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From YouTube: Weekly e-NABLE Town Hall Meeting - October 15, 2021
Description
This is a recording of the weekly e-NABLE Town Hall meeting.
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A
A
Let's
get
some
notes
here
all
right.
Welcome
to
this
week's
town
hall,
everyone
just
just
a
couple
of
windows
here:
okay,
so
as
usual,
if
anyone
is
watching
or
would
like
to
be
watching
on
the
youtube
live,
you
can
use
the
comments
there
on
the
youtube
live
page.
We'll
try
to
keep
an
eye
on
that
for
those
in
the
meeting.
That's
here
in
the
lower
right
corner,
so
we
can
try
to
keep
an
eye
on
that
together.
Ben.
Are
you
in
a
position
to
take
notes
today.
B
A
That's
fine!
Okay!
So
on
we
go,
let's
see
introductions
dara.
Would
you
like
to
reintroduce
yourself
for
those
that
might
not
have
been
with
us?
The
last
time.
C
Yeah,
of
course
my
name
is
daryl
broadbent.
I
work
with
an
organization
in
the
uk
called
3d
crowd.
We
are
a
not-for-profit,
well
we're
a
community
interest
company
corporation.
I
can't
remember
the
precise
words
which
is
effectively
sort
of
like
a
not
for
profit
and
we've
been
working
with
enable
on
some
research
into
very
flexible
materials
and
we're
also
pursuing
a
a
3d
crowd.
Chapter.
A
Excellent,
so
we'll
we're
going
to
be
having
daryl
give
us
an
update
on
some
of
the
work
regarding
flexible
materials
that
he
was
doing
we'll
come
to
that
shortly.
Let's
just
go
through
our
other
stuff.
Here,
real
quick
action
items.
A
I
had
an
action
item
to
reach
out
to
the
goldman
sachs
team
for
an
update.
They
beat
me
to
it
reached
out
to
us
to
let
us
know,
unfortunately,
that
we
did
not
get
moved
into
phase
three,
so
unfortunately
that
didn't
work
out,
but,
as
we
pointed
out
to
them,
I
think
it
was
a
very
useful
process
to
go
through
just
to
have
to
gather
all
the
information
they
were
looking
for
and
organize
it
and
really
think
about
where
we
can
have
the
most
impact.
A
B
No,
I
did
email
and
john
followed
up
so
so
that
was
just
sort
of
on
hold.
I
guess
until
he's
probably
pretty
busy.
A
Okay,
ben
and
bob
any
updates
on
the
draft
you're
working
on
for
reporting
back
to
our
donors,
about
what
we've
done
with
their
money.
B
Yeah
we
got
the
the
newsletter
out
on
wednesday
and
the
reports
are
sort
of
based
on
that,
so
I'm
gonna
be
doing
some
edits
back
and
forth
with
bob
and
others
over
the
weekend.
Just
to
sort
of
final
it
up
finalize
it
bob
did
send
his
summary
of
the
animal
prosthetics
initiative,
which
is
great
excellent.
A
All
right,
let's
see
another
one
for
you
ben,
was
to
reach
oh
well.
That's
already
done
obviously
reaching
out
to
dara
he's
here
with
us
so
mark
this
one
is
done,
jeremy
and
bob
to
do
a
recorded
zoom
session
talk
about
animal
prosthetics
still
not
yet
we
both
haven't
it's
going
to
be
a
while.
It
will
we'll
just
leave
it
here
but
yeah.
I
agree.
It's
not
going
to
happen
tomorrow,
bob
reached
out
to
a
veterinarian
about.
A
I
will
you're
in
the
midst
of
a
big
move.
So
totally
john
isn't
here.
I
wonder
if
somebody
should
send
him
a
text
in
case
he
maybe
sometimes
he
needs
a
reminder,
because
I
know
there
are
updates
about
at
least
this
one.
I've
seen
emails
where
these
guys
want
to
get
involved
and
help
us.
So
we'll
talk
to
him
if
he
is
able
to
jump
in.
A
Thank
you
all
right,
our
metrics
this
week
pretty
typical
we're
still,
as
far
as
I
know,
we're
still
197
chapters.
That's
right!
Bob!
A
I
assume
that's
right.
Everything
else
looks
pretty
typical,
so
I'm
not
going
to
really
spend
time
on
this.
You
guys
just
peruse
that
on
your
own.
A
Oh,
I
did
forget
to
fill
in
the
batch
request
there,
sorry
about
that
guys,
I'll
go
back
and
plug
that
in
later
pull
that
from
a
different
place,
now
all
right
summary
of
our
upcoming
or
our
recurring
meeting.
Sorry,
so,
just
as
a
reminder,
we
have
our
education
meetups.
Now,
first
monday
of
every
month,
chapter
leaders
meet
up
on
the
second
monday
and
the
device
pilots
on
the
third
monday.
Those
are
all
at
noon.
A
Eastern
and
then
we
have
the
new
member
meetups
on
the
third
friday
there's
one
today
and
focus
follow-ups
on
the
fourth
friday
and
those
are
both
one
o'clock
eastern
so
again
that
new
member
meetup
is
coming
up
today,
an
hour
after
this
meeting
finishes
up
so
hope,
you'll
join
for
that
all
right.
