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From YouTube: OSE Developer - Jon Takacs Work Plan Meeting
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A
A
But
one
of
the
things
we're
developing
is
there's
an
open
Enterprise
on
a
3d
printer,
meaning
that
people
get
to
collaborate
kind
of
like
an
and
what's
known
as
distributed
distributive
enterprise,
where,
unlike
normal
capitalism,
which
tries
to
knock
people
out
of
business
as
a
way
to
succeed
here,
we're
saying
we're,
gonna
get
everybody
to
collaborate
and
we
encourage
others
to
take
our
assets
and
replicate
the
business
and
that's
the
way
that
we
actually
grow.
A
A
We
want
to
put
up
with
the
competitive
waist
or
just
the
constant,
reinventing
the
wheel
instead
of
innovation,
so
innovation,
as
opposed
to
just
trying
to
make
a
living,
liberating
the
time
away
from
competitive
waste
to
innovation
and
then
actually
pursuing
what
we
want
to
do
as
human
beings
I
mean
that's
kind
of
the
greater
vision,
but
we're
saying
okay
well,
why?
Why
not
get
together
with
a
number
of
collaborators
developing
advanced
open-source
assets,
their
help,
help
and
move
everybody
along,
so
that
anyone
can
run
it?
A
So,
for
example,
the
3d
printer
we've
been
working
on
it
on
our
own
design
for
about
a
year
over
a
year
now,
now
we've
got
a
decent
product
and
it's
time
to
get
that
to
market
all
the
values
created.
The
point-of-sale
is
one
of
my
big
learnings,
as
as
I
transitioned
from
the
vision
to
execution,
meaning
that
you
know,
what's
the
actual
product
that
you're
offering
to
people,
can
people
actually
take
it
on?
A
Can
lively
hoods
be
made
because
that's
the
way
that
we
can
bootstrap
the
the
project,
we're
saying
the
only
way
we're
gonna
go
just
like
Linux
Linux
grew
because
a
lot
of
people
pretty
soon
after
Linux
was
developed.
People
could
take
on
jobs
as
programmers
and
so
forth.
You
a
lot
of
people
claim
all
it
was
all
this
voluntary
work.
It's
not
I
mean
it's
not
the
only
way.
You're
gonna
grow
that
to
a
billion
dollar
movement
like
Linux
is
that
there's
gonna
have
to
be
livelihood
involved
and
we're
trying
to
say
well.
A
What
does
that
look
like
for
for
the
hardware
world,
where
it's
much
more
compact
rying
to
ship
products?
Well,
fortunately,
in
a
digital
economy,
a
lot
of
these
aspects
can
be
digitized
shared
collaborated
and
when
you
digitize
them,
they
become
scalable
and
more
people
can
participate
with
the
goal
of
reducing
the
waste
and
and
improving
innovation
all
together.
So
that's
that's.
The
vision
of
the
open-source
economy
and
our
humble
experiment
right
now
is
to
start
with.
Ok,
let's,
let's
experiment
on
this
with
a
3d
printer,
take
the
design
a
website.
A
People
can
run
workshops,
there's
various
various
elements
of
this
enterprise,
so
actually
no
John,
I
won't
actually
start
like
I
was
reading
a
book
on
Amazon
and
and
the
way
they
do
their
project
teams
and
what
I
like
to
do
is
adapt
their
Amazon
team
model
where
they
actually
start
with
a
press
release
and
they
work
backwards
from
ok,
imagine
this
is
our
product,
so
it
forces
you
to
get
absolute
clarity
on
what
you're
offering
and
then
we
go
back
to
making
all
those
steps
happen.
A
A
Into
the
chat
you
can
see,
it
take
a
look
at
that
go
into
the
the
website
idea,
so
we're
talking
about
a
website
as
a
way
to
market
product,
but
but
ok,
let's,
let's
think
about
what
this,
what
this
press
release
would
look
like.
So
you
know
what
are
what's
the
clarity
on
a
product
that
we're
trying
to
offer
so
so
you
kind
of
have
to
speak,
boldly
and
present
the
good
vision
so
that
people
can
join
you.
So,
ok,
so
I'm
thinking
of
something
like
Aussie
launches.
