would
be
myself.
B
B
A
A
Can
everyone
check
your
audio?
Please
do
you
have
something
playing
in
the
background,
I'm
going
to
start
muting
people,
otherwise,
okay,
I
think
it's
gone
now.
No!
No!
I
just
heard
it
please
all
right,
I'm
gonna
start
well,
it's
gotta
be
coming
from
me
or
john.
Now,
I'm
not
hearing
it
all
right,
it's
gone,
it
was.
It
was
somebody
I
don't
know
who,
but
it's
gone
sorry
go
ahead.
John.
D
A
D
Yeah,
the
macroscope
having
the
topics
be
sort
of
the
navigation
for
that
it's
kind
of
been
my
idea
of
a
long
of
being
able
to
zoom
in.
If
you
put
in
one
topic
to
be
able
to
filter
and
get
you
know,
10
years
worth
of
activity
just
on
materials
just
on
partnerships
just
on
fundraising,
and
that
would
be
really
valuable
and
and
right
now
you
can
do
that
going
and
using
the
filter
settings
within
the
hub,
but
you're.
A
Right,
a
simple
page
with
buttons
would
be
really
more
accessible.
That's
a
good
idea,
and
I
I
wouldn't
think
that
kind
of
a
thing
would
be
too
hard
to
do
for
someone
like
mas
v
when
he
has
time
assuming
the
the
hub
allows
you
to
kind
of
feed
a
query
like
that
by
topic,
because
that
all
would
be
as
a
simple
page
with
buttons
and
that
button
each
button
links
to
a
search
query
on
that
topic.
I
wouldn't
think
that
would
be
too
hard,
so
yeah.
A
Let's
follow
up
on
that
when
I
know
he's
been
busy,
but
hopefully
we'll
have
him
back
eventually,
and
we
can
explore
that
so
back
to
where
we
were
posts
of
note.
Now
we
didn't
have
a
town
hall
last
week,
so
I
have
here
a
collection
of
posts
of
interest
from
these
past
two
weeks.
Actually,
that's
why
there's
more
than
usual?
A
First
up
we
have
marco
dominguez,
who
posted
about
a
17
year
old
that
he
has
been
working
with,
who
had
a
recent
amputation,
and
there
were
two
really.
There
were
two
things
of
note
here
that
I
wanted
to
share
it
because
of
one
was
the
the
issue
of
a
recent
amputation.
There
were
several
good
comments
in
here
from
people
saying
yeah.
You
definitely
want
to
wait.
Give
it
time
to
heal,
make
sure
the
swelling
is
stopped,
so
you
don't
want
to
be
putting
something
on
tissues
that
are
still
healing,
etc.
A
So,
there's
there's
good
advice
about
that.
The
second
thing
that
was
that
was
of
interest
here
is
this
gentleman.
Marco
has
a
smaller
printer
and
he
needs
to
make
an
arm
and
he's
asking.
How
do
I
print
that
big
piece
of
the
arm?
My
printer
isn't
big
enough
for
it.
He
was
thinking.
Can
I
cut
it
into
pieces
and
joint
it
and
yeah?
You
maybe
could
do
that.
But
really,
I
think
the
better
option
is
what
people
here
are
offering,
which
is
hey.
We've
got
plenty
of
people
with
big
printers.
A
Let
me
print
that
part
for
you,
which
I
thought
was
really
nice.
You
know
no
need
to
go
and
create
something
special.
We
got
plenty
of
people
in
the
community
with
big
printers.
If
there's
one
part
that
you
need,
you
can
always
find
somebody
that'll
be
happy
to
print
a
part
for
you,
so
I
thought
that
was
a
nice
approach
there.
A
So
that's
that
post
any
questions
or
comments
on
that
before
I
move
on
okay,
the
next
one
up
here
is
tianara
dos
santos
bina.
I'm
sure
I've
been
pronouncing
that
wrong,
but
this
is
an
occupational
therapist
and
she
shared
a
3d
printing
protocol,
which
I
was
very
impressed
by
and
it's
a
pdf
which
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
kind
of
this
is
one
of
those
things
that
I
want
to
make
sure
we
capture
and
make
more
accessible.
It's
a
really
nice
document
that
goes
through
it's
all
about.
A
It's
mainly
focused
on
printing,
so
print
quality,
how
to
print
things.
But
it's
really
well
laid
out.
It
gets
into
how
to
use
openscad
it
gets
into
how
to
scale
things
it
gets
into
a
lot
of
the
you
know,
anatomical
concepts.
I
have
not
seen
some
of
these
diagrams,
which
I
think
are
really
good
and
I
would
like
to
see
maybe
even
used
elsewhere.
A
She
gets
into
the
parts
and
then
gets
into
different.
You
know
layering
concepts
and
infill,
and
it's
just
it's
very,
very
detailed
and
there's
a
lot
of
good
information
about
printing
here.
So
a
really
good
resource
that
I
wanted
to
call
attention
to
I'm
hoping
that
we
can
make
sure
that
that
gets.
You
know
placed
where
it
will
be
used
and
not
lost.
A
C
That
one
I
I
actually
reached
out
to
her
after
she
dropped
that
post
and
she
is
an
occupational
therapist
based
in
brazil.
I
I
don't
know
if
you
mentioned
that
jeremy-
sorry,
I
didn't
know,
but
she
has
also
worked
on
sorry.
What
is
it
called?
C
She
developed
a
3d
printing,
a
3d
printed,
face
shield
and
has
helped
to
found
an
organization
that
early
in
the
the
early
days
of
covid,
was
sending
out
face
shields
to
to
medical
providers,
so
really
really
cool
person,
who's
who's,
finding
a
lot
of
different
applications.
C
I
have
invited
her
to
join
the
healthcare
roundtable
and
I'm
hoping
that
with
her
expertise
here
she
clearly
is
is
an
expert
not
only
in
the
the
printing
side,
but
also
in
the
the
rehab
side.
