►
From YouTube: STEAM Camp Team Meeting
Description
Discussing marketing, and curriculum for March - and Filament Maker for end of April.
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A
A
B
C
A
B
To
set
up
his
business,
basically
listen.
They
just
are
trying
to
disrupt
a
business
so
for
him
this
could
also
be
an
opportunity
and
of
grow,
his
own
well
business
and
then
network
with
a
part-time
contract
at
the
same
time,
I'm
kind
of
prototyping
this
one
and
see
how
it
goes
with
these
workshops.
The.
B
A
A
A
B
B
A
In
which
case
the
April
28th,
through
May
6
I
will
do
it
at
factory
farm.
That's
a
good
place
to
do
it
if
I'm
not
travelling.
That
was
where
we
wanted
to
de
beauté
the
filament
maker
focus
which,
where
we
can
get
the
torch
table
up
and
running
and
cut
the
parts
and
have
a
solid
five
days
of
a
good
development
on
that
yeah.
D
A
Thing
right
now
is
the
marketing
part.
So
if
you
look
at
the
OSD
youtube
channel,
just
take
a
look
and
I
looked
into
180
degree,
consulting
so
they're
at
their
company
that
runners
and
volunteers,
primarily
University
students,
they're
getting
experience
and
a
really
nice
group,
I
mean
they've,
got
some
high-profile
clients,
and
these
are
top
students
at
top
universities,
so
I
applied
with
them
to
get
product
strategy
and
marketing
assistance.
A
C
A
A
A
Therefore,
who's
gonna
pay
the
bills
and
it
seems
like
the
market
of
simply
makers.
I
mean
it's
like
no
kidding,
but
there
are
established
venues
for
makers,
so
that's
kind
of
where
we're
looking
at
makers
and
then
I'm
also
thinking,
okay,
well
makers
and
students.
So
students
on
breaks
there's
a
lot
of
breaks
throughout
the
year
that
can
happen.
You
and
students
are
definitely
idealistic
students
who
want
to
save
the
world
and
be
ecological
and
yeah.
A
We
want
to
go
so
I
think
with
the
students
on
the
one
side
there's
make
like
makers
like
Make
Magazine.
Like
there's
other
venues,
we
can,
you
know
hack
a
day
other
places
where
we
can
try
to
post
and
maybe
targeted
ads
on,
maybe
on
Facebook
and
then,
as
far
as
the
university
students
I,
my
approach
would
be
to
I
mean
what
do
we
do
there?
A
It's
I
would
say:
look
for
every
single,
open
source,
Club,
Engineers,
Without,
Borders,
Club,
all
those
kinds
of
progressive,
open
source,
related
DIY,
related
engineering
for
good
kind
of
clubs
or
entrepreneurship,
close
social
enterprise
clubs.
All
that
universities
that
we
should
just
reach
out
to
them
and
say:
hey
we've
got
we'd
like
to
set
up
chapters
so
I
think
the
the
vision
for
the
chapters
is
exactly
what
180
degree
consulting
does
they
they
have
scaled
since
2007
I
was
pretty
impressed.
C
A
A
Yes,
great
student
organizations
galore
that
may
be
related.
I
looked
at
some
open
source
clubs
at
universities,
listing
by
Mozilla
reached
out
to
some
of
them.
Some
feedback
I
got
at
least
one
guy
who
I'm
setting
up
a
conversation
with
one
professor
who
runs
an
open
source
Club
at
RIT,
Rochester
Institute
of
Technology
he's
really
interested
like
saying
yeah
we
can
take
on
projects.
That's
how
do
we
so
very
good?
A
C
A
I
think
the
pitch
there
is
like
we
want
to
sell
that
like
from
that,
so
there's
good
stuff
happening
with
high
schools
that
there's
so
I
mean
we're
getting
pumped
up
for
June
June
looks
like
we're:
gonna
have
a
really
successful
month
because
so
I'm
signing
a
contract
with
Seattle,
okay.
No,
this
is
first
of
all
Pacific
Ridge
school,
so
that
contract
is
in
sign
in
that
that's
in
a
mail
and
they're.
Basically
captive
audience
of
at
least
12
people,
they're
gonna,
participate
and
probably
will
fill
it
to
24.