First
open
franchise
right
world.
A
This
is
a
future
press
release.
This
has
not
happened
yet
this
is
gonna
happen.
Some
of
the
assets
I'm
discussing
here
are
not
built
yet,
but
here's,
the
vision
policy
announces
the
launch
of
its
first
open-source
franchise.
This
is
just
a
quick
first
cut
that
I
did
and
we
can
refine
us
and
just
just
get
a
starting
point.
Open
franchise
or,
more
specifically,
a
distributive
enterprise
is
a
collaborative
enterprise.
That's
stent
that
stands
proprietary
development
on
its
head.
A
The
open
franchise
actively
seeks
to
train
others
to
replicate
its
business,
aiming
to
put
itself
out
of
work.
Paradoxically,
Allah
si
has
shown
that
such
busy
business
model
allows
for
strophe
strong
growth
of
the
enterprise,
even
though
encourages
others
to
clone
it.
The
ideas
that
OSE
opens
its
boundaries
to
collaboration
and
creating
marketable
assets
based
on
its
open
source
work.
A
This
enterprise,
the
current
enterprise,
is
a
3d
printer
business,
with
several
elements
from
selling
kits
to
organizing
extreme,
build
workshops,
selling
information
products,
3d
printing
services
like
an
online
service
books
and
other
swag.
So,
according
to
the
founder,
this
is
the
purest
form
of
free
enterprise
beyond
capitalism
and
socialism.
By
focusing
on
zero
barriers
to
entry,
creative
talents
are
unleashed
for
livelihood
based
on
purpose
for
benefit
rather
than
profit.
A
The
enterprise
focuses
on
social
production,
the
experience
economy,
zero
inventory,
outsource,
fulfillment
business,
automation
that
allows
collaborators
to
focus
on
innovation
rather
than
marketing
and
sales.
We're
essentially
collaborating
on
all
the
marketing
and
sales
and
product
development
aspects.
The
goal
is
to
empower
millions
of
people
to
free
themselves.
A
Most
fundamental
aspect
is
the
open
source
product
design
where
world
world
worldwide
contributors
develop
and
test
test
products
with
freecad
as
a
core
design
tool
and
extreme
manufacturing
is
the
key
prototyping
tool.
Free
CAD
is
the
open
source,
3d
CAD
package
and,
with
the
support
of
part,
libraries
and
design
guides,
a
number
of
the
individuals
are
able
to
collaborate
after
a
brief
onboarding
training
period,
every
90
day,
development
cycle,
at
least
one
new
product
is
added
to
the
OSE
product
line
fully
documented
free
to
clone.
A
Entrepreneurs
are
allowed
to
clone
products
independently
or
they
can
get
OSE
certification
to
become
qualified
producers
of
goods
and
services.
For
example,
someone
who
is
trained
and
certified
in
running
extreme
build
workshops
may
be
hired
by
OSA
to
run
run
them
under
OSE,
or
they
can
run
them
on
their
own.
Using
the
OSE
brand
agreement,
extreme
manufacturing
works
up
to
our
one
day
build
events
in
which
a
number
of
3d
printers
are
built.
A
In
a
single
day,
people
show
up
to
a
build
event:
they
pay
a
workshop
fee
and
if
they
pay
for
the
materials
they
also
get
to
take
a
completed
3d
printer
home
OSE
had
has
demonstrated
such
regular,
build
events,
dot
dot
dot.
So
that's
that's
as
far
as
I
got,
but
basically
that's
that's
kind
of
like
the
big,
the
small
big
picture
for
now
with
this
collaborative
development.
What
are
your
thoughts
on
all
this?
Well.
B
But
it's
like
Linux
I
mean
I,
you
can
date
it
a
lot.
He
kind
of
elaborate
on
Linux.
Before
of
it.
Watts
one
person
comes
down
the
Prophet
everyone
else.
Any
advancements
made
on
the
product,
so
everyone
gets
men
coming
cure.
Clearly,
yeah.
B
Everyone
benefits
from
any
advancement
you
make
everyone
else
benefits
from
the
same
advancements
forth,
so
you
kind
of
become
one
entity
pushing
over
anyone
else
that
replicates
off.