I'm
hoping
that
we
can
use
this
as
a
ground
work
that
the
protocol
that
you
put
together
as
a
ground
work
to
start
providing
some
some
more
broad
spectrum
education
resources
to
to
the
community
here
about
how
to
care
for
amputees
beyond
the
delivery
of
the
device.
A
B
Just
say,
and
of
course,
they're
connected
the
trick
to
I
think
successful
outreach
is
going
to
have
a
a
bench
of
medical
professionals
who
can
interact
both
with
the
recipients
and
with
their
own
caregivers,
who
may
not
be
confident
about
what
we're
doing
so
eric
it's.
It's
a
really
good
two-pronged
approach.
A
Adam
you're,
looking
at
the
next
name
of
my
list
here,
eric
shared
an
article
that
he
suggests
should
be
required
reading.
I
don't
remember
if
I
shared
this
before,
but
this
is
a
link
that
talks
about
the
bionic
hand,
arms
race
and
how
the
prosthetics
industry
is
too
focused
on
high-tech
limbs
that
are
complicated,
costly
and
often
impractical,
which
certainly
sounds
like
a
suggestion
that
we
might
be
focusing
in
the
right
direction.
A
Is
it
okay
all
right,
so
that
link
is
in
there
and
I'm
I'm
part
of
the
reason
I'm
calling
some
of
these
to
attention
is,
is
for
you
ben,
I
think
you're
in
the
best
position
to
help
me
make
sure
that
some
of
these
resources,
like
that
article
from
eric
and
the
printing
guide
from
from
10
hour,
maybe
we
can
get
those
into
the
next
newsletter
or
something
or
maybe
you
have
some
other
idea
of
how
we
could
get
those
into
the
hands
of
others.
A
Next
one
is
adam
phillips,
a
7
through
12
math
and
stem
teacher
seeking
assistance,
getting
started
kind
of
a
common
post
that
I
see
you
know
it's
it's
getting
to
be
fairly
familiar
to
see
an
educator
that
says:
hey
looking
to
get
this
going,
I
want
to
get
some
help
getting
started
and
so
just
thought
it
was
worth
touching
on.
A
I
I
think
this
is
an
area
that
we
do
cover
in
our
getting
started
like
our
welcome
space
and
stuff,
but
maybe
we
want
to
think
about
giving
a
little
bit
more
detailed,
getting
started
guidance
specifically
for
educators
looking
to
get
going
in
the
classroom,
and
I
think
we
have
all
the
bits
and
pieces
we've
got
some
great
curriculum
materials.
We've
got
some
great.
You
know
portions
of
that
process,
but
I
don't
know
that
we
have
one
place
where
we
say:
you're
a
teacher
looking
to
get
this
going
in
your
classroom.
C
I
wonder
if
that
I
was
actually
thinking
on
that
too.
Earlier
this
week,
jeremy,
and
I
wonder,
if
that's
an
area
where
tanya,
I
believe,
tanya
on
believing
yeah
yeah.
I
believe
that
she's
an
educator
yes
and
I
wonder
if
she
and
if
anyone
else
were
interested
would
be
open
to
reaching
out
to
some
of
the
chapters
some
of
the
like
the
high
school
or
you
know,
community
college
chapters
to
see
how
we
can
get
a
standard
on-ramp
developed,
make
it
a
little
bit
easier.
A
For
folks,
I
think
that's
a
good
idea
and
let
me
ask
john,
since
he
just
rejoined
we're
talking
about
getting
doing
a
better
job
of
putting
together
a
kind
of
a
getting
started
guide
for
educators.
I
know
we
have
all
the
pieces,
you
know
we
have
curriculum
materials.
We
have
the
bits
up
here
and
there,
but
one
place
step
by
step
guide.
You
want
to
get
going
in
the
classroom.
Here's
everything
you
need
adam
mentioned
tanya
lurch.
I
would
add,
maybe
lindsay
wells
to
that
list.
A
You
yourself,
john
being
an
educator
and
we
have
plenty
of
others
any
thoughts
on
how
we
might
and
then
it
looks
like
you
might
have
an
idea.
My.
D
Going
to
say
similar
to
what
adam
mentioned
about
getting
the
brazilian
physical
therapist
into
the
monthly
meeting,
we
have
the
education
meetings
once
a
month,
ian's
managing
them.
We
have
our
two
new
interns.
I
think
that
really
is
going
to
be
the
the
thing
to
remind
educators
when
they
join
the
hub
is
saying
you
know
we
we
have
these
meetings
once
a
month.
We
have
this
space.
A
D
B
A
Okay,
I'm
going
to
assume
he
got
the
message.
Let's
move
on
next
one
up
is
hugo.
I
assume
it's
hodus,
a
mechanical
engineer
student
at
utfpr
in
brazil,
looking
to
write
about
structural
analysis
of
a
low-cost
human
hand.
Prosthesis
it's
been
a
while,
since
I've
seen
this
one.
So
I
don't
recall
the
details,
let's
see
here,
okay,
so
you
know
it
got
into
discussion
about
well
you're.
Looking
for
you
know
doing
structural
analysis,
there's
a
lot
of
variables
here.
You
know
you're
gonna
have
to
get
into
the
material.
You
know.
A
Ward
is
talking
about
how
well
you're
gonna
need
to
get
into
basic
material
testing.
There's
print
orientation.
There's
there's
all
kinds
of
things
that
are
going
to
affect.
You
can't
just
look
at
a
hand
and
figure
out
what
the
structural
you
know.
Integrity
or
strength
is
or
whatever.
So
I
think
that's
why
I
wanted
to
highlight
this
one.
It's
just
some
interesting
discussion
about
what
can
and
can't
be
analyzed
in
our
devices,
but
any
any
other
thoughts
on
this.
