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From YouTube: Weekly e-NABLE Town Hall Meeting - November 5, 2021
Description
This is a recording of the weekly e-NABLE Town Hall meeting.
The notes/agenda document can be found here: https://bit.ly/e-nable-town-hall-notes
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Meeting ID: 738 892 697
Passcode: 885810
A
Should
be
up
and
running
now
it
says:
go
now
it
says:
we're
live
okay,
so
good!
Well,
happy
friday,
I
guess
welcome
back
to
another
town
hall
and
you
guys
seen
my
screen.
Yes,.
B
A
Well,
oh,
we
have
a
new
guest
with
us,
mrs
rubinstein,
oh
she's,
connecting
the
audio
give
her
a
second,
so
I
can
say
hello,
rubenstein
welcome.
Can
you
hear
us.
C
A
Of
you
to
jump
in
here
we're
actually
just
getting
started,
so
I
would
love
to
have
you
introduce
yourself
since
I
know
at
least
I
don't
know
you,
I
don't
know
if
the
others
here
do.
Maybe
we
could
just
do
that
real,
quick
first,
just
let
us
know
who
you
are
and
how
long
have
you
been
with
enable
and
anything
you're
hoping
to
you
know,
learn
or
or
get
out
of
this
meeting
here.
C
Well,
I
was
going
to
attend
the
education
meeting
on
monday,
but
I
teach
so
it's
in
the
middle
of
the
day,
so
I
had
a
little
bit
of
a
difficult
time,
but
I
have
the
recording.
I
am
not
a
chapter,
I'm
just
a
not
just.
I
am
a
technology
steam
teacher
in
new
jersey
and
I'm
looking
to
get
started
with
a
grant
that
a
student
and
I
wrote
for
education
foundation
to
participate
in
enable
I
have
two
3d
printers
and
I
don't
know
how
to
get
started.
C
A
Well,
you
first
of
all
welcome
and
we'll
do
everything
we
can
to
give
you
some
guidance
and
help
you
with
next
steps.
Here
I
will
say
that
you
have
already
zeroed
in
on
the
key
challenge
that
we've
been
dealing
with
for
quite
some
time,
which
is
that
we
we
have
more
volunteers
than
we
have
people
asking
for
devices,
and
so
that
has
been
a
struggle.
We
are
doing
a
number
of
things
to
address
that,
but
it's
going
to
take
time,
and
so
the
short
term
answer
is
basically
workarounds.
A
We're
going
to
recommend
that
you,
you
know,
look
within
your
own
community
and
you
know
schools
nearby.
You
are
a
good
source
because
there's
usually
one
or
two
students
in
any
given
school,
statistically
speaking,
that
have
a
limb
difference.
There's
you've
already
tried
reaching
out
to
some
of
your
local
chapters.
That's
another
thing
that
we
recommend
folks
what
else
other
recommendations
for
finding
people
to
work
with.
D
Well,
those
are
the
obvious
ones,
but
I
guess
I
would
point
out
that
we
have
found
that
the
learning
opportunities
don't
require
that
you
have
a
recipient.
There
are
a
number
of
ways
of
engaging
students
in
relevant
activities.
Even
if
you
don't
have
a
specific
recipient,
but
outreach
is
going
to
be
the
right.
The
right
solution.
A
So
let's
talk
about
the
other
side
of
that
real
quick,
because
there
are
many
other
ways
that
might
even
be
you
know
equally
relevant,
educationally,
for
example,
right
now
we're
working
on
building
out
an
upgraded
version
of
our
device
catalog,
which
is
going
to
have
all
kinds
of
additional
details
about
each
of
our
designs,
and
we
want
to
there's
going
to
be
when
we
roll
this
out,
there's
going
to
be
a
lot
of
blanks
of
pieces
of
data
that
we
don't
have.
A
How
strong
is
this
device
things
that
need
to
be
tested,
things
that
need
to
be
evaluated
and
looking
to
student
groups
to
do
things
like
that,
where
they
do
kind
of
quantitative
measurements,
build
testing
rigs
to
sort
of
you
know,
compare
different
aspects
of
these
designs,
things
like
that
would
be
tremendously
helpful
and
we
could
we
could
give
you
some
guidance
there.
We
also
have.
We
also
have
some
wonderful
educational
materials
that,
if
you
haven't
seen,
are
worth
looking
at,
we
have
in
the
hub.
Are
you
on
the
hub?
The
enable
hub.
A
That's
good
to
know,
and
that's
something
we're
working
on.
I
I
don't
know
how
much
this
will
help
I'll.
A
There's
a
link
list
on
the
left,
sidebar
and
that
link
list
includes
a
link
to
enable
education,
which
is
something
that
one
of
our
other
educator
volunteers
put
together.
It's
a
whole
set
of
curriculum
materials
by
grade
level.
That's
all
it's!
Not
only
you
know
making
hands
it's
it's
all
about
sort
of
design-oriented
thinking
and
empathy,
and
it's
you'll
you'll
have
to
look
at
it,
it's
wonderful
stuff.
A
So
I
think
those
will
give
you
some
good
places
to
at
least
start
looking
and
then
we
can
maybe
help
you
from
there
and
and
see
where
your
interests
lie
and
where
you
want
to
go.
Go
forward.
C
D
One
other
note,
karen
sorry
about
the
actual.
D
C
D
A
Okay,
well,
let's
move
on!
You
are
welcome
to
stay
with
us
as
long
as
you're
able
to
karen
these
meetings.