They
can
choose
to
okay,
they
can
open
source,
they
can
go
their
own
way
or
they
can
become
stagnant.
It
could
always
they
can't
choose
to
close
source
it
because
of
the
licensing
model
of
an
open
source.
B
Like
you
know,
maybe
it
was
like
a
giant
company
calm
like
Nestle,
or
something
like
that.
Well,
they
have
a
whole
bunch
of
branches.
We
have
all
these
people
they're
doing
their
own
things,
they're
innovating,
to
provide
their
own
methods,
their
own
people,
their
own
knowledge,
your
world
experiences,
their
own
professionals
and
they're
all
driving
the
product
Ford
and
essentially,
when
it
with
an
open-source
product.
B
Like
this,
you
really
quickly
become
a
huge
force,
pushing
the
product
forward
and
creating
a
larger
market
by
merging
all
that
collaborative
effort
together,
yeah,
that's
where
I
really
see
the
strength
than
this
is
that
you
people
think:
okay,
yeah,
you,
like
you
said
you
know
it
seems
that
you
might
destroy
it
because
you're
telling
everyone
hey.
This
is
how
you
build
our
stuff.
Well,
the
license
is:
don't
make
a
food
source.
B
Okay,
you
differentiate
it
and
haggle
with
us
and
keep
pushing
it
forward
and
benefit
from
all
those
iterations,
as
a
council,
like
you
mentioned,
would
be
produced
to
maintain
cohesion
between
all
entities
and
identify
different
entities
out
there.
Like
the
program
you
mentioned,
making
this
Moodle
certify
partner,
someone
who
is
consistently
providing
good
results
towards
the
community
as
a
whole,
who's.
B
Be
a
huge
benefit,
see
I'm
moving
with
this
platform
this
product,
and
we
have
some
basic
space
here.
We
have
new
house
that
used
to
be
a
ceramic
studio
that
they,
the
old
families,
use
very
makes
classes
out
of
it
and
I'm
starting
to
get
a
welding
equipment,
all
the
rest,
hoping
to
sort
of
build
products
like
this.
To
the
you
know,
farming
community
around
you
know
up
Orange,
County,
Ohio
and
start
to
introduce
these
kind
of
designs.
Yet
others
to
realize.
B
B
A
Okay,
yeah
yeah,
alright,
so
so
you're,
basically
you're
self-employed
right
now
you
do
pretty
much
web
design.
Marketing
video.
B
A
A
B
B
Ultrasonic
flow
meters
that
controls
and
before
that
I
started
up
a
company
in
a
Lakeland
Florida
for
three
years
after
graduating,
from
UT
and
once
cargo
aware
uses
phased
array,
radar,
antennas,
attract
RFID
tags
and
product
and
another
one
was
the
metric
which
is
used
to
track
to
the
cannabis
and
everything
grown
in
Colorado.
So
the
v8
track
of
everything
there
have
moved
up
here,
your
family
again
and
you
know,
start
something
start.
Some
business
learn
more
about
systems,
engineering,
okay,.
A
B
Kind
of
stuff
yeah
guys
cuz
I
am
me
when
we've
got
collaborated
before
I
mean
I
was
interested
in
starting.
You
have
some
of
that
stuff
locally.
Well,
but
I'm,
not
a
hundred
percent,
the
marketing
guy
more
about
engineering
but
yeah.
A
A
B
Far
as
open
source
I've
just
done
a
3d
printers,
they
have
several
RepRap
sand.
Delta
3d
printers
at
my
house
and
I
work
that
project
you
really
contribute,
but
just
passively
hey,
I,
see
something
and
build
it.
But
as
far
as
that
I'm
you
know.
I'm
a
professional
I
have
a
patent
pending
on
somebody.
Trans
queer,
don't
sell
Carlinhos
and
open-source
Hardware
Allah
much
:
computer
mechanical
design.
Engineer.
B
B
B
That's
a
couple
wheelchair
motors,
Raspberry
Pi
and
you
know
with
links
in
and
a
laptop,
which
shows
us
some
of
the
processing
and
I'm
having
that
it's
in
the
it's
in
development,
but
hoping
to
have
that
move
around
and
build
off
of
all
the
stuff
I've
done
and
gazebo,
because
our
us
has
nice
like
stimulated
to
button
bar.