A
As
I'm
just
scanning
it
here
awards
with
us,
no
no,
the
ward
was
with
us,
he's
gone,
I
don't
know
anyone,
or
should
we
move
on
all
right,
we'll
move
on.
B
D
For
dropping
out
the
device,
catalog
is
one
of
the
things
that
ian's
interns
are
interested
in
being
involved.
With
he's
got
two,
and
I
know
he
mentioned
his
email-
that
one
of
the
students
met
with
nih.
Having
that
sort
of
platform
be
something
that
helps
us
to
organize
the
devices.
I
think
right
would
be
great.
A
Yeah,
no,
that's
that's
a
project
we
talked
about.
I
think
that'll
be
very
worthwhile,
I'm
hoping
that
I
don't
know
if
you
heard
what
I
was
saying
before
you
froze
I'm
hoping
that
you
could
talk
to
ian
about
having
kind
of
another
project
on
his
radar,
which
would
be
to
build
this
kind
of
onboarding
guide
for
educators.
I
think
somebody
in
his
group
would
probably
be
well
suited
to
to
do
that,
and
at
least
maybe
bring
it
up
and
see
what
he
thinks.
D
A
Yeah,
at
least
to
talk
with
you,
my
gut
tells
me
it's
probably
not
a
great
fit
for
interns.
I
could
be
wrong.
There
at
least
has
to
be
somebody
on
the
team.
That's
going
to
be
pretty
familiar
with
the
processes
and
what
we
have
available
and
just
you
know
somebody
to
guide
them.
Maybe
maybe
it's
just
somebody
in
addition
to
the
interns,
but
I
also
don't
want
to
take
away
from
you
know
his
plans
of
having
them
work
on
the
device
catalog
so
handle
it
as
you
see
fit,
but
I
do
think
it's.
A
D
Yeah,
it
seems
like
it
could
be
sort
of
a
general
topic
to
come
back
to
for
the
education
meetings.
Basically,
once
a
month,
people
are
sharing
their
resources,
that's
right
and
circling
back
around
to
saying:
okay,
how
can
we
make
this
easier?
You
know
what
does
our
wiki
collect,
that
other
educators
can
can
use.
A
And
I
will
show
you
that
in
our
in
our
help
desk,
we
do
have
you
know,
since
this
is
something
that
we
get
quite
a
bit.
We
have
some
like
a
template
with
some
starting
information,
we're
basically
giving
them
all
these
links.
You
know
the
hub,
the
launch
pad
the
wiki,
the
code,
the
device
catalog
digital
badge,
awards,
chapter
map,
web
central.
D
A
It's
probably
you
have
to
look
it
over
because
I
some
of
these
templates
are
a
little
out
of
date,
so
I
think
this
one
is
still
in
pretty
good
shape,
but
that's
what
we
have
so
far
great.
A
Yeah
I
mean
for
what
it's
worth:
we've
got
I'll
just
show
you
real
quick.
We
have
so
into
my
enable
templates.
A
We've
got
all
these
common
sort
of
questions
here
above
elbow
amputee,
seeking
device,
classroom
new
ewc
case
disclaimers,
not
a
medical
professionals,
all
these
kind
of
common
things,
which
I
could
I
could
copy
all
these
and
share
them
with
you,
but
then
we
also
have
there
is
a
knowledge
base,
which
I
don't
use
a
whole
lot,
but
I
do
have
a
knowledge
base
platform
set
up
in
here,
and
I
do
have
an
enable
section
in
here
and,
let's
see
currently,
I
think
the
only
well
I've
got
which
material
should
be
used
for
enable
devices,
and
then
I
maybe
it's
not
under
enable
there's
one
about
which
3d
printer
here,
which
3d
printer,
should
I
get
for
making
enabled
devices.
A
So
there
are
these
knowledge
base
articles
for
common
topics.
I'd
be
happy
to
look
at
expanding
this.
If
it
would
be
of
use,
I
haven't
done
a
whole
lot
with
it,
except
for
using
I.
What
I
do
is
I
basically
just
link
to
these
knowledge
based
articles
in
our
email
responses.
When
people
ask
us
these
questions
like
this
is
a
question
I
get
asked
so
many
times
that
I
just
wrote
up
an
article
about
it
and
then
I
just
linked
to
this
so
ben.
A
D
Yeah
it'd
be
wonderful
to
get
some
of
those
articles
and
templates
in
sort
of
a
public
facing
wiki,
or
something
like
that,
so
it
would
be
easier
for
you
know
people
to
stumble
on
some
of
the
the
answers
they're
looking
for
without
the
email
exchange,
yeah.
A
Okay,
let
me
think
about
that,
because
there
is,
I
don't
even
remember
how
it
works,
but
there's
there
is
a
public-facing
version
that
that
would
be.
I
don't.
I
don't
know
yeah.
So
here's
oops,
that's
what
it
looks
like
on
the
on
the
public
side.
So.
A
Public
here
so
knowledge
base
enable
general,
so
this
right
here
what
you're
seeing
here
you
know
is
public.
I
just
don't.
I
don't
usually
share
this
and
right
now
under
the
enable
topic,
there
is
only
one
article
in
here
which
material
should
be
used
where
we
talk
about
pet
g
being
the
recommended
material,
and
why?
But
we
could
easily
add
more
articles
in
here,
and
this
is
a
public
facing
page,
I'm
just
not
using
it
except
internally.
A
A
So
if
you
didn't
happen
to
see
that
post
in
the
hub
be
sure
to
check
it
out,
it's
about
a
45
minute
interview
had
a
lot
of
fun
talking
about
many
things,
including
his
shitar,
that
you
see
there
in
the
picture
and
lots
of
other
wonderful
innovations
that
that
rick
has
been
messing
around
with
it
was
it
was
a
good
discussion
watched
some
fun
video
clips
of
the
work
he's
been
doing.
