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From YouTube: Weekly e-NABLE Town Hall Meeting - September 8, 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.
B
A
B
B
Good
excuse
for
it,
but
I
specialize
in
amputee
rehab
during
my
clinical
days,
I
was
first
interested
in
joining
enable
as
a
maker
I
really
didn't
know
anything
about
3D
printing
back
in,
like
2016
and
I
thought.
This
seemed
like
a
good
application,
but
it
really
my
involvement
was
extremely
limited
until
about
a
year
ago,
I
still
know
very
little
about
3D
printing
instead
I
work
as
enables
Outreach,
coordinator
and
and
practice.
B
What
that
means
is
that
I
do
my
best
to
connect
our
members
with
people
who
can
help
them
to
accomplish
whatever
projects
they're
working
on
or
on
a
wider
scale,
attempting
to
establish
Partnerships,
and
you
know,
opportunities
for
collaboration
with
other
organizations
that
are
similarly
minded
so
trying
to
join
on
with
state
agencies
with
other
ngos
with
for-profit
Enterprises
that
have
missions
that
align
with
ours.
So
that's
generally,
what
I
try
to
do?
Okay,.
B
A
In
the
maker
space
and
I've
shown
it
to
a
friend
of
mine
and
said,
they've
got
a
forge
here,
so
we
went
back
into
the
metal
shop
and
looked
for
the
forge
and
I
couldn't
find
it,
but
I
could
find
all
the
metal
forming
tools.
You
know
the.
A
The
Hammers,
the
Anvil
so
I
next
time,
I
ran
into
the
person
that
runs
the
metal
shop.
I
asked
her
and
she
said:
well,
you
must
have
walked
right
past
it
because
it's
a
single
coil.
It.
B
B
B
Well,
I
think
Jeremy
will
be
back
in
just
a
moment.
He
was
just
grabbing
some
coffee
and
we're
about
five
minutes
past.
So
I'm
gonna
go
ahead
and
kick
this
off
so
welcome
everyone
to
our
weekly
town
hall,
meeting
I
just
need
to
double
check
one
thing
really
quickly
because
I'm
getting
a
little
bit
of
feed
back
in
my
mic.
B
I'm
just
going
to
check
my
settings
really
quick,
make
sure
that
nothing
can
be
improved
there.
B
Okay,
can
you
all
hear
me
yep,
okay,
great
feedback's,
gone
perfect
Let
me
show
my
screen
again
and
we'll
get
moving
so
welcome
to
the
September
8th,
Town
Hall.
We
have
a
number
of
things
in
the
agenda
to
discuss
today,
but
I
think
if
we
can
jump
through
it,
it
actually
won't
take
too
long.
A
lot
of
these
are
really
just
status
updates
of
things
that
we've
discussed
quite
a
bit
in
recent
meetings,
so
we'll
do
our
best
to
be
neat
and
tidy
with
the
discussion.
B
B
B
Okay,
so
first
we've
got
a
post
from
one
Alexandra
Romney,
so
they
are
looks
like
an
educator
who's
just
obtained
a
consumer
grade,
3D
printer
I'm,
guessing
they're
in
Australia
from
the
use
of
currency
there,
they're
interested
in
printing
full-size,
prosthetic
hands
and
they're
asking
about
use
of
this
specific
creality
print
printer.
B
It
looks
like
our
community,
as
they've
really
been
great
about
in
the
recent
months,
has
jumped
on
this
question
and
provided
quite
a
lot
of
information.
I've
been
Thacker,
indicated
they're
using
a
E5
Plus.
C
What
was
the
specific
question?
I
was
looking
at.
B
They've
obtained
a
cruelty,
Ender
5
plus,
and
they
wanted
to
know
if
anyone
had
some
general
pieces
of
advice,
it
sounds
like
they're,
relatively
new
to
the
field.
If
I'm
reading
between
the
lines
right.
C
Well,
how
do
I
want
to
say
this
they're,
not
my
favorite,
a
lot
of
people
love
the
creality
printers
okay,.
C
Might
be
a
great
fit
for
them?
It
really
kind
of
depends
on
the
kind
of
person
I
find
that
people
who
enjoy
sort
of
the
engineering
side
of
things
and
don't
mind
sort
of
tinkering
and
troubleshooting
and
figuring
out
how
to
put
things
together.
You
know
they
can
have
a
lot
of
fun
with
the
creality
printer
people
who
just
want
to
kind
of
take
a
printer
out
of
the
box
and
have
it
work,
reliably
Corral.
You
might
not
be
the
way
to
go.
C
We
used
to
offer
them.
We
actually
dropped
the
whole
line
because
there
were,
unfortunately
just
too
many
units
that
had
problems
out
of
the
box.
They
have
some
some
quality
issues,
but
some
like
I,
said
some
people
love
them.
I've
just
had
a
very
mixed
experience
with
them.
I
found
them
to
be
a
little
bit
inconsistent.
If
you
get
your
unit,
you
know
set
up
and
configured
and
tuned
and
optimized,
which
you
know
does
take
time.
C
You
have
to
kind
of
do
more
of
that
on
your
own,
but
if
you
do
get
it
to
the
point
where
it's
properly
set
up
and
properly
optimized
I
will
say
it's
a
great
bang
for
your
buck.
You
know
you
get
a
you
get
a
lot
of
capabilities
for
a
very
low
price.