These
town
halls
are
really
kind
of
just
opportunities
for
us
to
sort
of
collect.
What's
going
on
out
there
in
the
community
share
some
of
those
best
practices
and
things
that
people
are
doing
as
well
as
talk
about
some
of
the
challenges
that
we
face
and
just
sort
of
you
know
work
together
about.
You
know
coming
up
with
ideas
of
how
we
might
address
some
of
those
challenges.
C
One
thing
that
was
suggested
to
me
by
the
chapter
that
I
had
reached
out
to
which
was
rutgers
university
that
may
be
coming
up
with
some
other
helpful
things
to
create
not
just
prosthetics
but
other
tools
for.
A
Absolutely
yeah,
absolutely
we,
you
know
the
original
vision
of
enable
was
always
broader
than
prosthetics.
It
was
always
assistive
technology
and
even
beyond
that,
really
it's
about
help
people
helping
people,
I
think-
and
so
there
is
a
whole
range
of
different
kinds
of
assistive
devices
and
there
are
some
good
sites.
A
We
can
point
you
to
that
already
have
some
good
collections,
things
for
the
the
hearing
impaired
for
the
the
the
blind,
for
you
know,
they're
all
all
kinds
of
different
types
of
assistive
tech
that
you
can
look
into,
so
I
definitely
would
encourage
that.
Can
anyone
think
of
places
we
can
point
her
to?
I
know
ikea
has
a
collection
and
I
can't
remember
what
they
call
it,
but
I'll
bet
you.
I
can
find
it
right.
Real,
quick,
ikea,
assistive
devices.
Let's
see
they
have
a
whole
website
there.
A
It
is
visibles,
so
they
have
a
site
called
visibles.
That
is
a
whole
catalog
of
assistive.
You
know
technology
for
making
it
easier
for
people
that
are
using
ikea
furniture
and
things
like
that.
So
that
might
be
a
place
where
you
find
some
ideas.
Anyone
else
know
of
other
places
like
this.
I
think
john,
you
were
looking
into
some
sites
that
collect
things
like
this.
D
E
A
A
E
A
So
when
you're,
when
you're
in
the
forum
right
here
at
the
top
there's
a
little
filter
button
there
and
you
can
just
use
this
to
filter
on
topics
and
look
at
assistive
technology
and
universal
designs
and
it'll
zero
in
on
all
those
posts
that
have
that
topic.
A
A
Absolutely
I
think
we
can
skip
the
action
items
except
for
one
which
is
ben.
I
do
need
your
help
coming
up
with
content
and
graphics
for
giving
tuesday
fundraiser
on
facebook.
If
you
don't
mind
great
and-
and
I
think
the
rest
of
this
can
wait.
E
We're
still
trying
to
figure
out
instagram
that
that'll
probably
be
part.
A
I
just
reached
out
to
jen
as
a
workaround,
so
we
don't
have
to
waste
any
more
time.
On
this.
I
asked
her
to
just
go
into
the
existing
account
change
the
password
to
something
that
we
can
share
with
you,
so
we're
gonna,
I'm
just
waiting
she's
two
hours
behind
so
I'll
probably
have
have
that
done
in
the
next
hour
or
so
for
you.
A
Okay,
so
won't
spend
any
time
on
the
metrics
I'll
just
pop
them
up
here,
nothing
out
of
the
ordinary
really,
so
I
think
we'll
just
move
on
five
thousand
two
hundred
and
one
enable
web
central
users
two
thousand
one
hundred
seventy
two
hub
users.
Those
are
the
key
numbers
all
right,
so
we've
got
a
lot
of
recurring
meetings
going
on
these
days
and
the
next
one
coming
up
is
the
chapters
leaders
meeting
on
monday.
A
That's
the
second
monday
of
each
month
at
12,
eastern,
so
chapter
leaders
hope
you'll,
be
able
to
join
that
next.
One
real
quick,
let's
just
remind
people
of
our
student
chapter,
networking
event
on
november
20th
ali.
You
want
to
give
us
a
quick
synopsis.
Very
quick,
please.
C
Yeah,
so
the
student
chapter,
networking
event
is
happening
virtually
on
zoom
on
saturday
november
20th,
it's
gonna
be
all
day.
The
chapters
are
interested
in
having
a
hybrid
version
of
the
event
they
can.
You
know,
get
together
in
person,
maybe
at
their
school
and
attend
virtually
that
way
and
we
decided
to
subsidize
pizza
parties.
So
if
I'm
up
to
five
dollars
a
person
so
yeah,
so
hopefully
we're
going
to
have
a
mixture
of
virtual
and
hybrid.
E
And
that's
actually
a
a
question:
it's
something
that
we
talked
about.
That
seemed
like
a
really
great
idea
to
encourage
teams
to
get
together
under
the
umbrella
of
their
school
and
sort
of
be
participating
in
a
group.
But
I
guess
that
would
be
maybe
a
vote
for
us.
Do
we
want
to
support
that
with
the
enable
fund
or
yeah.
A
I
think
it
let's
just
talk
about
a
limit
so
up
to
a
total
of
you
know.
How
much
are
you
guys
thinking?
I
don't
know
if
you
have
any
numbers
on
this
yet.
C
As
of
right
now,
not
many
people
are
aware
of
it
because
it
wasn't
on
the
original
registration
form,
but
chapter
wise.
We
have
under
20
people
signed
up
individuals.
C
A
D
You
know
it's
it's
really
hard
to
say
I
would
it's
only
going
to
go
to
people
who
show
up
at
the
meeting.