A
So
if
you
want
to
learn
more
about
how
midi
might
be
incorporated
into
assistive
devices
and
how
how
people
with
limb
differences
can
get
into
or
back
into
music,
it's
it's
worth
checking
out
thanks
for
doing
that
with
me,
rick
all
right
of
our
recurring
meetings,
the
next
one
coming
up
is
our
bionic
design
team
meeting
today.
Is
that
that's
still
right?
Isn't
it
guys?
A
D
It's
it's
shifting
a
little
bit
just
to
keep
up
with
the
the
schedules
of
the
different
group
leaders.
We
do
have
alberto
nevada,
who's
gonna
present
today
from
one
to
two
I'll
be
hosting
that
vivek
is
out
of
town,
so
I
can
share
the
link
to
that
in
the
chat.
B
D
And
then
I
I
guess,
after
that,
the
the
next
meeting
will
be
the
enable
education
meeting
and
the
date
will
change,
but
then
I'll
be
led
by
ian
and
likely.
The
the
host
or
the
the
guest
presentation
will
be
one
of
the
new
interns
who
again
recently
met
with
nih
and
and
has
some
some
vision
for
for.
What's
next.
A
All
right
so
keep
an
eye
on
the
hub
in
the
main
forum
upper
right
corner.
There's
a
list
of
upcoming
events:
you'll
see
them
there.
D
Real
quick
question:
as
long
as
you're
talking
about
these
monthly
meetings
adam,
what
was
the
the
game
plan
for
the
the
healthcare
group?
I
remember
we
we
talked
about
it
in
the
emails.
C
D
C
I
I've
got
to
get
in
touch
with.
I.
I've
tried
reaching
out
through
the
previously
established
space,
but
so
far
it's
just
oh,
my
gosh,
I'm
blanking
on
her
name
now
the
occupational
therapist
in
brazil.
No
sorry,
but
though
scythe
would
be
a
good
person
to
include
tanera
down
in
brazil
who
has
signaled
interest
in
participating,
so
really
ben.
I
think
that
I
think
this
is
a
great
idea,
but
I
don't
have
a
sense
for
who,
in
our
community
is
a
healthcare
provider.
C
So
if
I
could
gosh
if
they're
so
quick
that
I
can
get
some
insight
into
you
know,
which
of
our
numbers
have
any
kind
of
background
to
certifications
that
that
could
be
useful
there.
Then,
then
I
can
reach
out
to
them
directly
and
see
about
pulling
together
a
formalized
group.
I've
got
ideas
about
what
the
format
of
that
coder
should
be,
but
I'd
really
like
to
to
open
up
discussion
to
to
other
practitioners
before
locking
who
else
do
we
know.
A
D
Well,
the
the
members
of
the
the
rehab
space
includes
some
folks,
I
I
know
there
was
a
number
of
people.
I
think
three
or
four
people
that
I
listed
in
an
email
to
adam
and
it
could
be
something
where
we'll
get
more
attention
after
this
thing
starts,
I
mean
it,
it
does
seem
like
sort
of
a
soft
opening
type
monthly
meeting.
You
know
getting
one
or
two
people
that
would
be
great
to
bring
together
instead
of
having
a
separate
meeting
or
chatting
through
emails.
Just
doing
it.
B
D
C
I've
yeah,
I
renamed
it.
I
don't
think
I've
done
anything
more
than
that,
but
let
me
see-
and
I
did
make
a
post
here
on
august,
17.
yeah,
so
really
what
my
vision
for
this
was
based
on.
C
What
you
had
approached
me
with
ben
was
just
having
an
opportunity
for
this
group
to
invite
speakers
or
themselves
serve
as
speakers
to
cover
any
topics
of
interest
that
may
be
a
benefit
to
the
community,
so
things
like
discussing
just
bouncing
off
of
that
post
that
was
made
this
week
on
that
healing
residual
limb
and
talking
about
how
long
healing
phases
or
healing
timelines
might
take,
and
if
you're,
working
with
like
a
diabetic
patient
versus
a
traumatic
amputee,
how
that
might
differ
in
other
considerations,
you
might
have
to
make
also
looking
into
things
like
application
of
force
and
when
you
get
into
kinesiology
of
movement,
you
know
how
you
know
the
the
size
and
length
of
the
residual
can
impact
grip,
strength
and
all
that
you
know
little
things
that
I
think
could
be
useful
for
people
to
have
more
of
a
clinician's
eye
on
when
designing
things
and
working
with
recipients
is.
D
Oh
yeah,
I
mean,
I
think,
just
opening
up
the
with
any
topic
related
to
sort
of
the
healthcare
perspective
as
a
place
to
start
and
then
seeing
you
know
what
people
are
working
on
and
what
the
challenges
are
and-
and
you
know,
I
think
it
will
definitely
start
to
inform
itself.
You
know
like
the
bionics
meeting,
it's
something
where
you
know
every
time
somebody
comes
in,
they
share
what
they
know
and
then
the
discussion
afterwards
is
really
what
kind
of
informs
the
direction.
C
Well,
I
think
you
had,
and
forgive
me
I've
been
more.
My
head
has
been
more
in
the
afghanistan
initiative
and
I
haven't
put
as
much
thought
here,
but
I
can't
I
believe
you
said
something
about
hosting
a
meeting
in
mid
to
late
september.
Is
that
right,
yeah
correctly.
D
I'm
looking
at
the
calendar
right
now,
we
could
do
the
30th
if
you
wanted
to
if
we
wanted
to
keep
it
on
a
friday.
Let
me,
let
me
see
if
I'm
in
town
on
30th.
C
D
Okay,
the
other
thing
is
yeah,
it
doesn't
have
to
be
on
a
friday.
It
could
be
on
a
monday.
It
could
be.
You
know
at
a
time,
that's
late
enough,
so
it's
not
an
issue
for
folks
from
california
to
join.
D
C
In
that
case,
could
I
do
could
I
do
1
p.m?
Central
time
so
2
p.m.
Eastern
time
on
friday,
30th
would
that
work.