It's
just
not
always
easy
to
get
it
to
that.
To
that
point,
yeah.
B
Are
there
other
printers
within
that
price
point
that
might
fit
their
needs
a
little
bit
better.
C
Let
me
see
650
Au
and
USD
it's
about
415
us,
that's
not
a
lot
of
money.
It's
not
really
my
forte
to
be
honest.
I
focus
on
a
kind
of
the
higher
end
professional
level.
Printers
I
I'd,
say
in
that
price
range,
yeah,
creality
is,
is
probably
the
most
popular.
C
There
definitely
are
other
brands,
I
I,
can't
think
of
the
specific
ones.
I'd
say
posting
in
the
hub,
as
they're
doing
is
probably
the
best
way
to
get
some
other
recommendations.
If
people
haven't
already
I'm
guessing
they'll
get
a
few
other
people
popping
up
with
other
options.
A
C
B
Refresh
memory
and
I'll
be
sure
not
to
share
this
discussion
with
Kyle
Reeser,
but
but
what's
regarding
the
enable
fund,
what
is
the
precedent
and
what
is
the?
B
C
You
know
it's
Community
voting.
The
community
can
vote
to
approve
anything
they
want.
I
can
only
tell
you
that,
historically
speaking,
we
have
not
used
the
enable
fund
to
purchase
printers
or
materials,
or
things
like
that.
We
generally
expect
volunteers
and
or
chapters
to
kind
of
do
their
own
fundraising
for
that
and
the
fund
is
intended
more
to
support
projects
that
would
have
some
benefit
to
the
entire
Community,
as
opposed
to
just
benefiting
that
one
yeah.
B
Okay,
that
makes
sense
yeah,
okay,
well
great,
well,
I!
Guess
we
can
just
let
this
conversation
continue.
A
A
Bought
the
cruelty,
3D
Pro
and
it
was
a
nightmare
and
the
hack
space
I'm
at
they
just
love,
cruelty,
3D,
printers
and
I.
Think
partly
for
the
reason
of
being
able
to
Tinker
whistle
and
and
being
able
to
make
them
the
machine
that
they
want.
But
I
gave
up
on
it
and
sent
it
back.
It
was
an
Amazon
purchase
and
I
got
the
allagu
Neptune.
That's.
A
It's
working
out
and
I
I
think.
Maybe
the
quality
is
more
consistent,
that
if.
A
B
So
it
looks
like
that's
totally
within
their
price
range.
Would
you
like
to
respond
with
that
recommendation?
Tamara
Oh.
B
I
think
your
personal
experiences
I
mean
this
is
not
a
huge
sample
size
in
this
community.
So
I
think
that
you
know
your
your
anecdotal
feedback
might
be
very,
very.
A
Helpful
here
give
them
another
place
to
look
yeah.
So
what
do
I
do.
B
B
A
A
different
accent:
that's
accented,
a
that's
fine
with
me,
too.
Okay,.
B
Okay.
Next
we
have
on
Jelly
santillin
again
I'm,
probably
making
a
mess
of
that.
Let's
see,
this
is
one
I
believe
I
responded
to
this
was
an
animal
Prosthetics
question
or
really
just
an
announcement,
I
think
so
Angeli.
Let
us
know
that
last
year
they
reached
out
for
advice
on
how
to
create
a
prosthesis
for
a
toucan
I,
remember
that
post,
so
it
was
wiko,
the
two,
the
Toko
toucan
and
apparently
they're
doing.
Well,
that's
really
great.
B
I
think
so,
if
I'm
I
remember
a
a
toucan
here
right
around
the
time,
I
joined,
there's
a
discussion
about
that.
So
they're
posting
here
to
Spotlight
the
NGIT
Prosthetics
Club.
B
They
are
happy
to
have
those
needs
of
Prosthetics,
whether
human
or
animal
for
free.
Their
Club
has
developed
prosthetics
for
many
animals,
they're
also
happy
to
3D
print
into
simple
hands,
fingers
or
other
prostheses,
and
she
provided
her
direct
email,
which
is
amazing.
This
is
really
great.
B
B
Elizabeth,
who
is
a
physical
therapist
who's
post
we
highlighted
last
week,
is
a
PT
who
works
with
marine
biology
and
she
had
a
sea
lion
case
last
week
that
she
floated
so
yeah.
Hopefully
they
can
get
together,
I'm,
hoping
that
we
can
get
a
little
bit
more
traction
here
on
the
animal
side,
because
I
just
think
that's
really
interesting.
B
Obviously,
one
of
the
reasons
we
brought
wildmont
on
wildmon,
being
me
into
this
position,
was
to
help
to
offload
some
of
the
items
that
were
on
your
plate.
You
know
we
still
have
a
couple
of
things.
I
think
that
we
can
do
to
help
you
out,
but
I
just
wanted
to
check
to
see
things
feel
a
little
bit
better
now
in
terms
of
total
workload
and
what
else
we
can
do
to
help
you
out.
C
Yeah
I
mean
I,
appreciate
you
checking
in
you
know,
there's
some
things
that
I
just
kind
of
unfortunately
stopped
doing,
and
so
there's
things
that
aren't
being
handled
right
now
and
we
may
want
to
talk
about
those
someday.