A
So
I
didn't
put
it
on
the
agenda
here,
but
let's
just
start,
if
it's
okay
with
you
daryl,
let's
start
with
you,
if
you're
ready
and
that
way
you
have
whatever
time
you
need
and
feel
free
to
use
whatever
you
would
like
absolutely
share.
If
you'd
like
to
do
any
sharing.
C
Right,
can
everybody
see
a
a
screen
with
some
words
on
it?
C
Yes,
wonderful!
So
I
guess
part
of
it
is
a
question
for
you
guys.
How
much
is
of
this?
Should
I
go
over
again,
or
should
I
purely
focus
on
the
the
progress
that
I've
made
since
the
last
update,
which
I
believe
was
all
the
way
in
back
in
july
no
june,
apparently,
which
seems
a
very
long
time
ago?
I
swear
it.
Wasn't
that
long,
but
well
here
we.
A
Are
well,
I
think,
that's
a
question
for
ben
and
maybe
john
but
john
is
still
connecting
the
audio,
so
he
doesn't
hear
us
all
right
now,
john
is
connected
to
audio.
So
john
pharaoh
was
just
asking
how
much
he
should
go
over
the
information
he
presented
last
time
versus,
should
he
just
focus
on
the
new
stuff
ben.
What
are
your
thoughts
on
that?
First.
B
C
Don't
actually
write
down
a
good,
a
good
overview
of
why
what
we're
doing
and
why
we're
here?
No,
so
this
project
is
focusing
around
the
kinetic
hand
by
matt
botel,
some
of
the
recipients
that
we
interacted
with
found
that
the
hand
was
too
difficult
for
the
recipient
to
act
actuate,
and
it
was
felt
that
that
was
due
to
the
inflexibility
of
the
hinges.
C
Now
the
hinges
are
are
made
of
a
flexible
material.
The
standard
ones
seem
to
be
on
the
sort
of
82a
sure
hardness
82
to
85.
You
know,
I
see
a
lot
of
people
printing
them
in
ninja.
Flexers
is
about
85
and
a
lot
of
people,
especially
in
europe.
I
spoke
with
a
chat
from
enable
france
who
was
printing
them
in
filler
flex,
which
is
82,
but
those
materials,
as
I
said,
seem
to
be
on
the
inflexible
side
of
of
good.
C
So
there
have
been
some
newer
materials
out
on
the
market
in
the
last
year,
mainly
from
recreas
the
makers
of
filler
flex,
and
they
are
on
the
70,
the
60,
to
78
range.
I
have
one
in
my
hand
here.
This
is
70a
and
it's
very,
very,
very
soft
in
comparison
to
the
82
stuff.
C
So
I
thought
you
know:
could
we
bring
up
a
hand
and
try
to
characterize
the
difference
between
the
hand
with
82
to
85a,
hinges
and
then
1760
and
to
see
if
there
is
a
sweet
spot
or
to
see
just
how
flexible
we
can
get
it,
because
you
know
the
more
people
that
are
able
to
use
this
device
the
better,
in
my
opinion,
because
it's
it's
certainly
a
lot
more
modern
appearing
than
some
of
the
other
devices
out
there
and
that
might
be
a
barrier
to
to
adoption.
C
So
that's
where,
where
the
project
started
back
in
june,
I
had
then
managed
to
acquire
and
print
all
of
the
candidates
materials
of
my
bone
stock
pressure,
i3
mark
iii,
which
I
should
have
been
really
surprised
at.
I
should
have
been
more
a
scance
than
it
just
worked,
but
I
wasn't,
I
just
said:
oh
okay,
it's
great!
They
printed
fine,
let's
just
move
on,
but
that's
that's
we'll
we'll
get
to
that
in
a
minute
and
constructed
a
test
rig.
C
C
In
the
last
update,
I
did
show
some
initial
experimental
data
and
this
has
been
expanded
on
so
this
is
beginning
to
this
graph.
On
the
left
hand,
side
is
beginning
to
show
you
how
much
of
an
impact
that
softer
material
makes,
but
it's
kind
of
obfuscated
by
a
load
of
other
stuff,
that's
going
on
with
the
hand
itself
and
that's
part
of
the
progress
that
I've
made.
C
C
Doing
some
repeat
runs
because
this
experiment
is
very
manual,
there's!
No,
it's
it's
not
especially
automated,
so
doing
repeats
is
kind
of
critical
because
it's
very
very
easy
to
affect
the
experiment
as
you're
doing
it.
Just
by
how
you
do
certain
things,
how
you
take
a
date
and
how
you
add,
the
weights
all
adds
up
to
variances
and
then
these
two
graphs
at
the
bottom
you
can
see.
You
know
this
is
some
averaged
data,
but
you
can
still
see
where
the
you
know
those
two
lines
on
sat
right
on
top
of
each
other.
C
There
is
an
aspect
of
a
variance
and,
interestingly,
on
the
right
hand,
side
one.
You
can
see
they're
diverge
at
the
end,
which
suggests
there
might
be
something
mechanical,
because
when,
when
this
this
graph
right
at
the
end
here,
that's
when
the
the
hand
is
closed,
although
maybe
slightly
less,
with
the
82,
maybe
more
with
a
70,
but
that's
with
the
hand
completely
closed
and
all
the
joints
are
effectively
bumping
up
against
each
other.