C
A
D
I
predict
it'll
be
a
few
hundred,
and
I
want
to
say
that
I
already
assured
ali
that
an
anonymous
donor
would
cover
this.
If
this
group
didn't
want
to.
A
A
A
Okay,
let's
move
on
because
there
are
two
things
I
need
john's
input
on,
one
being
infrastructure
related
and
the
other
being
outreach
related.
Let's
do
the
outreach
thing
first,
because
that's
one
that
you
are
working
on
john
and
I
just
wanted
to
get
an
update
from
you
on.
I
know
you're
working
on
stuff
in
india
and
working
with
some
of
these,
I
think
makers,
making
change
in
some
of
these
other
associated
groups.
Just
you
know,
what's
going
on
with
coalition
work.
D
So,
with
regard
to
india,
I
have
not
gotten
responses
secondary
responses
from
baibab
or
prashant.
I
need
to
ping
them
again.
I'm
I've
already
begun
that
email
now
with
regard
to
makers,
making
change
and
a
variety
of
groups
that
are,
you
know
now
sort
of
recognizing
the
more
general
opportunity
for
an
open
health
movement.
D
I'm
tapped
into
a
few
of
them.
I
have
forwarded
about
30
emails
from
this
alliance,
going
after
a
microsoft
grant
for
a
general
assistive
technology
database
and
platform.
D
I
forwarded
all
that
information
to
alexander
who
has
now
been
engaged
to
help
get
on
top
of
this
they're
now
scheduling
a
first
meeting.
I
just
alerted
alexander
to
that.
So
there's
a
lot
of
this
stuff
going
on.
As
you
know,
these
things
sort
of
percolate
and
take
time
and
then
suddenly
everyone
is
scrambling,
but
something's
actually
happening
we're
at
the
percolation
stage.
A
Okay,
all
right
good,
well
as
long
as
somebody's
keeping
an
eye
on
it.
I
think
that's
key
is
that
it.
You
know
just
takes
time,
so
I
I
would
like
to
talk
about
this
a
little
bit
and
john.
If
you
need
to
leave
before
we
get
to
this
discussion.
That's
fine,
because
you've
already
seen
what
I
want
to
talk
about
here,
we've
got
a
group.
That's
been
meeting
weekly
working
on
developing
a
new
design
that
we're
hoping
is
going
to
be
a
really
valuable
contribution
to
the
community.
A
We're
we're
really
trying
to
look
at
all
of
the
various
designs
that
the
community
has
come
up
with
so
far
and
kind
of
take
all
the
the
best
features
from
those
and
kind
of
combine
those
and
eliminate
some
of
the
weaknesses
we've
run
into
and
we're
really
striving
to
come
up
with
the
next
sort
of
go-to
design.
That's
our
goal
anyway!
I
don't
know
if
we'll
do
it,
but
so
far
we're
making
really
good
progress,
but
I
have
I
am
surprised
to
to
see
that.
A
So
as
we're
developing
this
new
design,
we're
trying
to
do
it.
The
the
very
first
thing
we
all
agreed
on
is
that
we
want
it
to
be
fully
parametric.
A
Now
I
don't
know
if
all
of
you
know
what
we
mean
by
that,
but
for
any
of
you
making
these
devices,
you
know
that
part
of
the
process
is
scaling
them
up
or
down
to
the
get
them
to
the
size
that
you
need.
Well,
when
you
take
all
of
these
stl
files-
and
you
just
say
you
scale
them
up-
which
is
usually
the
case-
usually
you're
going
from
100
scale
up
to
for
an
adult,
say,
150
percent
or
145,
or
something
like
that,
so
you're
going
much
larger.
A
But
when
you
scale
those
parts
up,
you're
also
scaling
up
the
screw
holes,
you're
scaling
up
the
cable
channels,
you're
scaling
up
all
those
little
gaps
between
the
moving
parts.
Everything
is
getting
scaled
and
when
you
design
something
parametrically
you're
able
to
scale
the
parts
in
a
way
that
certain
features
don't
scale,
so
the
gaps
between
moving
parts
stay
the
same,
the
screw
holes
stay
the
same.
The
channels
stay
the
same,
but
the
overall
bodies
themselves
can
be
scaled.
A
It's
a
very
powerful
thing
that
we've
never
really
been
able
to
do
fully
well
with
our
devices.
Some
have
done
it
partially,
but
never
fully
parametric.
So
we've
already
had
great
success
with
do
doing
that.
We've
come
up
with
almost
all
of
the
components
of
our
design,
modeled
parametrically,
but
then
we
start
looking
at
okay.
How
are
you
when
this
is
ready?
How
are
we
going
to
roll
this
out
to
the
community?
A
This
is
something
we've
really
struggled
with
for
weeks,
because
we're
working
in
at
least
our
our
best
candidate
was
onshape
as
a
cad
platform
and
part
of
the
reason
was
it
made
it
relatively
easy
to
go
in
and
enter
the
configuration
parameters
that
we
specify
the
measurements
and
then
have
it
scale
things,
and
then
you
can
export
stl,
but
the
more
we
looked
at
it,
the
more
we
kept
feeling
like.
Well,
you
know
we
put,
we
we
keep
using
you
bob
as
our
as
our
example.
We
keep
saying.
Well,
could
bob
rieger
do
this?