B
B
Yeah
very
cool
robots
in
need
of
stuff,
so
I
mean
I'm,
just
kind
of
a
jack-of-all-trades
guys
robotics
engineer.
I
know
you
know,
controls
engineering,
you
know
industrial
controls,
ain't
for
city
of
Cleveland,
the
wastewater
treatment
plant
I
run.
You
know,
Alan
Bradley,
all
the
control,
Alan
Bradley,
Siemens,
PLC
programming
and
ladder
logic
for
in
PID,
loops
for
incinerators,
hydraulics
controls
and
programming
the
whole
deal.
B
A
B
B
B
A
B
A
A
A
B
A
Yeah
yeah,
that's
exactly
that's
exactly
what
we're
doing.
I'm
gonna
probably
get
out
back
to
the
torch
table,
which
is
based
on
a
D
3d
platform,
our
3d
printer,
the
same
kind
of
motion
system,
I'm
gonna,
get
back
to
that.
I
was
actually
looking
doing,
starting
that
again
in
a
week
that's
kind
of
been
on
hold
since
it's
been
really
cold
in
a
really
cool
back
here.
B
B
A
Cuz,
you
know
I
mean
there's
as
far
as
the
full
product
release
I
mean.
There's
a
lot
of
elements
like
one
one
of
the
elements,
there's
an
actual
design
platform
within
freecad
that
one
of
our
guys
started
it
yeah,
but
just
basically
started
it.
There's
another
guy
on
our
team
working
on,
for
example,
a
PVC
pipe
and
fittings
library
which
would
actually
allow
you.
If
you
wanted
to
build
the
frame
out
of
PVC.
You
could
build
out
of
that.
A
B
C
A
Yeah
yeah,
no
I'm
thinking
we
won't
be
the
best
thing
to
do.
I
mean,
are
you
excited
about
working
on
on
a
workbench
within
free,
CAD
or
I
mean
cuz,
because
actually,
as
far
as
designing
see,
the
thing
is,
as
you
said,
in
the
construction
set
approach,
if
you
can
modify
all
the
parts
to
make
larger
and
smaller
printers,
you
can
do
build
whatever
size
you
like.
That's
that's
the
true
beauty
of
it.
It's
all
scalable
parametric.
B
A
B
A
B
B
A
A
B
A
A
It's
kind
of
sitting
unused
right
now,
as
all
these
things
kind
of
they
kind
of
need
development,
but
the
the
PVC
frame
looked
actually
really
favorable
with
the
XYZ
corner
pieces
and
another
one
of
our
guys
is
actually
building
that
and
finishing
that
up
to
get
some
runs
he's
actually
in
California.
So
we
kind
of
have
two
tracks
going.
One
is
on
a
PVC
frame,
which
is
you
can
source
that
anywhere?
A
You
can
get
the
parts
in
Amazon
the
little
corner,
so
you
can
have
like
I
said
you
know
you
can
pretty
much
dropship
the
entire
3d
printer
from
from
Amazon.
You
know,
but
that
other
route
is
the
metal
frame
which
requires
CNC
cutting,
which
is
it's
it's,
of
course
much
more
solid
and
for
the
bigger
machines
you're
gonna
need
metal,
but
for
the
non-contact
3d
printer,
the
frame
looks
like
it's
acceptable.
We're
gonna
test
them
to
make
sure
that
it
works
yeah,
but.
A
B
A
B
A
B
See
Oh
both
are
valid
designs
for
different
things,
because
when
you're
doing
3d,
printing
I
really
see
it
like
printers
gonna,
give
me
150
bucks
you
can
afford
make
several
of
them,
especially
when
you're
selling
some
of
them,
you
can
have
to
make
lower
precision
parts
cuz.
There
are
loads
or
lower
precision
parts
that
you
know
not
need
a
really
great
dimensional
accuracy.
You
always
have
drill
bits
available
to
you
under
yo
over.
You
know,
extrude,
something
and
then
always
drill
out
to
make
something
more
accurate.
It's
a
cheap
way
that
you
can
really.