We,
you
know
we
have
to
kind
of
catch
up
on
where
we
stand
with
the
new
website,
I'm
a
little
bit
out
of
the
loop
there,
because,
as
of
now,
we
have
that
enable
web
Central
platform
sitting
out
there
pretty
much
unmanaged
and
unmonitored
and
yeah.
A
C
Guess
it's
it's
maybe
kind
of
working
but
I,
don't
know
how
many
people
are
using
it
and
if
there
was
a
problem
or
if
we're
broke,
there's
pretty
much
nothing
I
could
do
we
used
to
have
you
know
what
we
call
case:
facilitation
where
we
had
somebody
that
was
actually
monitoring
the
cases
in
there
and
actually
helping
with
the
cases
that
got
stuck
and
we're
just
not
even
doing
that
anymore.
C
Catalog
management
is
another
thing:
I
used
to
be
managing
the
device
catalog
on
the
Hub
and
adding
new
designs
that
people
were
submitting
and
and
I
stopped
doing
that
because
you
know
Ian
Roy
was
working
on
getting
that
going
at
the
NIH
3D
site
and
I
just
again,
I,
don't
know
where
that's
at
I
see
new
designs
popping
in
there,
but
I
don't
know
what
the
next
steps
are.
I,
don't
know
what
the
plan
is
for
actually
launching
that
as
our
official
catalog
and
how
we
get.
C
You
know
the
new
designs
that
have
been
submitted
into
there,
which
I
forwarded
over
to
him,
but
I,
don't
see
it
okay,
so
there's
work
to
be
done
there.
What
I?
As
you
know,
I
stopped
tracking
the
statistics
that
we
were
reporting
on
here
in
the
meeting
you
have
that
spreadsheet,
so
maybe
that'll
get
picked
up
at
some
point.
B
Yeah
I
do
and
I've
let
the
ball
kind
of
Bounce
down
the
court
for
a
little
while,
while
looking
at
some
of
these
other
things,
but
yes
I.
That's
on
my
to-do
list
too.
So.
C
The
one
thing
that
I
am
still
doing
is
managing
the
help
desk,
where
you
know
we
probably
get
about
a
I,
don't
know,
maybe
maybe
eight
to
twelve
email
inquiries
per
week
and
I'm
doing
my
best
to
stay
on
top
of
those
I'm
not
doing
it
in
a
very
timely
manner.
I'd,
say:
average
response
time
is
probably
three
to
five
days
right
now,
where
it
used
to
be.
You
know
within
one
day,
but
you
know
the
other
side
to
that
is
that
there
is
a
cost
to
that
I.
C
The
help
desk
system
that
I
use
you
know,
I
pay
per
license,
so
I
am
maintaining
that
monthly
cost
of
a
license
for
that
which
maybe
we
could
find
a
better
solution
for
I
know.
C
We
talked
about
a
a
chat
bot
on
the
Hub
and
maybe
coming
up
with
a
way
of
doing
this
kind
of
support
directly
within
the
Hub,
which
of
course,
wouldn't
require
any
additional
licensing
fees
and-
and
it
would
be
nice
to
at
some
point
figure
out
how
to
how
to
reduce
that
that
you
know
monthly
cost
on
land.
B
B
Oh
there
you
go
thanks,
so
learn
something
so
I
can
certainly
help
train
the
chatbot
I'd
be
very
healthy,
happy
to
help
test
it
out
and
and
stress
test
and
see
how
it
works
with
you
know:
a
lay
user
like
myself
so
anytime,
you
want
to
to
work
on
that
or,
if
there's
anyone
that
you
can
think
of
who
might
be
available
and
sufficiently
skilled
to
devote
their
time.
Yeah.
B
C
Don't
know
who
has
that
background
so
well.
B
Let's
put
out
a
call
in
the
hub
baby
and
just
see
if
anyone
bites
I
mean
I.
I
know
that
the
the
hit
rate
has
been
a
little
on
the
low
side
for
those
calls
to
to
action
for
specific
Project
work.
But
that
might
be
something
I
mean
if
it's
something
that
doesn't.
C
C
He
manages
the
back
end
server,
so,
whatever
integration
we
do,
it's
going
to
require
his
involvement
and
I
know
he's
had
pretty
Limited
availability,
so
I
would
have
to
figure
that
out
and
then
there's
the
question
of
you
know:
Canon
any
no
matter
how
good
a
bot
is.
You
know,
I
I,
don't
know
if
it's
ever
going
to
be
sufficient
to
address
all
of
the
you
know,
inquiries
coming
in
yeah,
yeah
I
think
we
have
to
figure
out
some
way
of
of
having
people
be
able
to,
and
maybe
maybe
we
don't
have.
C
You
know,
email
support
anymore.
Maybe
we
shut
that
down
and
just
direct
people
to
the
hub
and
say
post
your
questions
in
the
Forum.
That's
an
option
but
yeah
right
now
we
have
an
email
address,
support
enable.org,
which
is
being
directed
into
this
help
desk
ticketing
system.
So
you
have
to
figure
out
what
to
do
with
that.
If.
B
C
C
Some
of
them
are
more
custom
in
terms
of
somebody
wanting
to
I
don't
know,
do
some
kind
of
research
or
want
to
do
a
certain
kind
of
project.
You
know
more
and
more
these
days,
I'm
I'm,
giving
kind
of
templated
replies
and
directing
people
more
and
more
over
the
Forum
to
ask
them
to
direct
their
questions
there,
but
it
does
still
require
some
kind
of
of
you
know,
response
and
and
processing.