A
That's
what
we
want
something
that
somebody
could
really
easily
do
without
having
to
worry
about
complex
interface
and
stuff,
like
that
andrew
kaiser,
some
of
you
may
remember,
gave
a
presentation
a
while
back
on
anand
shape
to
help
us
understand
why
it's
a
powerful
platform
worth
looking
at.
A
He
came
in
here
through
our
friend
ward
holloway,
reached
out
to
him
and-
and
I
then
had
a
meeting
with
him
and
he
he
was
working
on
this
problem.
I
shared
the
challenge
with
him.
He
went
away
and
I
don't
know
it
was
like
a
week
later
or
something
ridiculous
like
that.
He
came
back
with
like
a
full
solution,
already
prototyped
and
it
blew
me
away.
So
what
he
came
up
with
is
essentially
this
idea
for
a
web
application.
A
It's
a
multi-tier
application,
so
there
would
be
a
front
end
that
the
user
would
use,
and
it
would
be
a
very
simple
front
end
that
I'll
show
you
in
a
minute
that
talks
to
a
back
end.
So
you
feed
the
measurements
to
this
back
end.
This
application
layer
takes
these
measurements,
feeds
it
to
the
api
for
on
shape
or
fusion
360..
A
We
think
now
we
can
do
both
and
generates
all
the
parametrically
scaled
files
zips
up
those
scaled
stl
files
and
gives
them
to
you
ready
to
use
it's
really
amazing,
and
so
he
he
gave
some
demos
of
this
and
I'm
not
going
to
show
you
the
whole
thing
but
like
over
here
on
the
left
side,
you
can
see
an
example
of
this
mobile
friendly
web
application,
where
there's
really
two
components:
there's
measurements
and
devices.
A
So
you
start
with
measurements,
and
the
idea
is
that
you
can
use
this
offline,
so
it
would
start
as
a
web
application
very
easy
to
get
started
just
rolling
this
out
as
a
web
application.
You
would
pull
up
in
your
browser
on
your
phone
or
whatever,
but
he's
doing
it
in
a
way
that
it
would
be
very
easy,
then,
as
a
next
step,
to
make
it
an
actual
native
smartphone
app.
A
So
this
would
be
an
app
that
we
could
have
in
the
apple
store
and
the
android
store
anybody
could
download
to
their
phone
and
it
works
offline.
So
you
go
out
in
the
field
these
places
where
they
don't
have
good
cell
coverage,
or
things
like
that.
You
go
out
in
the
field,
you
capture
your
measurements,
you
tap
to
get
a
new
measurement
and
it
would
be
a
wizard
that
would
walk
you
through
with
pictorial
guidance
of
exactly
where
to
take
measurements
and
what
measurements
to
capture
you
put
in
those
values.
A
And
then
you
come
back
where
you
have
connectivity
and
you
would
then
go
to
the
devices
tab
and
that's
where
you
would
see
all
the
different
designs
that
we
have
available,
and
these
would
be
the
designs
that
have
been
parametrically
modeled
and
will
add
to
that
catalog
over
time.
So
at
first
it'll
just
be
a
couple,
but
then
it'll
be
eventually
all
of
our
recommended
designs.
A
B
A
This
is
andrew,
the
guy
that
you're
seeing
up
here
in
the
corner,
he's
amazing.
I
mean
what
he
was
able
to
do
literally.
This
happened
within
a
week,
so
he's
now
going
to
just
click
to
say,
generate
stl
files
that
little
button
there
and
then
what
you'll
see
is
over
on
the
right
side.
Here,
you're
seeing
what's
happening,
it's
feeding
the
configuration.
It
basically
feeds
a
build
of
materials
to
the
onshape
api
and
you're.
A
Seeing
here
it's
saying,
exporting,
pin
one
exporting
pin
cx,
so
it's
exporting
all
those
files,
parametrically
scaled
and
as
soon
as
it's
done
here
in
a
couple
of
seconds,
it's
going
to
go
ahead
and
zip
up
all
those
files
and
it'll
pop
right
up
there.
It
is
pops
up
as
a
zip
file
ready
for
you
to
save
to
your
hard
drive
and
you're
ready
to
go
print,
and
when
you
open
all
those
files
they'd
be
laid
out
on
your
bed
oriented
properly.
A
I
mean
this
is
powerful,
stuff
and
he's
close
already.
Okay,
I
mean
we
have
azure,
we
have
the
hosting
environment.
There
is
always
done
so
far
is
a
very
basic
prototype.
So
there
is
more
coding
needed
in
order
to
get
us
to
a
minimum
viable
product,
what
we
call
just
something
to
basic
features
and
functionality.
A
We
really
want,
I
think,
to
be
going
this
direction
so
at
the
reason
I'm
bringing
this
up
here
is
because
andrew
estimates
that
for
what
he
has
in
mind,
he
thinks
it'll
take
50
to
200
development
hours
for
a
minimum,
viable
product,
and
he
probably
doesn't
have
time
to
do
this-
he's
working
on
building
a
new
business
right
now
and
he
might
help
to
direct
things,
but
he's
not
the
guy
to
do
the
work
he
doesn't
have
time
for
that.
A
I
think
this
is
a
very
worthwhile
project
for
a
lumio
proposal
and
I
wanted
to
just
get
you
guys
input.
I
know
this
is
really
just
high
level
at
this
point.
I
just
wanted
to
see
if
it
sounds
like
it's
worth
pursuing
and
of
course
there
will
be
lots
more
details
to
come,
but
I
think
this
is
worth
going
after
funding
for.
A
Well,
that's
tricky.
All
I
know
is
what
I
I've
been
using
a
guy.