A
B
Other,
like
the
Delta
3d
printer,
you
need
the
you
know,
metallized
and
you
know
enclosed.
That's
the
other
thing
printer
to
get
the
higher
accuracy
tolerances,
I'm,
working
on
3d,
printing
at
wright-patterson,
an
airport
stays.
We
did
some
research
over
there
and
working
with
some
professors.
The
best
3d
printers.
You
know
dimensions
and
the
stratasys
is
I
work
with
mm-hmm
those
are
enclosed,
they
maintain
temperature,
they
maintain
all
the
rest
of
these
variables,
so
you
don't
have
cracking
and
warping
and
they
have
those
rigid
axes
so
mm-hmm
it's
next.
Half
of
that.
You.
A
B
Then
you
have
these
metal
3d
printers
that
aren't
like
enclosed
with
glass
or
anything
else
that
are
cruised
here,
slightly
more
precision
parts
and
maybe
you've
have
fully
enclosed
temperature
control
machines
that
are
giving
you
mm-hmm
parts
you
might
need
for
something.
You
know
you
need
to
have
a
tight
tolerance,
you're
printing
with
composite
film
story,
mm-hmm.
B
A
B
B
The
slicing
all
the
rest
is
stuff.
That
kind
of
falls
the
new
my
software
programming
background,
that'd,
be
it
will
get
into
it,
but
as
like
an
expert,
not
not
I,
couldn't
call
myself
an
SME
at
that,
but
I
think
might
be
more,
but
that's
engineering
right
one
year
when
you're
professional
engineer
a
daily
basis,
they're
like
hey
here's,
a
new
control
system.
B
A
A
A
I
think
it's
I
think
it's
all
supported,
but
what
we'd
have
to
do
is
right
now
we're
actually
building
the
Prusa
mk2
extruder,
as
just
like
our
standard
low
brow.
Extruder
like
we
use
the
MK
8,
just
one
of
those
off-the-shelf
ones,
we're
kind
of
upgrading
to
a
better
one
based
on
a
proof,
basically
copying
proof,
but
we
need
a
run-out
sensor
on
it.
B
B
B
Guys,
I
work
with
and
I
know
how
to
make
like
self-contained
digesters,
and
you
know
it
produces.
You
know
clean
effluent.
That's
why
it
goes
out,
because
what
I
do
is
radio
me
and,
like
five
other
guys,
my
company
kind
of
you
were
lead
engineers
and
a
plant
that
takes
in
all
the
waste
and
you'll
pumps
it
out
on
the
Lake
Erie,
make
sure
we
don't
yeah.
B
It's
a
contracting
company
and
I
cirrhosis.
They
give
the
big
three
tech
giants
when
you
building
controls,
we
do
pharmaceutical
bioreactors,
PID
control
for,
like
you,
know,
steel
production
and
all
that's
just
the
independent
controls
company
just
does
control
system
work
for
all
the
companies
out
there
in
the
world
just
on
a
project
basis.
So
one
day,
I
am
mostly
at
the
coop
plant
and
some
days
I'm
at
Hyundai.
B
B
A
B
A
B
Yeah
the
process
water,
it's
going
to
go
through
a
water
treatment
plant,
that's
gonna,
completely
clean
and
be
sellin
eyes,
the
water.
They
have
a
whole
water
treatment
plant
in
there.
That
takes
the
process,
water
and
completely
scrubs
and
cleans
the
stuff
out,
and
it
pumps
it
into
the
you
know
basically
pipes
that
you're
saying
that
live
on
top
of
the
fluid
eyes:
the
vet
incinerator-
and
that
is
just
a
giant
heat
exchanger
like
like
you're
saying
that.
B
Then
just
pumps,
this
theme,
you
know,
sealed
insulated
pipes
to
the
process
area,
but
there
is
just
a
huge
series
of
relief
relief
valves,
pressure,
monitoring
and
a
temperature
monitoring.
Yeah.
B
Yeah
the
pipes
are,
pipes
are
small.
You
know,
like
you,
said,
they're
there
yeah,
there's
they're
they're
around
one
foot
and
diameter
leading
into
it,
but
you
know
again:
I'm
on
the
control
side,
yeah.