A
Then
there's
Kerry
Academy
on
the
East
Coast
and
then
there's
Seattle,
Academy
of
Arts
and
Sciences.
So
all
three
that
we
talked
to
have
great
conversations.
You
can
see
it
online
on
the
with
on
a
YouTube
channel,
see
the
conversation
is
there,
but
that's
line
not
an
idea
that
I'm
trying
to
propose
there
is
okay:
let's
do
the
global
classroom
where
we
finally
get
like
after
we
get
like
12
12
groups
aligned.
A
We
do
visible
massive
collaborative
development,
so
for
the
university
audience
it
would
be
like,
let's
start
a
no
se
Club,
and
we
get
together
with
other
clubs
to
do
a
design
session
like
every
front,
and
you
know
every
set
every
weekend
or
once
a
month
where
we
can
move
forward
on
an
actual
technical
design
in
a
significant
way,
because
we've
got
all
these
clubs
that
are
collaborating
so
through
that.
Of
course,
also,
we
have
access
to
training
like
to
propose
to
people
let's,
let's
just
start
an
OSC
Club.
A
Now
we
can
also
train
you
to
do
the
steam
camps
and
then,
of
course,
post
this
stuff
up
about
the
summer
of
extreme
design,
building
in
the
scent
of
challenge
later
on
so
trying
to
give
this
whole
product
strategy
of
how
to
move
this
forward,
I
think
the
universities
and
schools
are
quite
the
audience.
Absolutely
now.
Steve
says
that
so
my
marketing
mentor.
He
says
that
okay
be
careful
about
the
just
the
two
day.
A
Events,
because
he's
he's
being
firm
about
do
it
for
days
or
nine
days,
because
then
you
really
get
the
people
who
are
interested
with
the
two
days.
You
don't
get
people
so
excited
about
the
design
and
collaboration
aspect,
there's
just
not
enough
time,
so
I
could
see
that
it
definitely
like.
If
you
commit
to
for
nine
days.
A
That
means
you're
pretty
hardcore
with
the
two
days
we
might
expect
less,
but
still,
if
it's,
if
it's
still
people
getting
our
printers
and
stuff
like
that,
that's
still
decent,
but
to
him
missing
that
deeper
vision
of
like
getting
absorbed
in
it
and
filtering
for
the
the
people
who
are
gonna,
be
the
longtime
collaborators,
but
also
one
of
the
recognitions
is
that
most
people
are
not
going
to
be.
I
mean
probably
like
talking
to
Caterina
about
that
here.
A
It's
like
probably
95
to
99
percent
of
people
are
not
gonna,
be
the
five-legged
dogs
which
she
identified
as
that's
a
mental,
but
was
a
mental
block
for
me
because
I'm
saying
I'm
trying
to
fit
these
five
legged
dogs
into
this
package
and
the
facts
good
is
gonna,
be
that
they're,
just
gonna
be
rare
and
they're
gonna
come
up
to.
It
would
work
here
and
there,
but
those
are
not
gonna,
be
the
people,
people
that
pay
the
bills,
because
there's
not
enough
of
them.
It
seems
like
that
manage
my
assessment
of
the
situation.
A
B
I
mean
working
in
teams
has
the
benefit
that
not
everyone
needs
to
include
all
perspectives,
so
maybe
having
a
bit
more
team
approach,
then
you
can
have
some
people
who
are
entrepreneurial
and
someone
else
was
very,
does
a
technical
and
them
together.
They
managed
to
build
something
together.
If
we
do
this
thing
with
schools,
for
example,
it
might
be
a
really
good
idea
to
including
our
students
on
them.
B
I
think
having
them
run
cannot
independently
the
liked
each
and
have
a
very
simple
package
that
all
right,
if
you
want
to
run
an
OC
chapter
after
school
than
these
sort
of
things,
these
sort
of
steps
you
need
to
do
you
need
to
buy
their
units.
Follow
this
and
then
you
choose
a
either
you
get
assigned,
let's
say
a
certain
machine,
it
might
be
dedicated
at
assigned
a
element.
Make
your
own
A's
should
choose
one
and
done
they
kind
of
work
on
that,
and
then
every
two
monsters
of
it.
B
A
B
If
you
look
at
people
in
volunteer
work,
which
this
will
be
to
some
degree
happening
for
a
lot
of
people,
it's
the
social
factor
and
for
some
people
will
be
the
idea.