C
I've
started
a
report:
this
is
what
is
currently
in
there,
so
just
a
bit
of
background
and
what
elastic
hysteresis
is
and
why
we
care
how
the
components
were
printed
test
rig
design,
yeah
how
the
test
was
performed
and
some
results
from
conclusion
and
the
the
big
part,
the
big
section
really
is
that
guidance
for
printing,
flexible
materials
there's
quite
a
lot
in
there
so
far,
and
there's
probably
going
to
be
some
more.
C
The
bulk
of
this
is
finished
or
near
to
finished.
The
bit
that
has
to
be
polished
off
is
the
results
and
the
discussion
and
the
conclusions
so
unfortunately,
but.
A
C
You
know
I
I
I
might
create
a
subset
of
that
report
with
just
the
you
know:
the
guidance
for
printing,
flexible
materials,
because,
that's
you
know,
nobody
wants
to
flick
through
half
a
dozen
graphs
before
they
get
to
the
bit.
They
actually
care
about
so
yeah
I'll
I'll.
Take
your
steer
on
that
anyway,
great,
but
they
it
turns
out
that
guidance
for
friendly,
flexible
materials.
That's
almost
going
to
be
the
incomplete
part
because
after
you
know
some
printer
maintenance
and
some
sheer
dumb
luck.
Sure
enough.
C
So
that's
something
that's
got
to
be
addressed
and
you
know
it's
going
to
come
up
in
the
future
work
section
of
you
know
exploring
some
of
these
more
specialized
avenues
just
go
back
to
this
preliminary
data
reduction.
C
C
C
C
That
is
absolutely
in
in
what
I've
written
already
you
know
these.
Some
of
these
materials
are
extremely
hygroscopic,
yeah
and
yeah,
but
yeah
you're
noted
on
that
on
that
particular
part
in
terms
of
how
the
how
the
measurements
are
taken.
It's
a
dull
test
indicator
that
well
yeah.
Actually,
let's,
let's
just
go:
let's
just
go
back
to
the
other.
C
We
have
a
linear
rail
that
runs
along
a
a
piece
of
2020
extrusion
and
on
that
linear
rail,
sits,
a
dial
test
indicator
and
a
gantry
and
there's
a
set
of
cables
going
from
the
the
fingers
on
the
hand
to
the
gantry
and
then
over
a
set
over
a
pulley
onto
a
set
of
test
weights
and
the
zero
is
taken
with
the
dial
test
indicator
sat
on
on
the
flag.
C
So
we
are
putting
a
bit
of
preload
onto
the
onto
the
finger
which
is
documented
in
the
report.
I
can't
remember
the
number
off
the
top
head
and
then
so
you
take
a
datum
there.
You
zero
the
test
indicator
and
then
you
start
adding
weight,
reading
off
the
deflections
at
each
interval
and
then
you
start
removing
weight
and
that
allows
you
to
capture
the
the
extraction,
yeah,
extension
and
retraction
effectively
at
the
hand.
Does
that
answer
your
question
in
terms
of
the.
A
I
I
suspect
it
does.
I
don't
know
if
alexander
has
audio
right
now,
but
if
that
doesn't
give
you
what
you
wanted
alexander,
that
last
recording
that
you
mentioned,
that
he
did
go
into
a
lot
more
detail,
so
feel
free
to
go
back
and
watch
that.
B
C
So
this
is
sort
of
other
miscellaneous
progress
that
I've
made
as
I've
said,
I'm
having
some
issues
with
extruding,
these
particular
materials,
and
you
know,
there's
a
good
reason
for
that.
C
Well,
I
believe,
there's
a
good
reason
for
that.
The
designs
such
as
it
is
and
and
drawings,
and
how
to
build
the
test
rig
is
is,
is
uploaded
to
github.
I
haven't
made
the
repository
public
yet,
but
I
just
need
to
tidy
up
a
couple
of
things
and
make
sure
it's
camera
ready
before
I
do
so
and
look,
and
I
I
had
a
question,
I
had
a
thought.
C
The
other
day
should
I
be
taking
an
average
of
all
of
those
of
all
of
the
each
of
the
individual
finger
and
displaying
that
or
is
a
sum
more
appropriate.
A
Yeah,
I
would
just
say
you
know,
think
about
what
we're
trying
to
do
here.
If
the
main
to
me,
it
seems
the
main
focus
is
on
evaluating
these
flexibles
compared
to
one
another,
and
if
that's
kind
of
the
key,
then
I
would
think
the
averaging
approach
is
sufficient,
because
that's
that's
going
to
give
you
essentially
that
comparative.
You
know,
you
know
how
they
compare
to
one.
C
Yeah
indeed,
my
only
thought
was
to
try
and
figure
out
how
the
hand
as
a
whole
worked
was
to
to
use
the
sum,
but
I'm
still
I'm
not
entirely
convinced
it's
it's
kind
of
one
of
those
six
of
one
half
dozen
of
the
other
yeah,
but
this
is
kind
of
this.
This
graph
is
kind
of
the
the
key,
the
other.
A
Obviously,
there's
a
a
testing
approach,
just
like
what
you're
using
now
weight
based
and
things
like
that,
but
have
you
thought
about
you
know,
there's
there's
testing
that
involves
actually
somebody
actually
using
the
device
or
somebody
with
a
limb
difference,
putting
on
a
hand
with
these
different
types
of
flexible
materials
and
then
doing,
for
example,
the
the
block
test
where
they
see
how
many
blocks
they
can
move
from
one
section
or
another
within
a
certain
period
of
time
and
see
if
they
actually
are
able
to
get
better
use
out
of
one
versus
another.