A
A
Yeah
ya
know
cuz
one
of
the
some
of
the
things
we're
doing
is
with
the
linear
solar
concentrator.
So
we
want
like
the
technology
for
yeah,
modern
steam,
plus
linear
solar,
concentrator
I,
just
found
out
about
this
company
called
Terra,
Joule
and
they're.
Doing
exactly
that.
Basically,
the
idea
is,
you
can
take
a
regular
propane
tank.
You
heat
the
water
up.
A
B
A
That's
that's
for
the
larger
machines,
but
so,
but
a
thing
is
it's
like
okay,
we'll
be
good
to
the
idea
is,
if
you
were
to
get
into
this,
it
would
be
good
that
you
have
the
machine
that
actually
can
use
these
things,
so
you
can
actually
test
it
fully
right
so
I
mean.
Would
you
be
able
to
build
I
mean
I,
guess
pretty
soon.
B
A
B
A
Yeah
cuz
cuz,
we
did
like
three.
It
was
three
quarter-inch
for
the
one
of
our
smaller
printers
yeah
yeah.
Maybe
that
would
be
good
cuz
and
then
you
can
put
on
the
bigger
bigger
printhead.
Maybe
have
you
start
working
so
there's
one
as
one
side
is
the
film
and
run
out
sensor,
but
the
second
part
is
the
larger
extruder
that
right
now,
nobody
on
our
team
is
working
on
that.
Maybe
we
could
get
you
going
on
that
because
that's
a
definite,
definite
thing.
A
B
B
B
A
B
B
B
B
B
It's
the
first
part
of
the
process
where
the
wire
and
the
rest
of
stuff
and
tire
inside
the
inside
a
little
cavity
that
they
need
the
rubber
into,
and
then
they
know
that
gets
blown
up
and
it
gets
ball
and
it
goes
into
the
high
pressure
thing
that
vulcanized
it
and
all
the
rest
later.
But
the
raw
rubber
supply
is
actually
on
supports
bonds.
A
B
A
Because
I
mean
we,
we've
talked
about
like
once,
we
have
the
larger
extruder,
but
then
also
you'd
have
to
have
the
feedstock,
because
we
I
mean
we're
also
working
on
on
a
filament
maker
itself,
but
yeah.
Then
you
have
to
have
a
lot
of
spools
cuz
that
gets
expensive.
If
you
want
to
print
something
and
you
don't
have
the
cheap,
cheap,
feedstock
yeah.
B
A
Yeah,
alright,
so
I
would
say:
I
would
say
how
about
this.
Let's
get
you
going
on.
Okay,
so
first
first
level
exercise.
Let's
let's
get
get
you
to
do
the
filament
sensor
just
add
that
to
our
code.
So
we
have
our
existing
code,
but
maybe
like,
if
you
can
sew
on
your
log,
I
mean
of
course,
document
everything,
but
take
it
take
down
our
code.
Have
you
you
have
used
the
osc
Linux,
you
download
it
right.
Okay,
so
on
it
is
the
copy
of
Marlon
that
we
currently
use
right.
B
A
Did
always
see
Linux
in
virtual
VirtualBox,
yeah,
okay,
but
anyway
the
the
marlin
that
you
pull
off.
We
use
cure.
I
have
used
Kira,
okay.
Well,
we
use
Kira,
but
in
Kira
once
you
start
that
up
it's
in
OSC
Linux,
then
you
can
open
up
one
well,
first
of
all,
it's
Arduino
environment
with
that
you
upload
the
stuff,
but
it's
but
the
our
code
is
in
Arduino.
A
D
A
B
B
We
want
the
software
part
of
it,
so
I
kind
of
do
it
first
couple
of
weeks,
just
you
know,
we
just
described
the
scrying
around
documenting
and
Bruce
and
concise
entries
and
then
a
blog
about
a
design
specification.
Something
I.
Do
you
know
you?
Do
an
engineering
make
a
design
spec?
It's
you
know
functional
spec.
This
is
what
this
thing's
gonna
do.
You're
gonna
do
this,
and
this
is
what's
gonna
happen.
This
is
what
its
gonna
look
like.