I
think
it's
around
like
40
percent,
who
are
there
for
the
ideal,
but
for
a
huge
proportion
of
the
people.
It's
the
community,
so
combining
the
sense
of
community
together
with
this
ideals,
movements
get
a
combination
of
people
and
we
might
get
people
to
stick
together,
but
there
will
always
be
problems
with
London.
A
Any
project
requires
a
team
right.
Why
so
say,
12
disciplines,
we've
got
the
TED
talk
and
a
vision.
People
like
that.
They
definitely
like
that
and
it's
a
definite
selling
point,
but
then
outside
the
collaboration
ecology.
What
else?
That's
the
only
thing
I
can
think
of
it's
like
that's,
that's
a
cool
thing
enabling
tools
like
okay,
here's,
your
building,
physical
artifacts,
3d
printers
other
things
build
your.
A
D
B
B
A
C
A
B
A
A
It
could
be
the
the
plastic
recycling
microfactory,
it
could
be
a
I,
don't
know
it
could
be
a
3d
printing
business
like
we
have
technical
things
as
businesses.
But
what
are
the
other
aspects?
Oh,
it
could
be
a
software
business.
That's
like
a
design
year,
a
business
that
focused
on
a
software
side
say
like
you're,
designing
your
3d
printer,
but
but
then
we
have
the
construction
set
to
actually
build
it.
So
it's
like
an
app
that
you
can
make
printers
with
I
mean
it
could
be
nothing.
C
A
Be
anything
it's
up
to
the
people,
but
we
want
to
still
keep
track
of
that.
Okay,
it's
still
about
the
global
village,
Construction
Set!
So
in
enabling
tools
or
the
kind
of
business
that
can
start
up
about
something
it
could
be
all
kinds
of
businesses.
It
could
be
like
an
Airbnb
like
business,
which
gets
very
ambitious
up
to
building
panelized
modular
housing.
You
know,
like
that's
crazy,
but
that
would
require
like
50
chapters,
to
work
on
that
together.
That's
what
I
think
the
power
comes
in,
where
they.
C
B
I'm
thinking
how
international
does
it?
What
they
do
is
that,
once
you
are
a
team
of
people
who
want
to
work
on
something
and
you
decide
which
country
you
want
to
work
on,
and
then
you
contact
the
people
who
run
it
in
England
and
then
they
will
assign
a
case
a
case
from
that
country.
Brief
to
you.
So
it
might
be
something
similar.
Maybe
they
wanted
to
work
on.
Let's
say
the
data
science.
B
Maybe
they
wanted
to
do
to
somehow
do
something
with
data
science
and
then
maybe
we
assign
them
a
case
of
how
to
use
let's
say,
augmented
reality
for
design
or
artificial
intelligence
redesign
and
someone
else
might
choose
3d
printing
and
then
we
might
give
them
a
project
or
at
least
an
example,
products.
That's
something
to
try
thinking,
because
we
still
have
a
list
of
things
which
might
which
are
necessary
so
that
we
don't
do
not
put
everyone
developing
the
same
thing,
because
they
did
all
what
I
have
heard.
B
A
Yeah
I
mean
it
would
depend
who
shows
up
to
the
table.
So
that's
a
discussion
for
later,
but
any
team
would
have
would
want
to
have
like
all
these
different
aspects
like
if
you
gonna
and
I
think
focus
it
on
an
entrepreneurial
aspect.
So
entrepreneurial
technology
for
good,
like
has
to
be
entrepreneurial,
so
that
people
are
actually
linking
the
livelihood
part
to
the
to
their
future.
A
But
I
think
we
can
sell
this
on
the
other
thing.
It's
like:
okay,
micro,
fat,
like
OSE
chapter
teach
steam
camps,
a
design,
tech
that
matters
build.
Your
micro
factory,
like
student
groups,
will
have
access
to
a
space
and
then
they
get
to
get
funded
for
making
their
OSC
development
space
like
a
hackerspace,
so
build
your
micro
factory
yeah
anyway,
but
I
I
think
I'll
write
up
something
to
that
effect
because
I'll
start
sending
out
emails.
I
already
have
started
like
what
I
was
pitching
is.