B
Yeah
I
wonder
if,
just
as
a
and
again
spitballing
I
think
that,
since
one
of
the
problems
that
we
have
is
Rel,
you
know
a
desire
to
increase
the
level
of
engagement
on
the
Hub
and
the
variety
of
conversations
that
are
happening
there
and
another
problem
we
have.
Is
you
not
quite
having
the
bandwidth
to
manage
these
emails?
But
if
we
kind
of
solve
both
of
those
by
just
as
a
go
forward
plan,
those
General
inquiries,
I
think
could
just
be
directed
straight
to
the
hub.
C
C
It
is
set
up
as
a
let
me
think,
I
believe
it's
set
up
as
a
group
address
on
our
Google
platform,
because
we
manage
enable.org
through
Google,
so
it
shouldn't
be
too
hard
to
create
an
autoresponder
on
that
address
so
that
anybody
that
emails
support
enable.org
automatically
gets
an
email
back.
That
says:
hey!
Please,
go
over
here
to
the
hub
and
post
your
message
and
gives
them
the
link,
so
that
should
be
doable.
I
just
have
to
figure
out
the
specifics.
B
Okay,
gotcha-
well,
that's
great
yeah
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
you
know
that
would
help
that
my
time
is
being
used
appropriately
and
that
you
are.
A
B
B
Let's
revisit
that
and
we'll
see
just
let's
Circle
back,
maybe
next
week
or
in
a
couple
of
weeks
and
see
how
we
can
get
the
ball
rolling
to
offload
I
also
wanted
to
note
that
we
were
originally
scheduled
last
week,
but
we
rescheduled
and
we're
back
on
the
calendar
this
afternoon,
Jeff
Manley
I
are
going
to
be
discussing.
You
know
the
NIH
print
catalog
and
a
couple
of
other
areas
where
he
might
be
interested
in
donating
his
time.
B
So
we'll
we'll
see
what
his
skill
set
and
availability
is
in
the
coming
months,
because
I
believe
he's
a
student
right,
I
think
so,
okay,
so
let's
move
into
some
of
the
just
for
broader
transparency
for
the
community.
Anyone
listening
into
these
calls
and
recordings
the
gosh
Wildlife
team,
Jason
and
myself
as
well
as
Jeremy
John
Sarah,
have
been
very
busy
the
past
couple
of
weeks
having
some
partnership
discussions
and
exploring
some
expanded,
fundraising
opportunities
for
the
enable
fund.
B
There's
a
lot
in
the
works
that
we're
pretty
excited
about.
I
wanted
to
just
talk
through
a
few
of
these
and
give
some
of
the
highlights.
We
actually
had
a
quick
conversation
with
representatives
from
ultimaker
yesterday.
I
think
that
there's
a
potential
for
some
collaborative
efforts
there
to
build
up
both
their
educational
content
with
more
updated
versions
of
enables
devices
right
now,
as
Jeremy
pointed
out
what's
available
on
their
site,
is
a
pretty
outdated
version.
What
is
it
the
robo
hand
Jeremy
that
they're
currently
using
in
their
their
educational
packet.
C
Together,
yeah
in
that
in
that
sort
of
they
call
it
the
MakerBot
Educators
guidebook,
and
it
focuses
on
the
snap
together
Robo
hand,
which.
A
C
More
of
a
of
a
toy,
so
yeah
I
would
hope
that
they
would
update
that,
but
it
it
sounds
like
there's
a
they
have
a
new
e-learning
platform
that
might
be
a
better
short-term
or.
C
Further
anyway
yeah,
it
sounds
like
there
might
be
an
opportunity
to
build
out
some
curriculum
materials
and
and
make
them
open
to
the
public
in
a
way
that
would
kind
of
provide
some
some
valuable
educational
content.
That's
tied
in
with
our
later
more
recent
designs,
and
so.
B
We'll
pursue
that
yeah
it
looks
like
further
is
a
pretty
streamlined
learning
management
system.
It
looks
pretty
pretty
user
friendly,
which
I
only
I
only
bring
up
because
I've
researched
like
a
dozen
LMS
programs,
the
past
few
months
for
my
company,
but
it
looks
really
cool
and
I
think
that
they
were
excited
at
the
prospect
of
working
with
members
of
our
community
to
build
a
potentially
ungated
content
that
anyone
could
access
to
see
exactly
how
to
you
know
just
Basics
on
how
I
apologize
for
this
cat.
B
She
won't
leave
me
alone,
anytime,
I'm,
on
a
call
but
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
potential
there
for
activity
from
our
education
groups.
I.
Think
that
there's
a
lot
of
further
application
that
could
be
done
to
expand
into
this
next
item,
which
is
our
ugani
partnership
I've,
been
in
continuing
conversations
with
Florian
valleys
with
ugani
perfia.
B
This
is
the
gentleman
who
spoke
at
two
of
our
town
halls
in
August.
His
organization
ugani,
is
just
doing
some
for
if
you
didn't
watch
those
town
halls,
I
I
highly
encourage
that
you
do
because
Florian
is
a
hugely
passionate
guy
who
is
genuinely
making
changes
to
the
landscape
across
the
African
continent
in
Prosthetics
delivery.
He
has
a
for-profit
company
that
provides
3D,
printing
and
training
to
prosthetists
to
create
3D
printed
devices
right
now,
they're
fabricating
exclusively
lower
extremity
devices.