B
D
B
A
B
D
B
A
You
can
definitely
do
that.
You
can
basically
go
on
a
single
face
and
you
can
draw
a
shape
on
it
and
extrude
it
out.
I
mean
yeah.
It's
got
the
same
thing.
That's
all
in
there
which
I
really
like
just
yeah,
just
the
sketcher
onto
the
different
faces:
okay,
cool.
Okay!
So
continue
so
that's
gonna
take
a
couple
of
weeks,
okay,
but
then
about
building
it.
So
maybe,
like
week,
three
start
on
looking
at
build
one
of
ours
with
PVC.
B
A
A
However,
we
don't
have
the
corners,
maybe
maybe
I
could
ask
the
guy
to
do
the
corners
too.
Actually
I
think
I
should
yeah
ruslan
is
one
of
our
guys
he's
from
Germany
he's.
He
made
a
macro
that
generates
any
kind
of
fitting,
which
is
that's,
really
really
useful,
but
we
don't
have
the
the
corner
section
corner
pieces.
Those
are
pretty
special
specialized,
but
yeah.
We
could
definitely
add
that
yeah,
so
maybe
do
the
design.
You
think
you
can
do
the
design
spend
a
couple
of
a
few
weeks
on
that
yeah.
B
Something
for
like
a
yeah,
you
know,
research,
a
software
code
that
shouldn't
be
too
big
of
deal.
It's
an
existing
feature.
That's
not
just
reading
and
looking
at
the
internet
for
a
while
Linda,
you
know
just
getting
a
Gantt
chart
getting
designed
together
for
the
extruder
modifications,
Wow
yeah,
you
know,
it'd
be
nice
to
I,
guess,
there's!
Just
two
parts
is
maybe
I'm
pushing
it
further
than
it
needs
to
be
cuz.
There's
out
of
filament,
which
is
just
I,
mean
that's
just
a
discrete.
But
what
about
measuring?
How
much
filament
you're
using
yeah.
A
B
C
A
A
B
Knowing
alternative
programs
and
projects
that
are
running
like
we're
gonna,
you
know
it's
like
the
gold
global
vision
we
want
to
be
able
to
have.
You
know
measurement
with
the
account
for
how
much
volume
works.
Treating
to
you
know
how
much
the
school
also
yo
hey.
We
ran
out
of
filament
and
making
sure
those
are
compatible.
Whatever
design
I
have
might
be
at
least
compatible.
B
A
A
Know,
don't
worry,
don't
worry
about
it
for
now,
because
it's
like
the
way
we
go
about
it
like
you
might
be
using
different
spools
that
the
critical
thing
right
now
like
in
terms
of
I
mean
this
is
a
use
case
like
like
when
I'm
thinking
like
sometimes
I
load
up
a
new
spool.
It's
God,
you
don't
know
how
much
it's
got
it's
just
too
complicated
for
now,
but
the
thing
that's
definitely
valuable
is
not
having
a
print
fail
because
you
ran
out
of
material
so
that.
B
A
I
would
say:
dude,
don't
don't
worry
about
it
for
now,
cuz
that's
I
mean
that
is
definitely
the
kind
of
stuff
we
were
gonna
get
to
later,
but
there's
just
much
more
important
things
right
now
that
we
need
like
like
really
getting
a
solid
printer
I
mean
we
don't
need
that
feature
too
our
printer
out
to
the
workshops
and
make
it
really
replicable
like
the
number.
One
thing
is
to
really
nail
the
production
engineering,
meaning.
How
do
we
build
these
things?
A
Exactly
make
sure
all
the
cat
is
right
that
when
we
put
it
up
on
online
I
mean
it's,
it's
accurate
and
everything
is
there,
so
that
so
there's
just
some
priorities
and
what
I
want
to
do.
Is
that,
like
you
know
like,
for
example,
we
mentioned
the
clay
clay
extrusion,
yes,
absolutely,
but
not
right
now,
I
mean
now.
You
know
totally
derail
the
current
work.
A
So
and
of
course,
as
we
get
more
people,
we
can
get
more
people
on
on
the
other
projects
and
that's
exactly
the
plan
as
we
go
along,
we
can
have
more
people
tag-teaming
on
this.