That's
done
a
great
job
for
me
on
enable
web
central
and
I've
got
him
working
at
twenty
six
dollars
an
hour,
which
is
a
very
low
rate
for
a
skilled
developer.
But
you
know
because
I'm
just
doing
it
through
one
of
the
online
contracting
sites,
you
can
get
those
kinds
of
very
good
rates.
So
I
I
was,
I
don't
know,
maybe
others
have
better
ideas.
B
A
Well,
that's
for
the
that's
for
the
final,
like
adding
all
the
features
we
want.
I
think
it
might
even
be
make
more
sense
to
look
at
the
200.
So
if
we
wanted
to
just
fund
200
hours
times
25,
you
know
so
for
five
thousand
dollars,
or
so
we
could
develop
and
roll
out
a
minimum
viable
product
that
had.
B
A
Well,
maybe
that's
the
lumia
proposal
we
do
you
know.
Maybe
the
approach
is
that
we
lay
this
out.
We
kind
of
share
the
vision
of
why
we
think
there's
value
in
this.
We
explain
that
this
first
phase
requires
about
five
thousand
dollars
and
that
we
want
to
allocate
that
specific
money
that
we
already
have
committed
and
just
get
the
communities.
You
know.
A
Okay,
so.
E
Yeah,
it
sounds
like
the
next
step
would
be
making
illumio
proposal
and
sort
of
presenting
it
to
the
community.
It
seems
like
a
really
great
project
and
having
the
proposal
sort
of
frame
out
the
output
and
the
impact
would
be.
I
think
it's
probably
really
helpful
for
less
technical
folks.
That
would
would
be
interested
to
participate,
but
might
be
out
of
the
loop
in
terms
of
all
the
specifications
with
parametric
stuff.
A
Right,
yeah,
no,
and
we
are
going
to
the
main
thing
we're
actually
going
to
need
in
this
first
phase
is
a
front-end
person
we're
going
to
need
somebody
really
for
the
you
know,
kind
of
the
ux
and
design
side
of
things.
That's
what
we
I
think
we
can
probably
cover
all
the
back
end
coding,
but
if
there
are
any
volunteers
in
our
community
that
have
that
more
of
a
design,
kind
of
creating
user
interfaces
that
sort
of
experience
we
could
really
use
that
help.
A
A
No,
it
is
the
offline
portion
works
for
collecting
measurements,
so
you
collect
the
measurements
offline
and
then,
when
you
have
a
connection,
that's
when
you
would
generate
the
stl
files,
so
it
just
uses
you
know
when
it's
online,
it
uses
the
api
to
actually
feed
those
measurements
in
generate
the
stl
files
and
bring
them
back,
but
it's
the
capturing
measurements
in
the
field.
That
part
is
all
offline.
D
A
Yeah
so,
okay!
Well,
it
sounds
like
there's,
I'm
not
hearing
any
objections,
so
I'm
gonna
wait
big
a
little
while
only
because
andrew
is
just
now
confirming
that
I
just
we
just
found
that
there
is
a
similar
api
for
fusion
360.,
so
he's
just
confirming
that
he
can
easily
modify
his
code
so
that
we
can
pull
designs
either
from
on
shape
or
from
fusion
316.
We're
pretty
sure
we
can,
which
is
going
to
open
up
a
lot
more
design
freedom
for
our
community.
A
Because
then
all
we
have
to
say
is
look
build
your
designs,
parametrically,
either
in
fusion
360
or
in
onshape,
and
then
let
us
know
when
they're
ready
and
we
can
plug
them
into
the
app.
So
as
soon
as
we
have
confirmation
that
that
will
work.
I
will
have
andrew
ask
andrew
to
help
me
to
put
together
this
proposal,
and
you
know
we'll
put
some
screenshots
and
make
it
really
easy
to
understand,
and
I
I'm
pretty
confident
we'll
have
support
on
this.
A
So
great.
I
will
follow
up
with
him.
I
don't
have
any
updates
on
this
new
matching
platform
from
enable
france,
and
I
definitely
would
like
somebody
to
help
with
this.
Also.
This
is
another
area
that
maybe,
since
I
know
we
have
mastery
watching.
This
is
a
good
time
to
be
mentioning
this.
A
So
I
have
a
copy
of
the
source
code
for
this
new
platform
that
the
folks
in
france
developed
it's
developed
to
run
on
wordpress
with
php,
and
I
have
all
the
files,
but
I
the
sites
that
I
have
available
for
testing,
I'm
hosting
on
a
service
called
pressable.
It's
a
hosted,
a
managed
wordpress
hosting
service,
so
I
can
ftp
in
and
get
all
the
wordpress
files,
but
they
don't
make
available
all
of
the
system
level
directories.
A
It's
only
the
wp
content
directory
and
I'm
having
trouble
figuring
out
how
to
kind
of
translate
which
files
go
where
and
you
know,
then
I
have
to
import
the
database
and
it's
just
it's
a
little
bit
beyond
me
at
a
systems
level.
So
I
don't
know
if
that's
something
you're
familiar
with
masby
or
if
there's
somebody
else
out
there.
That
is
a
sort
of
a
wordpress
systems,
kind
of
a
person,
but
right
now
I'm
a
bit
stuck
on
that
getting
that
up
and
running.
A
I
don't
have
anything
else
here
on
infrastructure
related
stuff.
Does
anybody
else
have
anything
any
issues
or
things
that
you
need
to
talk
about
related
to
our
our
online
infrastructure.