C
Yeah,
absolutely
we
have,
I
have
delivered
a
set
of
70a
hinges
to
a
recipient
who
previously
struggled
with
the
82
having
trouble
getting
that
feedback
loop,
because
you
know
they're
busy
sure.
B
C
It's
absolutely
something
we're
pursuing,
but
yeah
soft
soft
touch
on
on
that
one,
I'm
afraid
I
don't
wanna,
don't
wanna
scare
them
off
yeah.
So
I
was
hoping
that
that
would
be
a
more
considerable
section
in
the
report.
But
it's
looking
like.
A
C
Absolutely
so
that
is
about
it
really.
I
realize
I've
taken
up
probably
more
time
than
I
should
have,
but
there
we
are.
A
A
I
think
he's
referring
to
eric
brubar
eric
has
done
some
if
you're
not
familiar
with
him.
He's
a
professor
at
marymount.
I
think
it's
marymount
university.
Somebody
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong
yeah,
that's
mariemount
marymount
and
he's
done
some
phenomenal
work
with
building
different
test
rigs,
different
types
of
testing
methods
like
the
one
that
I
mentioned
the
block
test
and
all
that
and
comparing
different
types
of
enabled
devices.
I
don't
know
if
he's
focused
in
on
flexibles
or
not,
but
I
would
love
to
get
you
two
connected.
A
Yeah
you'll
find
him
on
the
phone
you'll
find
him
on
the
hub
and
he
I
believe
he
he'll
be
pretty
responsive.
So
try
him
that
way
and
if
not,
I
can
put
you
in
direct
contact.
If
he's
not.
C
Yes
as
dry
as
possible
and
there's
two
ways
to
go
with
retraction,
either
use
loads
of
retraction
at
really
high
speed
or
no
retraction
at
all.
They
give
you
different,
there's
pros
and
cons
to
both
it
will
depend
on
your
printer
and
the
key
is
to
have
a
hot
end.
That's
really
closely
coupled
so
the
drive
gears
are
as
close
as
practicable
to
the
hot
end.
C
There's
no!
You
know
because
effectively
we're
talking
about
spring
and
when
you,
when
you
want
to
stop
printing
you're
letting
off
that
spring,
but
the
spring
is
still
you
know
a
spring,
and
it's
still
going
to
keep
going
for
a
bit
and
just
like
when
you
start
printing
you've
got
to
compress
that
spring
for
a
minute
before
something
actually
happens.
C
So
you've
got
to
be
mindful
of
that
and
do
everything
you
can
to
reduce
it
in
other
ways.
So
and
then
things
like
the
spool
holder,
the
spool
should
be
as
freely
moving
as
possible
because
otherwise,
your
you're
you're,
relying
on
the
drive
gears
to
pull
that
to
provide
that
extra.
That
extra
force.
That's
not
really
necessary.
C
A
Right,
I've
even
heard
of
people-
that
will
I
mean
even
the
tiniest
amount
of
friction-
can
make
a
difference.
I've
seen
where
people
you
know
when
you
slice
your
job,
for
example,
cura
and
other
slicers
they'll,
tell
you
how
much
material
is
going
to
be
used.
They'll
actually
unwind,
that
much
material
and
leave
it
loose
on
the
ground
so
that
it
can
just
be
pulled
freely
in
no
friction
at
all,
so
reducing
that
is
really
important.
A
Now
a
lot
of
people
do
have
these
printers
that
have
bowden
tubes,
where
the
the
feeder
is
not
right
next
to
the
hot
end,
and
it
is
going
to
be
more
difficult
in
those
cases.
A
We
can't
talk
about
every
printer
out
there
there's
so
many,
but
I
I
do
want
to
point
out
for
the
reality
printers,
because
there's
so
many
people
using
those
a
lot
of
their
models
do
use
the
bowden
tube,
where
it's
not
a
direct
drive
extruder.
But
if
you're
not
aware
it's
not
hard
to
to
change
that
out,
they
have
a
direct
drive
upgrade
for
those
and
the
one
company
that
I
know
of
that
probably
has
the
best
reputation
for
that
is
called
bond
tech.
A
I
think
they're
in
the
uk
actually,
and
so
they
make
upgrades
for
the
extruder.
So
you
can
take
your
reality
and
just
swap
out
for
a
direct
drive
extruder
without
too
much
problem.
I've
done
that
on
one
of
the
crealities.
So
just
be
aware
that
that
is
an
option
if
you
want
to
be
able
to
print
flexibles
more
reliably.
C
And
bond
tech
they're,
I
think
they're,
sweden,
not
sure
they
have
a
line
called
the
lgx,
the
large
geared
extruder,
and
that
is
really
targeting
some
of
these
ultra
flexibles
and
is
is
the
way
that
I
would
choose
to
go
is
a
way
that
we've
chosen
to
go
as
a
piece
of
future
work.
It
was
3d
crowd
because
flexible
materials
are
becoming
more
and
more
relevant
in
a
bunch
of
different
ways,
and
so
we're
trying
to
get
ahead
of
the
curve
a
little
bit
and
so
the
bonte
lgx.