Are
they
interested
in
in
collaboration
or
starting?
A
Project
I'll
gladly
pay
that,
but
if
we
were
to
allocate
resources
to
any
other
things
that
we
can
execute
right
now,
what
would
that
be
to
get
to
get
the
product
strategy
out
there
and
people
hearing
about
this
because,
right
now,
it's
like
people
are
just
not
hearing
about.
We,
we
tapped
out
our
internal
audiences,
essentially
at
this
point.
B
D
B
B
A
B
B
Yeah,
if
we're
gonna
use
it,
then
we
need
to
be
set
up
for
it
in
order
to
get
the
amount
of
lyrics
from
it,
I
mean
it's
still
possible
to
have
like
Google
Adwords,
where
you
write
down,
which
type
of
search
words
that
you
want,
but
it's
it's
probably
better
to
capture
that
from
our
with
age.
So
we
get,
people
were
actually
similar.
B
A
A
Is
there
like
a
so
it
would
be
a
versus
a
say
we
can
do
some
stuff
like
say,
target
at
Facebook
right.
That
sounds
like
a
no-brainer
right
yeah.
A
B
B
B
A
C
F
Yeah
anywhere,
you
can
paste
HTML
code,
so
you
could
do
it
as
long
as
you
only
would
want
to
put
it
like
on
thanks
for
buying.
You
know
on
whatever's
that
the
landing
page,
for
you
know
a
successful
sign
up
well
work
you
know,
is
depending
on
all
you
wanting
to
run
an
ad
campaign,
you
could
call
a
conversion.
F
F
F
I,
definitely
don't
trust
what
clicks
that
they
report,
they
would
say
we
send
up
50.
You
know
we
showed
5,000
ads.
We
sent
15
people
your
way.
We
would
want
to
put
a
big
tracking
pixel
on
our
on
the
on
the
landing
page
that
we
were
directing
people
so
that
we
could
say
yes,
sometimes
15
people
showed
up
yeah.
A
E
F
C
B
C
A
We
track
some
some
resource
or
something
where
we
we
say
okay,
so
this
is
our
investment,
and
this
is
the
likely
ROI
from
that
investment
like
so
that
we're
not
just
spend
money
and
it's
like
we
don't
we
we
don't
know
if
it's
working
or
not
I
mean
I
liked.
If
we're
in
a
position
where
we
say
okay,
we
dedicate
this
budget,
and
this
is
the
statistical
ROI
on
that
budget.
F
So
yes,
so
right
now,
if
we
assume
so
right
now,
what
sort
of
statistics
do
do
we
have
on
the
web?
So
we
have
had?
However
many
sign-up
sheets
had
and
then
they're
not
divided
by
how
many
people
you
have
organically
come
to
the
thing
I
mean
I,
know:
I
know
you
said:
we've
done.
Advertising
within
OSE
is
immediate
reach
already,
so
that's
gonna
be
a
different
than
any
campaign
that
we
are
we're
running,
but.
B
C
C
F
F
B
B
A
B
C
F
A
B
E
D
F
F
B
Book
face
pixel.
Is
that
also
that
it's
we
shouldn't
advertise
a
group?
We
should
advertise
a
page
Facebook
page,
and
then
we
shouldn't
just
use
this
Marshall.
Imagine
now,
but
why
we
should
act
right.
Oh
yeah
makes
that
audience
and-
and
it
will
do
know,
the
technical
parts
are
exactly
how
to
do
it,
but
I
can
come
back
and
we
can
edit
yeah.
F
B
B
B
C
B
A
B
It's
still
if
we
want
people
to
find
it
during
Bournemouth,
we
use
the
same
keywords
throughout
the
HS
count.
I
also
think
it's
good
if
we
start
to
reach
out
to,
for
example,
schools
that
if
they
used
one
things
such
as
about
right,
because
Eventbrite
is
already
very
trusted
by
Google.
So
if
each
place
has
an
even
sprite
web
page
and
all
of
those
points
back
to
our
place
for
the
larger
events,
then
we
will
get
a
lot
well.
A
C
B
A
B
What
I
mean
is
that
if
we
have
let's
say
we
have
students,
organizations
who
are
running
us
see
developments
or
teams
that
when
we
meet
up,
they
don't
only
meet
up
behind
doors
until
they're
gonna
have
their
workshop,
and
then
they
the
advertisements
that
they
have
on
only
even
write
or
meet.