D
B
Chapter
hello,
you
know
I
was
going
to
say
adam,
that
there
are
of
course,
a
number
of
prosthetists
who
have
touched
base
with
the
navel
over
the
years.
B
One
in
particular,
jeff
aaronstone
has
been
a
collaborator
and
worthy
opponent
right
from
the
very
start
and
he's
remained,
and
I
think,
become
one
of
the
leading
authorities
on
3d,
printing
and
prosthetics.
B
I
think
it
would
be
useful
for
you
to
give
him
a
ring,
see
if
he'd
be
willing
to
give
his
perspective
and
see
if
what
you
might
learn
from
him.
Jack
buchanan
also
was
working
with
jeff
aaron
stone,
but,
as
you
are
becoming
our
liaison
to
medical
professionals
as
well
touching
base
with
him
seeing
what
he
has
to
say
would
be
a
good
idea.
Eric
bubar
gave
a
presentation
to
the
amputee
coalition
this
year,
so
he
might
have
some
connections
and
insights
as
well.
B
C
C
No
that's
great
and
john.
Can
you
just
send
me
there
just
by
maybe
a
direct
mail
in
in
the
hub
or
or
to
my
enable
email
to
just
you
know,
fill
me
out
on
who
those
people
are
and
how
I
can
contact
them.
A
Adam
enable.org,
that's
right!
All
right!
Let's
move
on!
We've
got
a
bunch
more
to
cover
we're
going
to
run
out
of
time
today.
But
let's
get
to
a
few
of
these
adam
going
to
talk
to
us
about
the
afghanistan
initiative.
C
Yeah
so
lots
man-
a
lot
has
happened
in
the
past
week
or
so
so,
just
as
a
quick
level
set
afghanistan
initiative
is
something
that
I've
been
tooling
around
with
for
the
past
month,
six
weeks
somewhere
in
that
range,
I
have
and.
A
C
Yeah
no
problem,
so
I've
got
a
contact.
Who
is
a
physician
who
is
from
afghanistan?
Has
a
childhood
friend
or
maybe
not
childhood,
but
long-term
friend,
who
is
now
the
director
of
the
only
functional
orthopedic
hospital
in
the
country?
Right
now,
it's
based
in
kabul
and
they
have
a
very
high
need
for
assistance
with
supplying
all
kinds
of
devices
wheelchairs,
orthotics
braces
everything
top
to
bottom,
but
specifically,
they
have
a
really
dense
population
of
amputees.
C
Given
the
the
nature
of
the
conflict
and
there's
an
opportunity
for
being
able
to
get
all
of
our
would-be
donors,
printing
and
getting
hands
delivered,
people
actually
need
them.
C
Given
our
our
current
mismatch,
you
know
the
dearth
of
recipients
that
we
have
right
now,
so
what
I
have
been
trying
to
figure
out
our
number
one,
the
scope
of
the
need
and
getting
a
better
system
in
place
or
any
kind
of
system
in
place
for
tracking
who
the
potential
recipients
are,
what
kinds
of
devices
they're
going
to
require
their
laterality
measurements
all
that
stuff.
C
As
of
this
week,
we
have
the
director
of
the
pno,
the
prosthetics
and
orthotics
department
hospital
in
kabul,
who
is
now
on
our
little
team.
I
had
a
little
conference
call
via
whatsapp
earlier
this
week,
which
is
always
kind
of
a
challenge.
Given
the
internet,
connectivity
issues
there
are
and
and
some
some
language
of
mismatches.
C
Sometimes
these
these
conversations
can
can
be
a
little
labor
intensive,
but
long
story
short.
Our
p
o
lead
over.
There
is
currently
taking
measurements
and
tracking
these
cases
so
that
we
are
going
to
be
building
a
list
of
potential
recipients
in
the
coming
weeks.
I
think
that
item
number
two
that
is
maybe
the
primary
concern,
is
logistics,
and
what
I
have
right
now
is
it
looks
like
we
have
a
contact
through
a
non-profit
ngo,
called
humanity
and
inclusion.
C
Things
like
you,
know
everything
ranging
from
shoelaces
to
syringes
and
all
manner
of
things
it
looks
like
we
would
be
able
to
ship
devices
to
a
central
location,
and
then
humanity
and
inclusion
would
be
able
to
deliver
those
to
the
afghan
border.
From
that
point,
what
we
still
need
to
figure
out
is
how
we
get
things
from
the
afghan
border
to
the
hospital.
It's
not
an
impossible
task.
It's
just
that
the
next
little
black
box
that
I
have
in
my
list.
C
Could
also
be
humanity
international
this
so
depending
on,
I
don't
know
if
it's
a
language
thing,
but
every
now
and
then
you
know
their
their
graphics,
says
humanity
inclusion,
but
the
google
search
term
brings
up
humanity
international.
B
C
Yes,
yeah,
so
that
that's
that's
what
what
we're
hoping
for.
So
I
also
had
a
call
this
week
with
utkarsh
and
I'm
blanking
on
his
last
name
with
the
helping
hands
project,
also
with
another
member
of
helping
hands
there
in
north
carolina.
We
talked
about
a
number
of
more.
C
You
know,
broader
topics,
about
trying
to
get
a
better
sense
for
what
enables
non-profit
partnerships
currently
are
and
seeing
how
we
can
this
actually
ties
them
as
what
we
were
talking
about
a
little
bit
earlier
about
educational
groups,
but
seeing
if
we
can
get
a
more
streamlined
model
in
place
for
school
groups
for
for
joining
on
and
and
making
sure
they
have
the
resources
they
need
to
get
started.
C
But
we
also
talked
about
how
whether
the
helping
hands
project
might
be
interested
in
doing
some
more
of
these.
Behind
the
scenes
efforts
to
get
hands
delivered
to
people.