The
the
people
that
you
said
are
working
with
the
clay
they're,
also
burning
it
right
there
they're
killing
it
afterwards
yeah
yeah
yeah.
No,
that
would
be
what
I
thought
that
would
be
really
good,
for
is
say,
even
want
to
make
like,
like
casting
molds
for
for
doing
metal.
B
D
B
A
A
very
simple
thing:
so
I'm
thinking
like
you,
you
know,
if
there's
a
like
a
it,
might
not
even
take
you
two
weeks
or
20
hours
to
do.
It
might
be
just
really
even
simpler,
because
it's
all
I
think
a
lot
of
it
is
pretty
much
all
out
there,
but
I
haven't
looked
at
it.
So
I
just
can't
tell
how
much
time
it's
gonna
take
okay.
A
So,
let's
take
take
a
look
at
tentatively
week,
one
until
we
do
the
run
out
sensor
and
then
the
point
just
the
run
out.
Nothing
else
at
this
point
so
essentially,
essentially,
the
rationale
is
which
I'm
writing
down,
not
losing
a
print,
especially
a
long
print,
a
long
print
when
the
filament
runs
out.
You
can
simply
continue
it
by
by
reinserting
filament.
B
A
C
A
Yeah-
and
that
should
be,
that
should
be
all
within
Marlon,
but
I
just
don't
know.
Okay,
so
let's
say
10
to
15
week
3
to
6
we
design
a
PVC
version
and
you
can
also
look
at
you
know.
Look
at
build
materials
ordering
and
stuff
like
that,
but
I
would
say
3
to
6
is
design
design.
The
version
fully
I
would
say
week:
7
do
the
Bo,
em
and
update
generate
a
new
Bo
em
so
because
that
will
have
some.
What
we
do
is
for
every
version
of
the
printer
that
we
have.
A
B
A
B
A
I
mean
hopefully
not
because
I
mean
if
we've
got
everything
as
I
mean
we
pretty
much
documented
everything
as
far
as
the
exact
parameters
and
everything.
So
you
should.
It
shouldn't
be
a
lot
of
messing
around
as
long
as
you
get
the
geometry
proper.
It
should
be
pretty
much
straight
for
time.
Een,
we've
done.
All
of
that
already
I
mean
I,
don't
think
you're
gonna
to
mess
with
a
lot
of
that
too
much
so
yeah,
just
the
PVC.
A
But
the
critical
thing
is
just
to
let
you
know
like
when
you
change
the
dimensions,
because
now
you're
gonna,
that's
why
the
the
cat
is
important.
You're
gonna
change
the
dimensions
and
therefore
things
are
going
to
align
differently
and
that's
all
the
stuff.
You're
gonna
have
to
figure
out
within
CAD
to
make
sure
that
your
CAD
drawing
shows
you
okay,
now
I'm
getting
exactly
this
12
by
12
inch
bed
fully
fully
covered,
so
I
would
say
the
PVC
version
with
a
12
inch
print
bed
because
we're
moving
to
the
larger
12
inch
print
beds,
yeah.
A
B
A
B
A
A
B
You'll
be
able
to
work,
I
think
what
my
kind
of
manage
my
time
is
usually
have
some
free
time
with
eat.
Eight
to
ten,
usually.
B
And,
of
course,
has
some
I'm,
Saturday
and
Sunday,
so
I
kind
of
just
do
little
bits
and
updates
throughout
the
week
and
input
in
ten
to
twelve
hours.
Excellent
action
I'm
the
kind
of
reach
this
stuff
I
think
excellent.
A
A
B
A
B
B
A
B
I
think
it's
just
wonderful.
Thank
you
for
welcoming
a
team
and
I
get
some
work
done.
Yeah
it's
been
I
had
spent
five
years
in
college
and
three
years
of
business
and
stuff,
and
a
lot
of
me
wanting
to
do
stuff
and
not
so
much
doing
a
lot
of
things.
It's
how
you
know
key,
probably
know
it's
hard
to
get
all
the
direction
and
focus
together
and
watching
this
for
from
a
while,
sits
like
2012
when
I
was
in
school,
but
now
I'm
like
okay,
very.