In
that
case
of
all
meetups
that
we
need
every
week
one
week
and
one
sis
can't
have
a
workshop.
Oh
yeah.
B
C
D
D
F
F
F
B
A
A
A
A
G
C
C
G
A
A
D
A
So
I
think
I
want
to
make
sure
I
get
one
that
I
test
before
I
fly
up,
fly
away,
make
sure
it
works.
So
the
workflow
there
I
think
I
think
it
would
be
useful
Chris.
What
do
you
think
to
to
start
with
a
breadboard
and
then
we
we
get
that
and
then
simplify
the
thing
for
yet
so
try
try
the
hole,
drilling
and
the
art
the
the
a
and
steam
where
we
just
draw
the
things
by
hand.
Just
like
we
did
last
time.
Do
you
think
the?
What
do
you
think
of
that
approach?
A
D
A
If
we
use
the
chip
and
load
it
on,
you
have
to
go
through
hole,
so
yeah
you
can.
So
what
I'm
thinking
is
we
we
do
the
through
holes
with
a
CNC
drill
which
I
think
we
we
have
enough
experience
to
do
that
and
then
once
we
have
the
drilled
holes,
we
do
the
second
step,
which
is
to
draw
the
actual
connection
to
like
the
super
minimal
Arduino
like
just
have
like
one
or
two
channels,
one
channel
even
and
don't
connect
any
pins
that
we
absolutely
don't
need.
A
So
so
try
that
experiment
where
we
draw
the
things
by
hand,
and
then
we
have
a
leeway
on
where
we
draw
the
things
and
we
can
have
a
pretty
rough
sketch
and
it
could
still
work
because
we're
connecting
the
holes
that
we
did
with
a
CNC
drill.
So
we
space
them
out
as
far
as
we
can
for
all
the
components,
and
then
we
etch
what?
How
does
that
sound?.
A
C
A
I
think
the
breadboard,
if
we
start
with
the
breadboard
and
that
could
be
a
I,
think
that
could
be
a
fulfilling
part
in
itself.
And
then
we
say
we
get
to
success
on
a
breadboard
which
is
I,
mean
I.
Think
that's
pretty
cool
that
you're.
You
know
you're
putting
together
these
simple
components
from
scratch
and
then,
if
we
succeed
or
not,
there'll
be
a
good
experiment
of
generating
G
code
and
using.
A
Using
code
that
we
generate
to
do
the
basic
drilling,
the
drilling
I
think
we
should
be
able
to
handle
it.
European
guys
have
shown
it
reasonably
well
Michelle.
What
would
be
your
comment
beyond
like
the
difficulty
of
the
drilling
operation
like
if
we're
just
to
drill
holes
and
then
then
draw
with
the
marker
connecting
between
the
holes.
G
And
then,
on
that
we
we
wanted
to
put
the
the
PCB
mm-hmm,
but
it
couldn't
measure
like
through
the
wooden
plate,
but
a
way
to
solve.
That
is
to
put
an
iminium
tape
on
it,
I
suppose,
or
even
maybe
just
an
aluminum
foil.
Then
it
would
measure
to
soar
to
the
surface
of
the
wood
actually
yeah.
It
was
the
only
problem
we
had
with
was
with
leveling,
okay.
A
C
G
A
I'm
thinking
so
you
put
a
magnet
on
each
corner
and
then
put
like
two
more
magnets
I
mean
we
have
magnets
are
easy.
Once
you
have
one
you
can
attach
as
many
as
you
want
to
get
like,
you
know,
half
a
centimeter
offset,
so
you
make
sure
you
don't
go
more
than
like
half
a
centimeter
down
which
is
I
think
should
be.
A
G
A
G
G
G
A
Let's
make
sure
we
just
document
that
as
much
as
gleaning
everything
from
the
last
Steenkamp
and
putting
it
together,
I
was
gonna.
Ask
Jessica's
not
here,
but
I
was
gonna.
Ask
her
to
do
the
the
plotting
she
was
the
best
one
at
plotting
workflow.
She
made
a
lot
of
notes
in
her
log
on
it.
So
I'll
ask
her
to
write
that
down.
Is
it
like
a
one-hour
lesson?