C
I
would
recommend
looking
at
that
at
least,
and
that
has
this
there's
a
lot
of
the
other
thing
is
in
terms
of
printing
them.
There's
a
lot
of
conventional
wisdom.
That
tells
you
you
need
very
little
idle
attention,
but
there's
there's
a
lot.
There's
it's!
It's
not
what
I've
found.
C
E
Yes-
and
I'm
glad
you
can
hear
me
now
sorry
about
my
my
troubles
I
so
I
I
missed
some
of
this,
but
it
occurs
to
me
that
your
test
rate
and
your
methodology
are
an
important
contribution.
B
E
C
Yeah,
absolutely
it's
it's
something
that
I've
already
committed
to
a
github
repository
and
I'm
just
tidying
up
the
last
few
bits
before
I
do
make
that
public.
So,
yes,
yeah,
absolutely
you
know
in
terms
of
price,
I
think
the
60
is
is
a
bit
more
expensive,
the
70
and
82.
I
think,
I
think,
are
very
close.
C
All
no,
I
don't
think,
there's
a
massive
difference.
I
think
since
we've,
since
I've
started
this,
the
people
that
make
ninjaflex
has
also
come
out
with
a
more
flexible
material.
A
D
D
To
reinforce
what
you
said,
jeremy,
I
swapped
out
the
the
end
on
my
creality
ender
three
and
got
a
direct
drive
and
it
took
me
quite
a
while
to
zero
in
all
the
parameters
of
printing.
But
now
I'm
printing
beautifully
in
in
ninjaflex.
A
C
A
D
D
I
do
and
with
a
with
a
4.4
millimeter
nozzle,
I'm
getting
really
nice
solid
prints,
but
it's
I'm
printing.
It
30
35.
D
D
C
D
D
C
John's
question:
some
things
have
happened
in
my
personal
life.
Well,
what
am
I
saying?
I'm
starting
a
phd
in
3d,
printing
and
metrology,
and
so
my
capacity
for
a
lot
of
this
stuff
is
going
to
decline.
I
really
hope
to
keep
with
some
of
this
stuff.
I
hope
to
try
and
get
some
of
this
stuff
into
universities,
because
it's
great
final
year,
project
stuff
for
undergrads,
so
I
I'm
definitely
open
to
having
that
sort
of
conversation.
I
don't
think
I
would
be.
E
Okay,
that's
good
to
know
so
for
the
for
the
benefit
of
the
video
audience.
I
asked
whether
we
could
send
a
few
of
our
standard
hands
like
the
phoenix
or
some
of
our
experimental
hands,
like
the
osprey
kinetic
that
we're
working
on
to
dara
for
testing.
He
understandably
can't
do
it,
but
his
rig
is
going
to
be
well
documented
and
I
think,
actually
being
able
to
benchmark
these
things
against
each
other
could
really
shift
the
balance
of
the
conversation,
because.
A
There
I
think
the
documentation
is
the
key
as
long
as,
if
you
focus
in
on
that
there
and
give
us
all
the
detail
to
you
know
how
to
build
that
test,
rig
the
frame
the
aluminum
extrusions,
where
you
can
get
the
dial
indicate.
You
know
everything
if
you
can
give
us
a
detailed
instructions
as
possible.
Somebody
else
in
our
community
can
then
recreate
that
rate,
and
we
can
ask
them
to
help
us.
You
know:
do
these
comparative
tests.
A
B
A
F
No
problem
yeah,
it's
less
of
a
presentation
and
more
of
just
information
and
a
little
conversation
around
an
event
that
we
have
been
working
on
and
is
now
on
the
calendar,
so
enable
is
hosting
a
student
chapter,
networking
event
on
saturday
november
20th
and
it's
a
virtual
all-day
event
and
all
enable
student
chapters
are
invited
to
host
a
workshop
or
a
presentation.
At
the
event,
the
event
is
a
chance
for
these
chapters
all
over
the
world
to
come
together
and
learn
more
about
each
other.
F
The
event
is
open
to
all
individuals
who
are
looking
to
learn
more
about
the
enable
ecosystem
and
we're
encouraging
people
to
participate
and
ask
questions
throughout
the
day
there
will
be
featured
keynote
speakers
and
networking
sessions
scheduled,
and
the
aim
of
the
event
is
to
promote
collaboration
across
chapters
and
encourage
resource
sharing,
it's
a
chance
to
learn
from
others
and
create
lasting
connections,
and
so
we're
just
basically
hoping
to
get
some
chapters
who
are
interested
in
participating
in
the
event
and
providing
us
with
feedback
or
giving
us
any
information
that
they
think
would
be
interesting
to
discuss
at
the
event
and
topics
to
present
on,
and
so
I'd
love
to
hear
what
you
all
think
about
this.
F
If
you
have
any
ideas
and
yeah
we're
going
to
be
sending
out
some
promotional
material
and
getting
this.
D
F
Yes,
so
it's
going
to
be
saturday
november
20th,
it's
an
all-day
event.
The
platform
that
we're
going
to
use
for
the
event
is
currently
being
determined,
so
we'll
have
that
information
relatively
soon
all
enable
student
chapters
are
invited
to
present
or
host
a
workshop,
and
individual
individuals
and
people
in
the
enable
community
are
invited
to
come,
and
you
know,
participate
and
learn
from
everybody
who's
speaking
we're
also
going
to
have
a
couple
of
keynote
speakers.