In
addition
to
just
working
on
the
printing
and
designing
of
prosthetics,
they
indicated
that
they
were
very
interested
in
that
and
they
might
have
one
or
two
folks
willing
to
volunteer
their
time
by
high
school's
intern.
To
to
assist
me
in
getting
these
logistics
nailed
down
and
coordinating
with
these
folks,
so
that
this
can
be
brought
across
the
finish
line.
C
So
in
short,
that
we've
got,
I
would
say,
70
of
a
plan
in
place.
I
can
get
all
of
my
notes
together
and
send
it
over
to
you
all
for
your
review.
So
if
you
have
any
additional
ideas,
but
as
it
stands
right
now,
we
have
the
means
for
collecting
data
about
recipients,
collecting
information
about
the
kinds
of
devices
that
they
require,
and
we
have,
I
would
say,
half
of
a
delivery
model
in
place
for
actually
shipping
them.
C
From
that
point,
what
we
really
need
is
a
community
buy-in,
making
sure
that
everyone
is
aware
in
the
enabled
community
about
what
is
coming
down
the
pipe
and
also
we
need
to
put
together
a
pilot
program
which
the
helping
hand
project
utkarsh
indicated
that
their
members
would
like
to
be
engaged
in
that
as
well
to
print
off,
maybe
five
or
ten
hands.
Once
we
have
a
logistics
pathway
to
make
sure
that
it's
you
know
reliable
before
we
start
shipping
a
whole
bunch,
but
that's
it.
A
Just
pulling
up
something
from
our
ancient
history
here
adam
this
goes
back
to
2014
when
we
did
a
conference
for
johns
hopkins
and
we
had
to
get
a
whole
lot
of
devices
printed
real
quickly
because
we
wanted
to
do
a
large
scale
assembly
workshop,
and
so
I
built
this
spreadsheet,
where
I
basically
just
laid
out.
You
know
oh
great,
what
scales
we
need
left
or
right,
how
many
we
need
of
each
scale
and
people
just
came
in
and
started
populating.
A
It
was
saying:
hey,
yeah,
I'm
I'm
making
you
know
so
many
of
these
scale
and
so
many
of
these,
and
it
would
tally
up.
You
know
how
many
we
have
need
for
and
how
many
you
know,
each
person
you
know
contributed-
and
I
I
don't
know
I
mean
this-
this
might
not
be
a
good
fit
for
what
we're
talking
about.
I
just
want
to
say
that
a
you
know.
C
So
that's
great,
and
it
also
goes
back
to
part
of
the
conversation
that
I
had
with
helping
hands
earlier
this
week.
C
You
know
whether
we
are
printing
individual,
you
know
bespoke
hands
for
specific
individuals
or
if
we
get
into
a
point
where
we're
supplying
basic
supplies
so
that
when
they
have
someone
come
in,
they
can
just
be
provided
with
something
off.
C
The
shelf
wouldn't
be
ideal,
but
if
we
had
like
you
know,
folks,
printing,
you
know
finger
components
and
folks
printing
palm
components
that
can
be
assembled
and
then
just
sort
of
give
an
ad
hoc
that
might
be
more
useful
than
for
them
once
we
reach
a
kind
of
maintenance
phase.
A
You
know
and
there's
there's
another
possibility
if
we,
if
it
seemed
like
it,
was
a
fit,
I'm
not
convinced
that
it
would
be,
but
just
so
that
you
have
your
options.
You
know
we
have
enable
web
central
and
we
we
kind
of
know
at
this
point,
that
the
platform,
if
we
were
to
move
forward
with
it,
would
need
work
to
make
it
easier
to
use.
But
if
we
decided
we
wanted
to
use
this
platform,
I
just
want
to
point
out
that
we
do
have
the
ability
to
import
cases
in
mass
from
a
spreadsheet.
A
A
C
So
right
now
I
have
sent
a
a
google
sheet.
I
have
shared
it
with
dr
saint
geen
in
kabul,
who
has,
I
believe,
shared
it
with
a
doctor.
I
believe
it's
puya
who's,
the
p
o
lead
there
and
I
believe
that
within
the
next
week
or
two
they
will
start
filling
that
out
and
it's
really
just
high
level
details.
You
know
patient
name,
getting
an
identification
number
attached
to
each
case,
laterality
age
and
then
basic
measurements
and
and
photos.
C
So
I'm
I'm
hoping
that
we
can
iron
things
out
before
we
get
too
deep
in
the
weeds.
But
what
what
I
really
want
to
do,
I
guess
before
dropping
this
topic
for
today,
I'd
like
to
get
some
sense
from
y'all
about
whether
whether
it
would
be
possible
to
get
a
pilot
picked
up
if
we
can
get
this
say
rolling
by
october
or
november,
whether
we
have
the
resources
to
print.
You
know
a
dozen
hands
or
so.
A
Oh
yeah,
I
don't,
I
don't
think
printing
has
ever
been
really
a
challenge
for
us.
If
we,
if
we
put
out
a
focus,
call
to
action-
and
we
say
hey
everyone
time
to
get
your
printers
going,
we
need
this.
Many
of
this
kind
of
devices
people
will
rally
you'll.
I
don't
think
we'll
have
any
problem,
even
if
it
was
a
lot
more
than
a
dozen.
Like.
I
said
in
that
spreadsheet
that
I
showed
you.
We
ended
up
producing
235
device.
You
know,
sets
unassembled
but
full
sets
of
parts.
In
a
matter
of.
C
Awesome
yeah,
so
that
that's
wonderful!
I
think
that
once
this
is
rolling,
what
it
would
probably
look
like
would
be
shipping
everything
to
like
what,
whether
it's
rochester
or
if
it's
to
this
group
in
thailand,
that
dr
sangine
has
connections
to
where
humanity
international
also
has
a
base.
A
C
Yeah,
which
is
why
I
think
getting
that
protocol
that
tanara
done
in
brazil
has
put
together
might
be
a
really
good
idea
to
try
to
get
this
free
discipline.