A
What
I'll
do
is
I'll
work
on
that
Arduino
lesson.
So
we
have
that
for
the
next.
You
know
for
this
time
and
we
really
get
I
really
want
to
see
the
thing
where
we
do
it
on
breadboard
and
then
we
actually
etch
it
successfully.
I
think
we
can
do
it.
I
mean
the
results
we
had
on
our
side.
They
were
decent
if
we
get
decent,
copper
boards
that
the
traces
don't
fall
off.
That
would
be
good,
I.
A
G
G
A
Yeah
yeah,
the
toughest
part,
is
just
like
separating
the
pins
on
a
on
Arduino
but
like
if
you
put
them
like
you,
have
to
say
to
adjacent
pins
at
0.1
inch
just
make
the
leads
to
him
like
go
away
from
each
other,
so
you
have
as
much
space
as
possible
to
not
mess
up.
You
know,
I
think
it
should
be
quite
doable
and
that's
what
that
takes
the
art
component,
which
is
cool
yeah,
what
else
so
just
to
cover
the
curriculum.
For
next
time,
I
got
to
ship
the
stuff
out,
I'll
ship.
It.
A
A
A
For
the
the
next
one,
which
is
April
28th,
are
you
guys
comfortable
with
with
working
on
the
filament
maker
stuff,
because
we
have
this
simplified
filament
maker
design
and
what
I
could
do
is
send
out
blade
kits
to
everybody
so
blade
for
the
film
and
grinder,
but
I
want
to
do
like
a
real
industrial
grade.
Shredder
that
still
is
super
low
cost,
so
we
can
get
metal
blades,
so
we
can
cut
them
out
here
and
then
use
hex
shaft,
which
is
off-the-shelf
material
and
then
it's
like
base.
A
We
can
even
do
like
you
could
even
do
this.
The
actual
structure
for
the
shredder,
like
the
chamber
there
outside
the
blades.
You
can
do
that
from
wood.
Even
so,
you
can
do
like
to
buy
to
buy
lumber
if
we
talk
about
a
low
way
to
do
a
low
cost
way.
But
here's
the
thing
on
the
drive
there'll
be
a
great
time
to
start
experimenting
with
the
gear
downs,
the
split
ring,
planetary
gear,
downs
or
even
rubber
rubber
printed
belts.
We
can
do
all
that
kind
of
stuff,
so
I'm
thinking
geta
get
it
either.
A
Do
a
stepper
motor
like
Stephanie,
my
26th,
a
promoter
would
do
the
bill
would
fit
the
bill
and
then
gear
that
down.
So
it's
a
slow
moving,
slow
moving
grinder,
but
it's
still
you
have
that
huge
force
on
it,
because
so
do
like
a
50
fold
gear
down
on
a
NEMA
23rd
with
23,
which
is
already
pretty
strong.
So
instead
of
the
like,
if
we
take
the
budget
out
of
the
PI,
we
can
easily
get
the
film
and
maker
down
for
like
250
bucks,
including
the
maker
and
a
shredder.
A
We
can
do
that
that
we
can
do
if
we
do
the
3d
printed
gear
downs,
because
that's
the
part
that
ends
up
costing
a
bit
and
then
the
other
part
would
be
if
you
get
away
from
the
expensive
bearings
there's
a
lot
of
prior
art
on
like
3d
printed,
slew,
bearings
or
even
like
the
metal
balls
in
3d
printed
housings.
Those
were
those
appear
to
be
working
pretty
well
like
the
one
guy.
That's
done.
A
A
linear,
linear
bearing
with
recirculating
balls,
see
that's
on
a
wiki
like
we
got
to
start
playing
with
that's
kind
of
stuff.
So
maybe
we
can
say:
okay,
we'll
get
as
far
as
we
can
on
a
shredder
and
film
and
maker
I
think
it's
important
to
to
present
it
as
an
experimental
session
with
all
that.
So
we
still
do
the
first
four
days
and
then
the
five
days
we
we
start
tackling
the
shredder
filament
make
ready.
How
do
you
guys
feel
about
it
think?
That's
doable.
F
F
F
G
A
For
gear
down
there's
two
routes:
one
is
the
split.