B
What
we're
interested
in
is
finding
some
way
to,
for
the
enables
benefit
piggybacking
on
their
existing
infrastructure,
that
they're
building
in
Kenya,
Nigeria
and
elsewhere
to
get
upper
extremity
devices
delivered
to
folks
who
need
them
using
enabled
designs
and
then
for
their
benefit,
and
also
to
open
up
more
opportunities
for
our
community
members.
Trying
to
find
research
opportunities,
creating
white
papers
case
studies
using
their
scanning
technology
and
their
prosthetic
designs
that
their
teams
have
I've
been
putting
it
together.
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
really.
A
B
I
want
to
just
don't
really
quickly.
Tainara
is
not
on
the
call
right
now.
I
want
to
just
note
that
we
did
have
two
Healthcare
meetings
scheduled
for
the
month
of
September.
Those
have
been
collapsed
into
one
on
September
18th
I
believe
that
we
had
some
sickness
and
there
was
a
conflict
for
the
guest
speaker.
B
This
month
should
be
a
very
interesting
discussion
if
you're
interested
in
the
field
of
occupational
therapy
as
it
pertains
to
training
of
upper
extremity
devices
and
and
functional
performance
using
UV,
Prosthetics
I
think
that
would
be
a
really
good
discussion
to
to
listen
into.
I
will
also
note
that
Elizabeth
Payton
the
physical
therapist
I
mentioned
earlier,
who
is
who
does
a
lot
of
work
with
marine
animals?
B
She
has
expressed
a
high
degree
of
interest
in
working
with
this
Healthcare
Group
I'm,
hoping
that
I
can
convince
she's.
Actually,
the
director
of
a
PT
program
in
Illinois
Jeremy,
so
I
think
that
she
could
be
a
great
resource
to
get
some
some
student
volunteers
to
assist
with
developing
some
materials
that
could
be
of
use
to
the
enabled
Community
just
to
provide
more
information
about
more
of
the
healthcare
side
of
things.
B
I
also
wanted
to
note.
This
is
I
was
hoping
to
get
a
post
on
the
Forum
before
this
meeting,
but
I
need
to
get
confirmation
from
Scout
Mary
who's.
The
director
of
the
Missouri
assistive
technology
act
program,
but
in
short,
Scout
and
I
have
been
having
a
number
of
conversations
the
past
few
weeks.
B
What
we
are
devising,
where
we're
putting
together
a
plan
to
produce
a
standard
device
kit
that
could
be
available
for
any
enable
member
to
contribute
to
at
any
time.
In
short,
these
device
kits
would
have
somewhere
between
8
and
10
sort
of
high
impact,
simple
assisted
devices.
Things
like
bottle,
openers
key
holders,
doorknob
Turners
things
that
don't
require
a
high
degree
of
skill,
so
things
that
could
be
really
great
for
people
who
are
new
to
3D
printing
to
classroom
groups,
especially
younger
skewed
classroom
groups.
B
To
practice
getting
some
of
these
devices
turned
out,
and
these
device
kits
would
then
be
delivered
to
rehab
facilities,
nursing
homes
and
other
key
points
that
are
overseen
by
the
Missouri
Assist
Technology
act
program
to
get
Hands-On
experience
for
people
to
use
these
devices.
We're
really
excited
about
how
what
this
could
be.
B
I
think
that
if
we
can
get
this
working,
if
we
can
get
some
data
collected
for
the
impact
of
these
devices,
once
they've
gotten
into
a
few
folks
hands
for
a
couple
of
months,
this
could
be
the
kind
of
thing
that
we
could
replicate
out
across
other
states.
If
it's
successful,
obviously
that's
the
you
know,
that's
the
the
goal,
or
if
this
is
not
a
successful
strategy,
we
can.
B
You
know,
take
our
lessons
learned
and
see
how
we
can
tweak
this
to
make
this
a
little
bit
more,
a
little
bit
more
broadly
applicable
to
different
states.
Assistive
technology
programs,
but
yeah
I'll
be
dropping
a
post
about
this
opportunity
on
the
Hub
today.
Any
questions
comments.
B
Okay.
Well,
in
that
case,
oh
no
one
more
before
moving
into
this
next
one
I
wanted
to
know.
That's
Sarah
and
I
have
been
working
on
prepping
for
the
2023
chapter
audit.
This
will
feed
into
a
number
of
initiatives
that
that
are
tied
to
this,
including
our
annual
reporting
materials
for
the
Dora
or
dedora
Foundation.
B
B
What
kind
of
work
they've
been
doing
expecting
to
gather
some
of
these
storytelling
elements
that
we
can
incorporate
that
into
our
timeline
of
the
past
year
will
be
very
important
again
if
you're,
a
chapter
leader
and
you're.
Listening
to
this
recording,
you
should
see
that
email
come
out
Sarah.
Do
you
have
a
plan
date.
D
For
something
I
mean
I,
don't
have
a
date
I
sent
so
I
I
used
a
template
from
last
year,
so
it's
similar
to
an
email
that
I
think
Jeremy
sent
out
out
last
year
and
I
I
added
some
things
and
there's
a
link
to
the
this
year's
survey
and
I
I
didn't
want
to
send
it
out
before
people
had
a
chance
to
review
it.