Those
those
individuals
are
also
being
secured
right.
F
Now,
that's
in
the
works,
this
the
event
is
a
chance
for
chapters
all
over
the
world
to
come
together
and
learn
about
each
other,
we're
encouraging
you
know,
cross-collaboration.
F
We
want
chapters
to
get
to
know
one
another
and
share
resources
with
each
other,
and
so
some
topics
of
conversation
are
going
to
be
just
sort
of
like
what
the
chapters
are
doing,
how
they
were
founded
kind
of
like
their
histories,
maybe
some
maker
lab
tours
and
if
they
have
already
collaborated
with
chapters
like
what
are
those
chapters
who
are
they
can
they?
You
know,
like
maybe
do
some
presentations
together
and
it's
gonna
be
an
online
event.
F
It
can
be
either
virtual
or
like
a
hybrid
version,
so
that
information
will
also
be
published
relatively
soon.
But
the
idea
behind
that
is,
if
it's
hybrid
and
you
are
a
university
chapter,
for
example,
or
a
high
school
chapter.
Maybe
your
chapter
gets
together
and
watches
or
participates
in
the
event
via
zoom,
but
everybody's
in
the
same
room.
And
then
I
guess
the
aim
of
the
event
is
really,
as
I
said,
to
promote
cross
chapter
collaboration,
encourage
resource
sharing
and
create
some
lasting
connections.
So.
A
E
This,
but
I
do
think
that
the
focus
on
student
chapters
high
school,
as
well
as
university
and
for
that
matter
and
possibly
including
enable
interns,
who've
and
students
who've
moved
on
to
other
things-
is
a
really
nice
focus,
especially
because
we
just
got
an
email
this
morning
in
which
and
ben
maybe
well.
I
suppose
I
could
share
my
screen.
E
B
Here
starting
tomorrow-
and
it
sounds
like
stafford
who
introduced
himself
in
the
chat
is:
is
it
with
that
group?
Maybe
he
can
share
some
of
those
details,
because
this
is
all
new
to
me
from
just
a
few
minutes
ago.
D
Hi,
thank
you
I'm
actually.
What
happened
was.
B
She
had
another
conflict
with
her
schedule,
and
so
she
wanted
me
to
just
let
you
know
that
she's
with
you
all
she
sent
out
the
email
and,
if
there's
any
questions,
please
to
refer
to
her
she'll.
B
And
with
the
links
yes,
she
has,
the
links
will
be
on.
A
I
would
love
to
be
able
to
participate.
I
unfortunately
have
a
scheduling,
conflicts.
E
B
B
I'm
not
sure,
but
I
I
do
I
think
it
was
recorded
as
well,
but
I'll
I'll
ask
her
about
that.
Thank
you.
A
Okay,
let's
see
what
else
we
have
all
right,
I
think
we've
talked
about
the
first
part
of
fundraising
I
mentioned
goldman
sachs
has
come
to
a
close,
but
we've
learned
a
lot.
I
think
that
was
very
beneficial.
A
We
did
have
dr
savage
with
us
last.
It
was
last
week
to
talk
about
this
grant
she's
going
after
from
amazon
for
up
to
80
grand,
and
we
talked
about
a
number
of
ways
that
we
could
be
collaborating
together,
including
a
couple
of
specific
possibilities
that
we
jotted
down.
Here.
I
don't
know
if
anyone
I
I
think
it's
probably
best
to
leave
this
until
we
have
her
with
us
again.
Does
anybody
have
anything
to
comment
on
this?
Anyone
had
any
further
contact
with
her
all
right,
just
wait
until
she.
E
B
It's
actually
there's
there's
two
separate
events
and
ally.
Stop
me
if
I'm
misstating
this,
but
there's
a
november
20th,
it's
a
student
networking
opportunity
again.
It's
high
schools,
universities,
universities
are
meeting
in
person,
but
they
can
be
networking
with
each
other.
I
think
the
plan
is
that
safe
is
going
to
sort
of
prototype.
B
What
that
would
look
like
before
that
event.
Potentially,
that's.
That's
she's
been
looking
at
setting
up
something
in
boston
and
I
think
those
are
two
separate
events
that
sort
of
connected
ally.
Maybe
you
can
describe
that.
F
Yeah
so
safe
and
I
have
discussed
having
an
in-person
local
to
boston,
university
type
event,
and
this
would
probably
be
you
know
just
way
less
intense.
It
would
be
more
of
like
a
an
afternoon
or
an
evening
event
at
one
of
the
local
universities
and
different
chapters
will
be
invited
to
come
and
it
will
kind
of
be
like
a
pilot
in
a
sense
where
we
are
gonna.
Do
similar
activities,
we're
gonna
network
and
chat
about
what
everybody
is
doing
and
spread.
F
Awareness
about
the
larger
event
see
who's
interested
in
participating
in
that
but
yeah.
So
this
is
to
be
it's
not
going
to
be
a
hybrid.
I
think
it's
just
going
to
be
most
likely
in
person.
I
guess
that's
kind
of
up
in
the
air,
depending
on
who's
available
to
come
in
person
and
who
wants
to
come
via
zoom
but
yeah.
So
it's
going
to
be
a
separate
event,
but
slightly
interconnected
right.