The
planetary
gear,
downs
or
split,
split,
ring
planetary
gear
downs,
just
in
plain
PLA,
or
he
can
do
belts
and
sprockets
that
are
made
of
rubber
of
TPU,
so
think
about
like
really
big
big
belts,
much
bigger
belts
and
then
still
attached
to
the
NEMA
23,
the
NEMA
23.
You
can
get
for
like
25
bucks,
for
a
motor
like
that
something.
G
A
You
just
make
them
big
enough.
That's
the
thing!
So
if
we
could
swarm
like,
if
there's
actually
people
signing
up
and
we
swarm
on
printing
that
with
like
six
to
twelve
printers,
you
can
print,
you
know
like
really
thick
gears.
You
can
even
print
them
in
sections
if
you
design
them
right,
so
you
have
the
six
to
twelve
printers
printing
parts
at
each
location.
C
A
But
if,
if
they
break,
you
know
make
them
one
and
a
half
inch
two
inch
thick
and
it
gets
into
the
limits
of
home
of
print
time,
but
with
a
one
point
two
nozzles,
that's
that
actually
gets
quite
manageable.
You
leave
that
overnight
or
whatever
so
it's
I
mean
it's
pretty
crazy
stuff
and
we're
definitely
gonna
do
that.
The
first
month
so
like
the
first
month
of
summer,
X
we're
gonna,
really
go
off
on
that.
A
So
but
here
I
think
it's
a
great
chance
to
start
that,
so
we
can
promote
like
now.
We
can
market
this
to
to
eco-conscious
people,
we're
talking
about
plastic
recycling.
That's
a
that's
a
big
deal
for
for
the
younger
people
who
who
are
concerned
about
global
warming
because
they
have
a
long
life
ahead
of
them.
D
B
C
A
H
Pro
I've
got
just
a
couple:
questions
I,
missed
out
on
the
start
of
the
meeting,
just
to
confirm
no
registrations
for
the
Seattle
area,
correct
Oh,
guys
I,
don't
have
one
right,
yeah
all
right
and
we're
closing
it's
a
night
tonight
and
then
I
see
April
28th
as
the
start
date
for
the
the
next
filament
maker
focus
camp
is
that
yeah
I'm
gonna
meet
with
some
of
the
venue.
People
here
on
Saturday
and
I
just
want
to
yeah
start
getting
them
on
board
for
the
next
camp.
Yeah.
A
H
C
A
C
H
Be
kind
of
it'd
be
kind
of
fun
to
man
combined
the
rolled
oats
two
together
yeah,
like
the
people,
can
only
stay
for
two
days.
They
start
there
and
then
either
continue
on
or
move
it
to
the
makerspace
for
the
rest
of
the
days
and
Bellingham
I
don't
know.
Anyways
I
will
tell
them
that
it's
happening
at
the
end
of
April,
but
we're
not
sure
on
the
exact
day.
Do.
H
C
C
A
H
A
D
C
H
H
A
D
F
D
A
Yeah,
so
for
next
week's
meeting
since
we're
it's
a
little
before
game
day,
do
you
guys
still
want
to
meet
like
I'll,
be
like
I,
don't
know
where
I'll
be,
the
time
zone
will
be
way
different,
1:00,
1:00
p.m.
would
be
8:00
a.m.
my
time,
but
it'll
be
a
day
later
already
so
I
can't
I
see
we're
one
day
ahead
already.
A
H
I
was
more
just
gonna
put
out
there
like
since
there's
not
anybody
up
here.
If
you
guys
need
support-
or
you
know,
if
you
want
me
to
throw
together
some
stuff
in
that
last
day
or
two,
if
we,
if
we
need
thing
just
reach
out
to
me,
I'm
available
yeah
or
like
go
through
some
of
the
instructions
stuff
and
just
like
you
know,
maybe
add
some
add
some
more
clarity
to
anything.
You
guys
need
just.
A
Continue
like
perfect,
perfecting
the
pie
tablet,
what
we
have
I
mean
definitely
like.
If
we
can
get
a,
we
have
the
the
pie
tablet,
part
library
page
but
they're
like.
If
you
can,
we
can
start
on
a
on
an
instructional
that
we
actually
run
through
in
the
camp.
That's
like,
okay.
By
step,
there
will
be
a
definite
you
know,
point
of
coordinating
the
events
better.