D
So
I,
don't
if,
if
you
didn't
get
a
preview
email
you
can
you
can,
let
me
know,
but
John
and
Jeremy
I
think
that
you
should.
You
should
have
it,
but
I
can
I'm
happy
to
send
it
any
day.
The
it's
I
think
the
there
are
229
chapter
leadership.
D
Contacts
on
the
list
and
I
also
wanted
to
see
if
I
like.
If
in
the
last
year
there
have
been
new
chapters
added
I
need
to
to
add
those
emails
into
the
contact
list,
yeah
for
before
sending
it
out
yeah.
B
That's
great
and
I
I
will
also
note.
If
there
are
any
new
chapters,
I,
don't
think
that
everything
necessarily
has
to
be
sent
out
in
a
big
bang.
We
could
always
send
it
out
later,
but
I
agree.
It
would
be.
It
would
be
much
easier
for
you
certainly
to
have
them
all
sent
at
once,
but
the
form
can
stay
open
for
as
long
as
it
needs
to
and
it
until
I
close
it
then
and
Jeremy
just
you
know,
this
is
a
Google
form.
B
I
I
actually
found
the
process
of
collecting
responses
very
simple
and
easy
to
review
using
the
Google
form
for
the
mission
statement,
question.
C
B
Sure
did
didn't
know
we
had
I
would
have
saved.
C
Set
up
a
form
and
in
fact,
because
we
already
made
one:
oh,
no,
it
wasn't
Bob,
it
was
who
his
successor,
the
guy
in
Florida
Rick,
Yes
Rick.
In
fact,
because
he
made
several
attempts
at
this.
He
actually
sent
out
that
survey.
We
did
get
some
responses
and
so
somewhere
and
I
can
find
it
for
you.
There
should
be
a
Google
sheet
with
the.
B
Responses
that
we
did
yeah
send
it
my
way,
if,
if
you
don't
mind
and
we'll
we'll
see
how
it
Stacks
up
I
think
you
know,
we
I
think
we're
the
questions
in
the
form
get
at
the
the
level
of
detail
we're
interested
in.
If
you
wanted
to
take
a
look.
B
Well,
by
all
means,
take
a
look,
I
think
Sarah,
since
the
the
the
draft
to
you,
if
you
could
just
glance
over
the
form
and
add
your
two
cents.
If,
if
you
have
the
time,
that
would
be
very
much
appreciated.
B
At
least
okay,
okay,
great
so
we'll
be
sending
that
out.
Sarah
I
mean
if
you
want
to
Target
Monday.
Does
that
sound
okay.
D
Connect
them
sorry,
possibly
I
I,
don't
I,
think
more
realistically.
For
for
me
to
get
emails
and
every
that's
a
travel
day
for
me,
so
I
would
I
would.
B
Fine
yeah,
let's,
let's
whatever,
whatever
fits
in
your
your
calendar,
that's
fine.
The
the
only
reason
I
was
thinking
sooner
is
that
our
report
to
the
door
Foundation
is
due,
and
this
is
not
you
know,
our
lack
of
planning
doesn't
constitute
an
emergency
on
your
part,
but
I
think
that
our
report
is
due
at
the
end
of
September,
so
hoping
to
get
a
couple
of
stories
in
place
that
we
can
draw
from
for
the
reports
in
time
for
that
yeah,
but
nope.
That
sounds
great.
Okay,.
D
D
D
They
were
not
specific
I
about
what
they
wanted
to
post.
They
just
wanted
to
know
how
to
log
into
enable
web
Central.
D
C
Have
one
already
and
then
they
log
in
like
any
other,
they
can
use
Google
authentication
or
they
can
create
an
account
with
email
and
password.
Okay,
but
yeah
I'd
have
to
know
more
otherwise,
I,
don't
know
if
they're
looking
to
post
a
device
in
the
catalog
or
if
they
want
to
request
a
device
or
if
they
want
to
ask
a
question
kind
of
depends
where
to
send
them
from
there.
Okay,.
B
Okay,
so
I
wanted
to
bring
up
the
topic
of
the
mission
statement.
Once
again,
we
talked
about
this
bit.
Last
week
we
had
a
couple
of
sticking
points.
Some
terminology
I
think
that
there
is,
you
know
one
approach.
This
tried
to
make
this
as
boiled
down
as
possible.
I
think
there's
another
that
tries
to
be
a
little
bit
more.
You
know
a
little
broader
to
wrap
our
arms
around
specifically
what
it
is.
B
We
went
to
a
little
bit
more
precisely,
but
let
me
just
read
where
we
were
last
week
and
we
can
talk
about.
You
know,
what's
highlighted
and
what's
in
parentheticals
here
and
why
so,
just
to
recap,
this
is
based
on
results
from
a
survey
that
was
sent
out
last
month
polling
our
enable
Community.
We
didn't
have
a
huge
number
of
responses.
B
We
had
a
couple
of
dozen
people
offer
their
insights
into
a
few
of
the
different
options,
and
this
is
taken
from
what
was
by
far
the
most
popular
one,
but
integrating
elements
from
a
couple
of
the
others
that
maybe
make
it
a
little
bit
more
comprehensive,
so
enable
is
a
network
of
Engineers,
Healthcare
professionals,
volunteers
and
individuals
with
limb
differences
working
together
to
make
possibly
open
source
there,
3D
printed
Prosthetics
and
assistive
technology
available
for
those
who
need
it.