E
I
can
share
something
actually,
especially
with
with
masby
on
the
call
we've
got
the
november
20th
event
coming
up,
and
one
of
the
things
that
mazzy's
going
to
be
working
on
is
sort
of
a
prototype
that
the
shell
of
the
chapter
management
toolkit
for
the
hub,
so
that
I
think,
would
be
it's
an
exciting
moment
to
be
able
to
with
participants
in
the
event
to
be
able
to
try
some
of
that
out
and
maybe
even
get
some
direct
user
feedback
specifically
from
chapters
that
are
not
so
we
don't
have
that
many.
E
Actually,
we
don't
have
any
educational
chapters
in
our
chapter
spotlight
series
so
we'll
be
able
to
get
more
detailed
information,
hopefully
on
pages
that
they
edit
themselves
it'll
be
a
much
more
sustainable
process
to
to
have
that.
So
so
that's
coming
up-
and
I
know
mazzy's
had
a
lot
of
stuff
going
on.
It
sounds
like
he's
been
sick
too.
So
I
hope
he's
feeling.
C
E
And
whatever
we
have,
we
can
share
with
the
community,
then,
even
if
it's
a
an
unfinished
work
in
progress,
I
think
it's
going
to
be
a
really
big
contribution
to
more
transparency.
E
In
the
past,
we've
talked
about
the
chapter
map
as
being
something
that
it's
hard
to
know
right
now,
who
the
active
chapters
are
and
who,
which
chapters
are
up
there,
but
you
know
maybe
have
faded
out,
so
this
new
process
will
make
it
much
easier
to
have
current
information
and
to
be
able
to
recognize
active
chapters.
C
A
C
A
A
A
Oh
no,
so
I
I
remember
now
it
was
just.
I
wasn't
quite
sure
how
to
put
it
on
the
forum.
What
I,
what
I
wanted
to
say
is
that
if,
if
needed,
I'm
happy
to
give
a
presentation
related
to
some
of
the
online
resources
that
we
have
available
for
chapters
to
help
with
collaboration,
you
know
I
I
handle
a
lot
of
the
infrastructure
stuff.
A
So
if
it
would
be
helpful
at
some
point
to
have
somebody
give
a
you
know
an
overview
of
some
of
the
tools
that
we
have
available
and
the
platforms
and
what
they
have
available
I'd
be
happy
to
do
that.
You
guys
might
already
have
that
covered.
Maybe
ben
is
going
to
show
that
or
something
that's
fine.
You
know
I
just
wanted
to
let
you
know
that
I'm
available
if
needed,
that
was
all.
A
Yeah,
okay,
so
I
think
we'll
move
on
here
from
infrastructure.
The
next
topic
we
have
here
is
fundraising,
so
I
don't
have
alexander
with
us
today,
but
he
is
currently
working
on
what
we
talked
about
last
time,
which
is
kind
of
gathering
and
reviewing
all
the
information
that
we
have
about
this
initiative.
A
There's
a
collaborative
kind
of
a
group:
that's
come
together,
calling
themselves
ico,
create
that's
going
after
a
relatively
large
microsoft
grant,
and
so
alexander
is
helping
to
sort
of
summarize
and-
and
you
know,
dissect
all
that
information-
there's
lots
of
emails
and
documents
to
go
through
so
he's
helping
us
to
go
through
that
and
determine
if
it's
worth
pursuing
and
we'll
get
a
summary
from
him
soon.
A
A
I
think
we
already
mentioned
this,
but
giving
tuesday
is
coming
up.
That's
november
30th
and
we
do
want
to
run
a
fundraiser
on
facebook,
so
ben's
gonna
help
me
come
up
some
content.
I
see
here
that
we
talked
about
a
fundraising
goal
of
five
thousand
dollars
last
time.
A
I
guess,
and
so
we
just
need
to
come
up
with
some
language
and
probably
like
a
banner
graphic,
and
I
can
very
quickly
get
that
up
and
running
when
we
have
the
the
stuff
to
do
that-
and
I
did
just
want
to
remind
anybody
here
or
watching
that
we
have
a
few
spools
of
antibacterial
pla
filament.
That
was
donated,
and
I
have
these
sitting
here,
ready
to
send
anywhere
needed
where
they
can
be
put
to
good
use.
A
So
it
is
a
pla-based
material,
probably
not
the
best
choice,
to
make
a
whole
device
out
of
it's
very
expensive
material
anyway.
So
I'm
thinking
it
might
make
really
good
sense
to
make
some
kind
of
a
lining
or
something
like
that.
It
would
probably
something
custom,
but
you
know
there's
some
interesting
things
you
could
do
with
using
this
for
certain
components
where
there's
skin
contact
and
things
like
that.
A
So
if
anybody
has
a
good
idea
of
how
to
put
these
materials
to
use
these
are
all
1.75
millimeter,
I
just
figured
that
most
people
are
probably
using
that
size.
So
that's
what
I
have
in
these
three
different
colors.
Let
me
know
if
anybody
can
make
good
use
of
these
and
it's
yours.
E
I
can
share
my
screen
and
give
you
guys
an
overview
I
did
hear
back.
There
was
some
specific
stuff
I
wanted
to
try
to
collect
for
fedora,
mostly
because
it's
a
little
bit
more
than
a
one
page
that
we
want
to
be
able
to
share
with
them
in
the
financial
side
of
things.
So
I
did
update
that
this
morning.
E
This
is
mostly
just
just
to
get
some
feedback
for
design,
but
it
it's
simple.