B
Right
just
to
follow
up
that
too,
as
long
as
we're
throwing
all
the
events
out
there
next
week.
So
today
after
this
meeting
is
the
new
member
meetup
next
week
after
the
meeting
is
the
focus
follow-up
workshop,
kevin
and
ally
have
agreed
to
present
and
and
sort
of
have
a
kind
of
preparation
workshop
for
some
of
those
educational
chapters.
F
Yeah,
so
I
guess
what
I
envision
is
kind
of
like
a
presentation
where
maybe
we
talk
about
what
the
expectations
of
the
event
are
and
then
also
different,
topics
of
conversation
or
workshop
or
presentation
opportunities
for
chapters
and
then
also
yeah
just
like
how
to
contact
us
and
chat
about
it.
Moving
forward.
B
E
So
that
will
be
a
great
opportunity
for
other
university
and
high
school
chapters
to
shape
the
program,
as
well
as
to
step
up
to
the
plate
and
show
off
what
they
have
to
show
off.
So
to
that
end,
I
think
I
hope
we
will
reach
out
to
ones
that
we
know
have
got
something
to
contribute
to
make
sure
that
they're
there
can
help
lead
the
charge
and
set
the
standard
for
other
chapters
who
might
might
go
out.
So
we
should
try
to
publicize
this
event
in
advance.
D
E
We
get
as
many
university
chapters
as
we
can
in
high
school
and
while
we're
brainstorming,
I'm
forgetting
his
name,
but
there
are
a
few
obvious
high
school
players
that
we
should
reach
out
to.
One
is
the
fellow
in
florida,
whose
name
I'm
forgetting
I
apologize,
because
I'm
doing
it.
B
We'll
reach
out
to
all
of
them
actually
there's
94
high
schools
and
universities
in
the
last
count,
and
we've
got
that
list.
E
There
are
a
couple
of
extraordinary
standouts
already
who
we
should
make
a
special
request
to
attend
this
workshop
with.
A
A
Yeah,
so
that's
so
what
are
we
saying?
This
is
a
virtual.
A
There's
that
all
right,
very
good,
all
right,
so
we
were
talking
about
fundraising.
We
covered
the
work
dr
savage
is
doing
as
of
today,
our
fund,
the
enable
fund,
is
just
under
30
grand
not
much
to
change
from
last
week.
A
We
already
know
that
we
have
some
new
funds
coming
in
from
dora
and
milstein,
but
you
know
we
never
want
to
get
too
complacent.
So
thinking
about
different
ways
to
bring
in
funding
like
what
dr
savage
is
doing.
We
encourage
anyone
to.
Let
us
know
if
you
come
across
grant
opportunities,
or
you
know,
potential
donors
that
we
can
follow,
but
that
sort
of
thing
very
helpful,
there's
a
note
here
that
giving
tuesday
is
november
30th
and
we
talked
about
a
one-page
summary
of
our
impacts.
A
So
I
don't
know
if
that's
probably
going
to
come
on
the
tail
end
of
what
bob
and
ben
are
working
on.
If
you
guys
talk
about
that
at
all,
it's
sort
of
a
one-pager
that
sort
of
summarizes
our
impacts
from
the
funding
we've
received.
We
encourage
other
people
to
give.
A
So
just
keep
that
keep
that
time
frame
in
mind.
Hopefully
we'll
have
something
that
we
can
start
sharing
a
week
or
two
ahead
of
november.
30Th
would
be
a
deal,
I
guess
so
about
a
month
from
now.
It
would
be
great
all
right
that
leads
us
into
animal
prosthetics
and
we're
going
to
move
quickly
through
the
next
couple
of
topics
to
go
on
short
on
time,
so
bob
anything
to
report
on.
D
D
A
All
right
so
well,
I
look
forward
to
just
being
able
to
see
some
reports
of
how
our
first
cases
go,
but
that's
yeah.
It's
gonna
take
a
while,
especially
so
we'll
check
back
on
that
anything
human
case
related
how's
it
going
with
the
couple
you're
working
with
you're,
the
eight-year-old.
D
Continuing
the
work
we
did,
we
I
sent
them
a
second
smaller
palm
it
fit.
It
works.
I
even
included
the
the
tpu
bumper
up
and
I'm
going
to
resize
that
a
little
bit
using
my
vast
cad
skills
and
they
they've
they've
made
some
marks
on
that
bomb.
They've
mailed
it
back
to
me.
I
should
have
it
monday
and
I'm
ready
to
start
printing
on
monday.
A
D
Fitting
okay,
I've
never
asked
for
one
back,
because
we
usually
face
time
and
I
look
and
you
know
I
can
get
my
information,
but
this
one,
the
anatomy
of
the
of
the
the
little
boy
it's
you
know,
on
a
kinetic
hand,
basically
you
have
this
insert
that
goes
in
right,
but
his
hand
is
diagonally
shaped.
Okay,.
E
D
A
A
We
could
coordinate
a
call
for
that
right
and
we'll
see.
That's
just
again.
That's
just
a
very
first
test
hand.
We
know
it's
not
going
to
work,
but
it
will
just
like
we
were
talking
about
it'll,
give
us
very
valuable
feedback,
so
we
know
what
to
do
for
our
second
attempt,
which
has
a
chance
of
actually
working.
A
That's
how
these
things
go.
Let's
see
anyone
have
anything
else.