B
Our
mission
is
to
empower
makers
with
knowledge
and
design
resources
to
improve
mobility
and
community
community
access
around
the
world.
So
the
items
that
were
in
contention
where
whether
we
want
to
include
open
source
as
a
key
point
of
what
it
is,
we
do
I
think
that's
totally
fair
and
I'm
happy
to
include
it
whether
we
want
to
limit
ourselves
to
3D
printing
or
whether
we
want
to
include
other
additive
manufacturing
techniques,
or
you
know
not
specify
what
kind
of
techniques
at
all
we're
referring
to
I.
B
Think
throwing
3D
printing
in
here
is
pretty
core
to
what
the
vast
majority
of
our
members
do,
but
again,
I
don't
want
to
limit.
If
there
are
people
who
aren't
using
that
or
use
things
in
addition
to
that,
I
think
that's
fair
and
then
this
last
item
was
a
specifically
the
outcomes
that
we're
hoping
to
provide.
B
My
thought
was
that
functional
Independence,
you
know
coming
from
a
healthcare
background,
that
being
a
sort
of
key
word
in
amputee
care
and
just
care
of
patients
generally
functional
Independence
is
is
ultimately
the
goal,
but
mobility
and
Community
Access
I
know
that
there
were
some
questions
about
whether
Community
Access
is
at
all
relevant
Mobility,
whether
that's
specific
enough
so
I'm
gonna
turn
this
over
to
y'all.
For
these
four
terms
here:
open
source,
3D
printed
mobility
and
Community
Access
General
thoughts.
A
I
had
two
one
was
unrelated
to
your
highlighted
ones.
Sure
I
like
it
when
they
use
the
word
collaborative
sure
enable
is
a
collaborative
network
of
Engineers,
Healthcare
professionals
and
volunteers
and
individuals
with
limb
differences
working
together,
I.
D
A
Options
and
ideas
and
I
really
liked
your
your
instead
of
mobility
and
Community
Access
I,
really
liked
it.
What
you
said,
I'd
never
heard
this
before
functional
Independence.
B
Sarah
I
feel
like
I'm
gonna,
have
to
ask
you
to
repeat
yourself.
So
a
couple
of
things
you've
already
said:
I,
don't
think
I
I
captured
all
of
your
points.
Last
time
we
were
discussing
this,
did
you
have
any
any
additional
thoughts
specifically
here.
D
No
I
I
don't
see
anything
problematic
with
any
of
those
terms.
I.
D
Yeah
I
think
that
that
any
of
them
or
all
of
them
could
be
used.
D
What
what
fits
best
and
like
what
we
want
to
try
to
try
to
Encompass
but
I
I
I
do
think
that
Community
Access
is
might
be
it's
it's
a
it's
good
and
it's
it's
a
good
thing
to
want
to
improve,
but
it's
so
it's
so
broad
like
that.
B
So
let
me
make
a
case
for
functional
independence
and
why
it's
the
perfect
phrase
here,
functional
Independence,
can
can
be
very,
very
broad.
It
can
also
be
quite
specific.
B
It
is
as
minor
or
as
sweeping
as
it
needs
to
be
depending
upon
what
you
know.
What
activity
the
person
in
question
is
seeking
to
be
able
to
do
for
a
prosthesis.
It
can
be
quite
broad,
you
know.
If
we're
you
were
talking
about
replacing
a
limb.
B
This
is
the
ability
to
you
know,
work
a
job.
You
know
there
I
know
that
we're
not
medical
devices,
but
you
know
they're.
B
You
know
people
who
might
want
to
play
music
musical
devices
who
might
want
to
you
know,
play
sports
using
or
ride
a
bicycle
using
this,
this
terminal
device
that
level
of
Independence
is
enabled
by
hey,
enabled
by
the
use
of
this
prosthetic
device
on
the
assistive
technology
side.
Functional
Independence
can
just
mean
allowing
a
person
to
open
a
can.
B
Broader,
like
with
a
prosthesis,
that's
why
it's
used
honestly,
it's
kind
of
a
catch-all
term,
but
I
think
it's
also
quite
apt
for
the
space
that
we're
operating
in
with
what
we're
talking
about
here.
That's
my
pitch,
but
is
there
anything
else
that
it
there,
in
the
only
reason,
I'm
putting
so
much
energy
into
discussing
this?
Is
that
I
feel
like
this
is
kind
of
the
Crux
of
you
know?
B
If
we
have
a
mission,
this
is
ultimately
in
my
mind
what
it
is
we
are
hoping
to
provide
to
folks-
and
you
know
whether
it's
people
in
the
education
community
and
teaching
students
how
to
what?
What
was
the
phrase
that
the
the
woman
from
ultimaker
used
yesterday
Jeremy?
Was
it
compassionate
design,
empathetic
design?
Well,.
C
They
mentioned
yeah
empathetic
design,
designing
with
purpose
yeah
I've
heard
it
framed
a
lot
of
different
ways.
Yeah.
B
But
all
of
these
things
are
about
providing
to
an
individual
or
to
to
a
group
of
like
a
demographic
subset
of
individuals.
A
In
the
disability
Community
there
A
lot
of
times
they
use
person-centered,
which
is
kind
of
hard
to
fit
into
a
sentence.