I.
A
C
A
That'll
help
people
to
know
what
to
do
to
get
better
quality,
but
regardless
of
what
we
do
on
the
front
end,
I
still
think
that
you
want
to
have
people
shipping
their
parts
to
somebody,
that's
going
to
check
them
before
sending
them
on
to
their
final
destination.
I
think
a
human
qa
checkpoint
is
is
really
working.
A
We
don't,
but
it
could
be,
it
could
be
me,
it
could
be
rick
who
is
evaluating
devices
already
for
the
badging
system.
It
could
be
quite
a
few
honestly
any
one
of
our
more
experienced
printers
or
volunteers.
We've
got
quite
a
few
people
that
could
do
that.
D
Been
sort
of
collecting
a
repository,
I
think
in
georgia
I
can
add
that.
A
D
Bob
rieger
had
set
up.
Let
me
let
me
pull
up
the
address
in
the
info.
It
was
in
one
of
our
older
newsletters.
A
C
So
my
my
mentor,
dr
colleen
coulter,
she's
sort
of
the
the
leading
pediatric
amputee
specialist
in
the
physical
therapy,
world
she's
based
in
alpharetta
there
anyway,
that
that's
interesting.
A
D
These
devices,
you
know
in
case.
A
D
Yeah,
I
think
we
found
from
projects
in
the
past
that
it
makes
a
big
difference
to
be
able
to
set
somebody
up
with
the
tools
that
they
need
to
sort
of
continue.
Rather
than.
A
A
B
C
I
thought
I
had
sir,
I
apologize
I
I
thought
I
had
brought
this
up
to
the
last
town
hall,
but
it
may
have
slipped
my
mind,
but
so
phase,
two
or
three
after
we've
done
a
pilot
and
made
sure
that
we've
got
the
the
route
in
place.
Once
we
have
started
sending
hands
to
meet
the
immediate
need.
My
thought-
and
this
was
actually
something
that
dr
sandeen
said-
was
that
they
would
love
to
have
a
printer
on
on
site.
C
They
just
don't
have
any
way
of
acquiring
one
so
yeah.
That
would
be
amazing
if,
if
we
could
provide
that.
D
Yeah-
and
it
could
be
also
something
where
we
start
thinking
about.
You
know
you
had
mentioned
thailand,
but
regionally.
The
closest
chapters
to
afghanistan
would
probably
be
syria.
D
Pakistan,
pakistan
has
not
only
did
they
do
sort
of
enable
projects,
but
they
also
are
kind
of
like
the
main
distributor
for
the
country
3d
grit,
so
they
deal
with
you
know
printers
and
material
filaments
and
that
kind
of
stuff,
so
it
might
be
worth
in
the
small
team
that
you
have
trying
to
figure
out.
D
What
is
you
know,
sort
of
the
closest
country
that
already
has
some
trade
relations
with
afghanistan,
they're
gonna,
they're
gonna
have
some
insights
and
you
know
people
and
materials
are
crossing
back
and
forth
with
iran
and
pakistan
regularly
so
that
you
know
for
good,
and
not
so
I
do
feel
like.
D
D
Yeah
I'd
be
happy
to.
I
do
think
in
terms
of
the
logistics
I
mean
I
I
haven't
been
there
for
for
a
long
time
and
and
no
yeah
there's
a
there's.
A
lot
to
learn.
Yeah
zynab
is
gonna,
know
a
lot.
I
had
connected
you
to
her
she's
she's.
D
Through
the
stand,
they're
sending
equipment,
you
know
skateboard
equipment
and
that
kind
of
stuff,
but
yeah
the
people
that
are
going
to
know
the
best
are
going
to
be
people
like
3d
grit
that
are
in
a
neighboring
country
that
are
dealing
with
sort
of
commercial
orders
and
that
kind
of
stuff
on
a
national
level.
C
And-
and
thank
you
also
for
connecting
with
xynab,
I
know
that
they
were
checking
into
their
contacts,
but
I
should
follow
up
because
I
haven't
heard
anything
in
a
couple
of
weeks
now.
A
Right
is
it
okay?
If
we
move
on
guys
or
is
it
of.
A
Know
it's
okay!
Just
we
only
have
a
few
more
minutes,
I'm
going
to
skip
the
next
topic
about
our
emerging
potential
leaders,
because
I
think
we
covered
that
already
we've
got
the
notifications
turned
on
adam
is
going
to
reach
out
again
to
post
something
to
try
to
get
their
attention
and
we'll
regroup
on
that
next
time.
So,
with
our
time
remaining,
I
just
wanted
to
hop
in
and
look
at
tickets
to
make
sure
there's
nothing
in
there.
That's
time
sensitive
that
we
need
to
deal
with.
A
Let
me
change
to
my
status
view
here.
Okay,
let's
see,
I
think
this
one
is
dealt
with,
so
we
were
communicating
with
the
harris
county
public
library
and
that
one
got
handed
off
to
john.
She
responded
to
you.
Did
you
get
this
john?
A
B
You
know
I'm
just
not
keeping
up
these
days.
I
don't
know.
A
I
want
to
I
want
to
just
check,
I
think
you
were
yeah.
This
was
sent
to
you
directly
to
your
gmail,
but
I
will
forward
a
copy
just
to
float
it
to
the
top
of
your.
B
A
All
right
and
then
we
have
an
offer
of
a
3d
printer
donation
from
lila
mercado
working
at
dmf
lighting.
They
didn't
say
what
kind
of
printer,
but
they
have
a
printer
that
they
want
to
donate,
and
so
I
invited
her
to
post
that
in
our
wishbone
program.
I
link
to
the
forum,
I'm
guessing
that
hasn't
happened
and
if
it
hasn't
been,
could
you
maybe
follow
up
on
this.
D
Yeah
and
I
did
the
email
that
you
sent
so
this.