Oh
yes,
so
we
have
a
note
here
about
case
activity
in
india
and
there
is
an
update
there.
There's
been
some
email
activity.
John,
do
you
want
to
give
us
an
update
about
your
discussions
with?
I
don't
remember
his
name.
Sorry,
you
can
tell
us.
E
His
name
is,
and
he
is
the
one
of
the
two
leaders
of
makers-
asylum
in
india.
I
see
that
someone
from
maker's
asylum
is
also
on
giving
a
talk
about
resilience
at
maria's
event.
I
think
to
I
think
sunday,
but
weinbach
said
we
would
love
to
be
involved
in
that,
and
so
we
should
maybe,
after
sunday
schedule
a
meeting
to
just
see
what
it
would
take
to
kick
start
that
very
capable
team
and
review
the
opportunity
to
expand
in
india.
B
C
We've
been
working
with
maker's
asylum
for
ventilators
glitter
and
their
oxygen,
concentrator
and
they've
now
spun
up
chapters
or
groups,
at
least
all
across
the
country.
So.
E
Unable
to
get
in
india,
which
I
gather
they've
made
good
use
of
the
event
on
the
19th
is
called
october,
make
it's
sponsored
by
a
french
group.
It's
about
open
health
in
general
and
I'm
actually
on
the
agenda
to
give
a
talk,
not
about
a
naval
per
se.
Although
I
will
talk
about
enable
as
a
model
but
about
some
of
these
climate
issues
that
I'm
I'm
interested
in
the
title
is
roughly
breakthrough.
E
A
Excellent,
I
just
put
it
up.
We,
I
got
a
section
in
our
notes
here,
john
for
upcoming,
enable
events
kind
of
one
time.
Events,
if
you,
if
you
get
a
link
or
something
that
you
want
to
share,
let's
put
it
in
there
and
I'll
collect
these
events
as
we
come
across
them.
A
I
will
do
it
just
occurred
to
me
as
I'm
sitting
here
listening,
I
mean
under
now
that
we're
kind
of
on
the
topic
of
outreach
and
partnerships
and
there's
so
many
possible
collaborations.
But
here
today
we
have
a
representative
from
3d
crowd,
who
already
is
working
closely
with
maker's
asylum
and
maker's.
Asylum
has
expressed
interest
in
working
with
enable.
A
E
I
have
one
other
note
on
that
theme,
which
is,
I
found
a
really
good
website
this
morning
I
emailed
it
to
bannon
to
bob.
E
I
don't
have
it
in
front
of
me
right
now
called
the
diagram
project,
but
it's
all
about
3d
printing
tools
for
blind
people,
which
is
an
area
which
our
volunteers
could
jump
right
into
and
this
website
which
didn't
exist
three
years
ago,
when
I
was
trying
to
push
this,
has
got
a
number
of
projects
and
recipes
that
I
think,
would
be
natural
for
people
with
3d
printers
to
step
into
so
I'll.
Add
that
to
the
note
I
will
post
it
into
the
hub
as
with
so
many
other
things.
E
What
we
really
need
for
that
to
click
to
go
for
broke
would
be
an
able
volunteer,
who
has
some
connection
to
someone
with
visual
impairments
to
really
help
us
integrate
and
perhaps
add
that
as
another
branch
analogous
to
animal
prosthetics
and
that
it
doesn't
have
to
do
with
human
prosthetics,
but
it
still
does
has
to
do
with
3d
printing
for
a
system
to
me
it
seems
quite
promising
because
all
of
our
volunteers,
with
3d
printers,
I
think,
could
use
their
existing
skills
and
interests
to
help
another
interesting
population
and
I'll
point
out.
A
And
I
think
this
is
an
important
discussion
to
be
having
I'm
glad
that
kevin
is
here,
because
you
know
kevin.
I
know
you're
working
so
much
on
the
onboarding
process
and
it's
it's
important
to
understand,
even
though
a
lot
of
people
out
there
think
of
enable
as
the
place
to
do
3d
printed
prosthetics,
you
know
that
was
never
really
the
vision.
It's
always
the
idea
has
always
been
you
know,
collaborative
production
of
assistive
technologies.
A
Prosthetics
are
one
kind
of
assistive
technology,
but
tools
for
the
blind
tools
for
the
hearing,
impaired
tools,
for
you
know
the
masks
that
we
made
for
the
pandemic
face
shields,
there's
so
many
different
things
that
you
can
do
to
help
people
and
that's
really
what
we're
about.
So.
Just
keep
that
in
mind
when
you
think
about
that
onboarding
process
and
how
you're
helping
people
find
their
place
in
the
community
that
you
know
making
prosthetics
is
not
the
only
avenue.
That's
not
the
only
option
and
the
only
thing
that
we're
working
on.
B
A
quick
question:
I
know
we're
running
out
of
time
in
the
spirit
of
connecting
the
dots
stafford.
Can
you
share
your
email
in
the
chat?
It'd
be
great
to
be
able
to
follow
up
with
you
directly.
I
don't
know
if
anybody
else
has
your
email,
but
just
to
sort
of
keep
up
with
the
activities
going
on
with
enable
alliance.
B
Sure
no
problem
awesome.
Thank
you
and
share
a
chat
with
links
to
those
3d
printed
symbols
that
that
3d
crowd
has
made.
Those
are
awesome.