I
it's
similar
to
the
one
pager.
It's
got
a
little
cover.
It's
got.
Contents.
We've
got
the
same
three
sections
that
you'll.
E
A
E
Well,
it's
it's
two
reasons
really
one
is
they
just
need,
probably
more
information,
a
one
pager
doesn't
really
give
them
so
much
detail
on
where
their
contribution
went
and
the
projects
that
that
happened,
and
specifically
with
dora,
because
their
focus
is
they're,
really
interested
in
national
projects
and
they're
really
interested
in
sort
of
the
the
arts.
So
I
tried
to
cater.
E
And
crafts
right
and-
and
I
think
you
know
it's-
it's
definitely
something
that
we're
doing
so.
I
did
break
it
out
in
those
three
categories.
That
was
something
that
you
know
looking
at,
like
maple,
france's
annual
reports,
they
do
a
really
beautiful
job.
I
mean
they've
got
a
very
professionally
done
annual
report
and
they
basically
broke
it
down
to
these
categories.
In
a
nutshell,
so
I
sort
of
just
modeled
it
on
that,
but
similar
summary
at
the
top
and
then
sort
of
a
breakout
of
five
different
community
projects.
E
So
I
covered
animal
prosthetics,
the
new
community
meetups
that
we've
done,
which
is
now
between
85
and
90,
that
we've
we've
archived.
I
have
a
section
here
about
expanding
our
awareness
through
art,
centers
and
museums.
E
You
know
again
catering
a
little
bit
to
dora,
but
having
some
links
in
here
with
the
western
arts
center
and
the
franklin
institute
john
and
I
co-presented
at
the
westin
art
center
and
innovation
center
in
boston,
and
I
gave
a
shout
out
specifically
to
them,
then
there's
a
brand
nice
university
internship
program
not
to
kevin
and
ally
and
at
the
end
I
put
a
little
shout
out
to
the
open
source
technology
towards
the
pandemic
as
just
sort
of
a
community
effort.
E
E
Alexander
has
begun
doing
these
sort
of
curated,
open
source
device,
catalog
updates
and
then
mike
larson,
not
a
project
that
we
funded
but
is
featured
in
the
fall
newsletter
and
has
been
working
on
sort
of
several
different
community
events.
Sort
of
underneath
the
initial
project
of
reviewing
and
providing
feedback
device,
user
feedback.
E
And
then
the
addendum
right
now
is
just
sort
of
a
a
detailed
look
at
how
we
came
up
with
the
community
projections.
We
did
go
through
a
bunch
of
sort
of
iterations
on
that,
and
this
is
loosely
well.
It's
not
lucy
based
it's.
I
used
the
goldman
sachs
proposal
process
and
then
tried
to
refine
it
a
little
bit.
I've
mentioned
it
in
emails,
but
making
the
projections
in
the
bottom.
Third.
E
So
basically
it's
a
it's
not
finding
an
average,
but
it's
an
average
of
an
average
that
gives
us
the
bottom
third,
which
is
a
more
conservative
estimate
of
devices
delivered,
and
you
know,
members
and
again
we're
using
a
small
amount
of
data.
You
know
five
percent
of
total
chapters
in
our
chapter
spotlights
but
32
percent
of
total
chapters
in
our
last
audit
and
then
using
both
of
those
together
to
come
up
with
these
projections.
So
that's
what
I've
got
it's
right
now,
it's
just
a
couple
pages.
B
E
B
B
You
know
I'll
I'll,
send
a
personal
note
to
bob
and
joe
lee
and
say:
hey:
we've
had
a
great
year
yeah,
as
you
can
see
from
the
attachment,
and
we
have
great
plans
and
jeremy.
I
might
include,
as
part
of
the
plans,
exciting
new
way
of
engaging
our
volunteers
with
higher
technology
ability
to
measure
and
and.
A
A
B
E
Do
yeah
heads
or
tails
I
mean
I'm
just
filling
in
the
new
numbers
at
this
point
I
can
get
you
something
I
can
get
you
what
I
have
now
by
the
end
of
today,
and
you
can
look
through
it
more
closely
and.
E
If
we
want
to
add
in
sometimes
an
annual
report,
they'll
be
sort
of
a
final
page
that
you
know
it's
not
really
forecasting
for
the
next
year.
But
it's
you
know,
restating
the
mission.
You
know
maybe.
E
B
A
A
Yeah
yeah,
I
just
got
to
figure
out
how
to
explain
that
succinctly.
I
mean
I'm
thinking
in
terms
of
the
people
that
are
assembling
these
devices,
there's
a
lot
of
challenges,
if
they're
not
being
scaled
parametrically,
and
so
this
is
going
to
make
it
easier,
and
I
got
to
think
about
how
to
how
to
word
it.
But
I
will
try
to
get
you
something
well.
E
And
I
think
really
for
that
final
page
restating
our
mission
and
then
maybe
having
a
couple
sort
of
key
development
areas
related
to
infrastructure.
I
mean
that,
could
we
could
give
a
little
nod
to
the
work
that
masby's
been
building
up
towards.
We
can
give
a
nod
to
this
project
that
you
guys
have
already
started
with
the
parametric
application.
E
You
know,
I
think
I
think,
there's
things
that
we
can
safely
identify
that
have
started
already
that
are
going
to
be
developed
into
2022,
and
I
think
that
would
be.
You
know
bob's
right.
We
do
want
to
make
it
seem
like
their
their
money
is.