A
D
Good,
I
think
I
did
respond
to
the
other
email,
but
right
I'll,
let's
see
if
we
can
get
this
this
going
and
having
you
know
we're
talking
about
potentially
sending
a
printer
to
afghanistan.
That's
gonna
need
to
be
something
local,
but
I
do
feel
like
we've
had
a
number
of
printer
donations,
john
shared
a
post
in
the
hub
that
involved
some
printer
donations.
We
had
a
guy
in
california
that
had
like
six
of
them
that
he
was
hoping
to
donate
and
it's
been
tough.
D
I
mean
we
haven't,
really
had
much
success
with
that.
We
had
some
printers
that
were
in
the
wishbone
project
that
people
did
eventually
request,
but
I
was
expecting
it
was
they
were
going
to
transition
through
within
you
know
a
week
short
order.
People
would
raise
their
hand
but
yeah.
D
A
Probably
a
visibility
issue,
I
mean
that's
probably
tied
in
with
the
other
challenges
we've
had
that
we've
known
about
for
a
long
time
with
you
know
the
hub
has
a
lot
of
complexity.
It
can
be
a
little
hard
to
find
things,
and
I
think
that
leads
to
people
not
maybe
using
it
as
much
as
they
could.
These
are
all
tied
in
with
one
another.
The
program
is
good.
A
We
have
to
figure
out
how
to
make
it
more
front
and
center,
and
that
might
be
a
matter
of
you
know
that
might
lead
us
back
to
that
project
with
deloitte
of
just
kind
of
figuring
out.
How
do
we
kind
of
clean
up
our
online
act
and-
and
you
know,
provide
a
better
journey
for
our
users
so.
B
B
But
with
regard
to
shipping
hands
and
printers
to
afghanistan,
do
we
now
think
that
it
would
be
cost
effective
to
build
ship
to
a
location
in
afghanistan
or
do
not
priced
that
atom?
Because
in
the
past
that's
been
actually
a
a
real
barrier
that.
B
So
look
into
it,
I
mean
we
in
the
context
of
a
well-organized
program.
It
might
make
sense
to
pay
top
dollar
and
ship
a
large
quantity,
but
that's
been
a
challenge
in
the
past,
so
I
don't.
D
A
Yeah
because
I
think
using
any
kind
of
typical
services,
I
would
think
there's
a
pretty
high
risk
of
the
package
disappearing.
But
I
don't
know:
okay.
A
Tickets
that
haven't
been
opened,
and
I'm
just
looking
at
the
subject
lines.
I
can
tell
that
several
of
these
are
going
to
be
template
responses,
so
we
don't
even
need
to
look
at
those.
Let's
look
at
this
one
here.
I
want
to
register
a
group
of
college
students,
so
they
were
chatting
with
our
bot,
okay,
well,
and
so
our
bot
answered
appropriately
and
linked
them
to
one
of
my
news
based
art.
One
of
my
knowledge
base
articles
look
at
that.
A
Our
bot
still
works,
so
I
guess
this
one's
been
handled,
but
just
since
we
were
talking
about
that,
I
didn't
even
see
this
one,
but
this
is
another
article
that
we
have
in
the
knowledge
base.
Oh,
I
see
what
I
did.
I
put
an
enable
topic
under
3d
universe.
That's
why
I
wasn't
seeing
these.
We
actually
have
a
lot
more
topics
here:
how
to
become
a
volunteer,
how
to
request
a
device
want
a
3d
print
part
so
yeah
I
gotta.
A
I
got
to
work
on
getting
these
over
shared
with
you
ben,
and
we
can
maybe
do
more
with
these
than
we
are,
but
anyway,
in
this
case,
we
do
for
those
of
you
who
don't
know
on
enablingthefuture.org.
A
We
do
have
a
an
automated
bot
that
uses
some
basic
ai
to
answer
common
questions
and
in
this
case
it
linked
them
to
the
right
resource,
I'm
just
going
to
close
this
ticket
rick
and
I
don't
think
we
need
to
go
into
these
others,
because
those
are
going
to
be
pretty
standard
replies
about
you
know,
printing
and
stuff.
So
that's
all
I
have
with
the
time
that
we
have
today.
Let
me
ask
if
anyone
else
has
anything
before
we
wrap.
D
So,
if
anybody's
available
to
join
at
1pm
alberto
is
very
knowledgeable
of
bionx
and
he's
going
to
be
sharing
sort
of
a
work
in
progress,
pretty
pretty
interesting
stuff
he's
trying
to
set
up
a.
I
think
he
called
it
a
platform
to
sort
of
be
able
to
figure
out
what
kind
of
bionics
apply
for
different
cases.
E
Yes,
we
have
a
new
project
that
I
thought
might
interest
you
guys.
We
have
just
started
working
with
book,
rescuers
and
basically
they're
going
to
be
giving
free
books
to
all
educators
and
we're
also
writing
their
entire
database
for
them,
and
what
we're
also
doing
is
we're
giving
children's
books
to
great
apes.
E
Apparently,
the
great
apes
absolutely
loves
children's
books.
So
it's
just
a
hoot
to
watch
these
gigantic
apes
reading
these
little
children's
books
and
so
they're
donating
all
these
children's
books
to
the
great
apes
and
we've
got
right
now:
40
000
new
books
in
the
warehouse,
but
any
educator,
that's
looking
for
specific
books.
They
get
free
books,
100
free.
A
E
A
E
It's
called
book
rescuers,
I'm
sorry
for.
E
B
Know
rick
the
the
books
for
great
apes
thing
might
be
close
enough
to
the
prosthetics
for
animals
thing
that
it
could
somehow
get
squeezed
under
the
enable
umbrella,
and
it's
going
to
be
a
great
story
it
you
know.
One
of
the
things
that
we
found
is
that
there
are
moments
when
certain
things
go
viral
in
the
media,
because
they're
just
irresistible
this
would
be
one
of
them.
We.