D
A
No
yeah,
okay,
it's
about
responding
to
what
the
individual
wants
and
not
what
you
think
they
should
be.
Okay,.
A
B
No
I
I
think
that's
I,
think
that's
right,
I
I
think
in
some
instances
people
with
a
limb
difference
might
not
have
a
physical
challenge
and
you
know
the
device
might
be
purely
cosmetic.
It
might
be
something
that
you
know
what
I
mean.
You
know
some
people,
don't
don't
you
know,
consider
themselves
impaired
or
disabled.
You
know,
with
with
the
limb
difference,
I
think.
B
I
think
I
want
more
input
and
I
I.
Don't
know
that
I
necessarily
feel
comfortable
pulling
the
trigger
on
this,
because,
obviously
I
don't
want
to
speak
for
a
community
of
thousands
to
solicit
to
more
Community
feedback.
Do
you
think
that
this
would
be
something
that
we
could
post
on
the
Hub
and
kind
of
highlight,
or
maybe
point
to
this
discussion
in
the
recording?
B
A
A
But
I
think
it
would
be
good
I'm
having
problems
with
limb
difference,
because
it's
it
kind
of
ties
into
what
Sarah
was
was
asking
me
if,
if
that
was
what
I
was
referring
to
earlier,
is
that
it
identifies
people
by
their
disability
rather
than
you
know,
individuals
seeking
solutions
to
some
to
something.
It's
it
focused
on
on
I,
don't
know,
I,
don't
know
what
it
is
about
that
term,
but
it
just
seems
it.
B
So
I
the
reason
we
dropped
this
in
here
specifically
was
because
we're
we're
trying
to
to
be
more
mindful
about
ensuring
that
the
the
communities
were
attempting
to
address
with
the
you
know,
a
prosthetic
and
Assistive
Technology
Solutions
that
this
community
Works
toward
trying
to
take
those
recipients
to
people
who
would
be
receiving
those
making
sure
they're
part
of
of
this
process.
B
That
they're,
not
just
you,
know,
faceless
people
who
that
you
know
we're
writing
to
to
repeat
myself,
but
writing
it
on
a
horse
and
giving
them
a
hand
and
saying:
oh,
look.
We
fixed
you,
that's
that's
really
not
what
what
we
want
to
be
and
so
trying
to
make
sure
that
that
you
know
those
people
are.
A
To
instead
of
a
collaborative
Network,
a
network
of
Engineers,
Healthcare
professionals
and
volunteers,
working
in
collaboration
with
individuals,.
B
Yeah
I
mean
would
that
be
accomplished.
A
C
B
No
I
think
that
that's
very,
very
valid
so
homework
because
I
don't
want
to
I,
don't
wanna
get
to
the
point
where
this
all
becomes
sort
of
numb.
B
If
everyone
on
this
call
could
take
a
minute
to
to
review
all
I'll
think
about
whether
I'm
going
to
drop
this
on
the
Hub,
because
I
really
don't
want
there
to
be
I
I
want
to
balance
Community
Insight
with
you
know,
productive
conversation
and
sometimes,
if
something's
on
the
Hub.
You
know
I
I
worry
about
I
I,
don't
want
to
diminish
the
the
the
character
of
our
our
Hub
members.
B
I
just
worry
about
what
this
kind
of
discussion
could
lead
to
on
the
Hub,
but
we'll
see.
But
let
me
think
on
that
one
way
or
the
other
I'll
make
sure
this
is
available
to
everyone
here,
to
review
and
possibly
to
the
broader
community,
and
we
can
talk
about
this
at
our
next
town
hall.
If
that
sounds
okay,
we'll
we'll
do
that?
Just
a
couple
of
final
points
here,
obviously
Jeremy!
This
is
relevant
for
you
and
John
and
also
for
me.
B
I
believe
wildmont
is
coming
up
for
our
three-month
review
in
the
next
couple
of
weeks,
we're
going
to
need
to
resubmit
to
lumio,
if
I
remember
correctly,
for
how
the
original
proposal
was
made
there.
B
B
If
we
wanted
to
continue
at
a
three-month
Cadence
moving
forward
or
if
we
wanted
to
move
to
a
six-month
frequency
I'm
fine
with
with
whatever
I,
will
note
that
we
have
been
tracking
our
activities
on
the
wild
mods
space
on
the
Hub.
We've
got
a
Weekly
Newsletter
that
we're
putting
out
I'm
going
to
try
to
be
a
little
bit
better
about
displaying
our
our
metrics
there
and
I'm,
hoping
that
in
the
next
few
weeks.
B
Here
we
can
start
reporting
more
conclusively
on
the
results,
some
of
our
fundraising
efforts,
but
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
was
on
your
radar,
Jeremy
or
at
least
John's
radar
as
a
to-do
item,
but
I
think,
oh,
you
did
have
a
question
about
the
website.
I've
been
trying
to
get
a
hold
of
azure
to
get
some
some
traction
here.
We've
been
meeting
semi-regularly
to
outline
exactly.
You
know
how
this
is
going
to
be
timelined
and
what
our
priorities
are.
B
I
haven't
been
able
to
get
a
hold
of
him
for
the
past
week
and
I.
I
hope
he's
okay,
but
I
will
try
to
reach
out
to
him
again
today
and
see
if
we
can
get
another
working
session
on
the
calendar
to
get
the
new
website
up
and
running,
but
yeah.
That's
it
for
me.