A
Guys
something
something
that
we
haven't
talked
about-
that's
really
timely.
Actually
is
we
really
should
be
starting
to
talk
about
next
year,
being
our
10-year
anniversary
and
doing
some
kind
of
a
really
big
conference
around
that?
That
would
be
something
for
some
of
that
funding
to
help
with
yeah.
We
really
haven't
talked
about
any
10-year
anniversary
plans.
We
really
ought
to
start
thinking
about
that.
A
It
would
have
to
be
something
that
I
think
we
organize
and
I
that's
why
I'm
very
interested
to
see
how
the
20th
goes,
because
I
think
that's
a
great
model
for
a
hybrid
kind
of
event,
which
is
what
I
have
in
mind.
So
I
think
we'll
probably
you
know,
learn
from
that
and
then
copy
that
and
maybe
improve
upon
it.
But
I
I.
B
E
And
I
think
you
know,
ironically,
this
is
sort
of
the
first
attempt
at
something
that
is
less
wild-ass
guesses
and
more
has
some
logic
behind
it.
E
I
think
more
than
anything
else,
it's
going
to
be
it
might
guide
us
into
next
year,
of
which
numbers
are
important,
that
we
can
be
collecting
to
have
sort
of
a
more
refined
projections,
and
I
do
think
we
do
have
something
to
work
with
it's
going
to
be
more
precise
as
we
get
better
data
and
the
chapter
management
tool
at
masby's
building,
you
know,
even
if
it
doubles
the
participation
that
would
be
huge
now.
E
You
know
that
the
audits
that
that
we've
sort
of
modeled
out
can
sort
of
all
converge
into
a
newer,
more
sort
of
automated
system,
basically.
A
Okay,
so
I
just
want
to
say
hello,
real
quick
to
I
just
want
to
say
hello
to
warden
alexander
who
joined
us
we're
just
catching
up
on
chat
here.
I
guess
the
the
time
zone
change
for
you,
alexander.
B
Your
your.
B
Could
join
too
great
job
ben
and
yeah
we'll
get
it
out
to
the
door
by
the
middle
of
next
week
and
I'll.
Take
a
look
at
what
you
send
me
great.
E
A
Well,
we're
coming
up
on
the
end
of
our
time
here.
Let's
just
talk
real
quick
about
anything
case
related
either
animal
or
human
case
related
anything
to
share
or
anything
going
on
that
we
need.
B
B
B
A
Got
it
okay,
and
I
I
just
learned
from
in
the
chat
alexander
apparently
has
something
to
share
on
some
work
he
did
for
our
thesis.
If
you
don't
mind
bob,
let
me
cut
over
to
him.
Yes,
before
we
run
out
of
time,
just
you
want
to
share
your
screen.
Alexander.
A
F
F
E
A
A
F
It's
3d
printed.
I
can
actually
show
you.
A
F
Thanks,
let
me
see
where
I've
put
it,
so
the
current
design
is
still
missing
some
things.
If
you
put
enough
pressure
on
it,
the
top
part
will
start
moving
about
okay,
but
otherwise
this
is
a
pretty
decent
device.
D
A
A
C
A
F
Yeah,
probably
granted
in
this
application,
there
was
no
point
for
the
string
because
it
was
cutting
onto
his
skin,
so
we
ended
up
using
velcros
anyway,
because
okay,
it
was
sitting
better
on
the
arm,
so
those
ratchets
aren't
actually
helping.
A
F
So
basically,
the
kid
came
to
me
because
out
of
the
five
nerves
that
are
supposed
to
control
his
left
arm,
only
three
are
still
working.
Two
of
them
were
plucked
directly
from
his
spine
and
cannot
be,
cannot
be
put
back
and
because
of
that
he
has
no
control
over
his
wrist
at
all.
Like
it,
the
hand
is
flopping
around,
he
has
no
control
over
the
pinky
or
the
ring
finger,
and
he
can
only
move.
He
can't
he
doesn't
have
radial
radial
movement
as
in
the
wrist,
doesn't
actually
turn.
A
F
The
elbow
is
limited
at
90
degrees,
so
from
all
the
way
down
to
90
degrees.
That
works
just
fine,
but
he
cannot
turn
his
wrist
with
the
radial
movement
and
he
can't
pull
his
elbow
any
more
than
90
degrees.
So
that
was
out
of
the
question
really
quickly
and
once
I
got
talking
to
him
turns
out.
He
needs
this
for
actually
holding
on
to
the
papers.
When
he's
writing
in
school
and
being.
D
A
F
It's
it's
what
he
wanted
and
what
he
actually
needed
more
than
an
expensive
and
probably
very
bad
exoskeleton.
A
A
I
think
we
we
actually
need
to
start
wrapping
we're
at
the
top
of
the
hour
here.
Thanks
for
the
show
and
tell
alexander
anybody
else,
have
anything
real
quick
before
we
wrap.
E
Okay,
bob's
already
left
us,
but
I
I
did
send
an
email
to
try
to
get
the
numbers
for
our
chapters
to
see.
If
we
can
update
our
chapter
list,
I
might
also
send
it
to
you,
jeremy.
If
I
haven't
already
to
see,
we
want
to
check
how
recently
they've
been
active.
A
Final
reminder,
then
monday:
we've
got
our
chapter
leaders
round,
table
12,
eastern
and
then
of
course,
november
20th.
We've
got
our
big
student
chapter
event.
So
don't
forget
those
all
right
thanks.
Everyone
see
you
next
week.