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Description
https://wiki.opensourceecology.org/wiki/STEAM_Camp_Candidates
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C
C
C
C
B
A
C
C
Is
like
it's
a
makerspace
even
if
I
resign
and
but
I'm
not
part
of
the
board
anymore.
I
was
there
for
the
first
two
years
and
then
I
I
mean
I'm
still
a
stakeholder
and
still
a
partner
of
the
business,
but
I
don't
live
anymore
in
Buenos
Aires
and
I.
Don't
get
along
much
with
the
with
the
rest
of
the
partners.
I,
my
but
my
path.
C
C
A
D
A
C
We
are
in
the
primaries,
so
we
are
between
the
elections
and
it's
bad.
Well,
we
are
used
to
a
third
war
is
like
that.
You
know
like
wow.
This
is
like
it's
not
completely
autonomous
in
terms
of
government.
It
depends
on
many
things
happening
in
the
first
world,
so
we
are
like
trying
to
deal
with
it.
Yeah.
A
C
C
C
D
C
D
C
D
C
C
About
I
I
really
believe
that
that
you,
you
need,
like
the
the
material
resources
that,
like
the
Congo
of
Technology,
let's
say:
production,
media,
the
production,
medium,
a
knowledge,
the
software
layer.
That
means
like
group
organization
and
like
the
way,
the
human
technology.
You
know
that
the
layer
that
I.
A
C
C
Yeah,
the
open
source,
ecology
brand
is
something
that
I
have
been
following
for
years
and
I
have
been
like
ups
and
downs
and
and
recoveries
and
and
evolutions
and
back
to
roots,
and
things
like
that,
I
like
it
very
very
much
and
I
have
been
inspired
by
that
open
source
business
model.
Point
of
view
in
which
you
have
you
need
to
have
a
business
model
at
least
one
or
two.
C
C
C
The
snapshot
of
the
of
the
proposal
and
I
keep
seeing
how
it
evolves
and
the
principles
in
which
have
a
community
will
building
up
like
products
and
documentation
and
and
processes,
and
and
building
like
business
models
and
sustainability
models
and
and
community
building
and
everything,
as
well
as
British
plastic
model,
as
well
as
some
other,
like,
let's
say,
open
desk
business
model
like
enterprises.
I
have
been
following
that,
like
really
shows
me
how
you
can
create
social
value,
I
make
and
make
a
living
at
the
same
time
and
have
a
lot
of
fun
like
I.
C
C
A
A
A
B
C
C
Their
really,
what
really
goes
behind
that
is
that
it's
not
I
would
have
to
say
about.
It
is
not
the
right
tool
for
the
environment.
I
live
in
like
this
decade
in
this.
In
this
reality,
in
Latin,
America
I
prefer
other
kind
of
tools
like
PNC's
or
laser
cutters,
which
is
like
Honda,
with
a
little
more
like
quite
a
lot.
C
C
Forever,
since
I
started
doing
things
like
that
and
I
keep
I
still
do
that.
My
project
is
about
like
sharing
technologies
like
uttering
something
complicated
and
complex
like
like
it's
an
acre
of
you
and
trying
to
reduce
it
to
like
some
small
piece
that
you
can
share
with
other
and
share
it,
epic,
a
little
a
big
universe,
with
a
less
amount
of
molecules
possible.
C
You
know
like
and
an
experience
and
a
point
of
view
in
a
way
of
thinking
and
I,
really
like
like
that
think
about
the
about
the
the
this
thing
comes,
because
it's
very
evident
how
you,
like
start
with
something
you
connect
it
with
other
thing.
You
can
agree
with
other
thing
and
you
have
like
the
four
pillars
for
building
up
a
combat.
C
3D,
printing
era
and
I
think
it's
very
like
it's
very
important
important
for
us
to
get
the
production
media
like
we
have
our
own
resources
to
build
our
own
pieces
for
everything
shutting
case
like
zombie
or
their
own
apocalypse
is
wrong
and
we
really
really
should
like
take
back
our
our
like
hands
on
technology.
So
we
are
not
just
users,
but
we
can
like
the
things
we
need
around.
It's
not
be
so
dependent
on
Amazon
or
China
or
supplier
you,
you
are
used
to
so.
A
B
D
A
C
C
So
it's
it's
quite
a
challenge.
I
really
need
to
understand
which
the
profile
of
your
of
your
usual
participants
and
and
the
intention
things
in
in
Latin,
America
in
terms
of
of
maker
movement,
are
quite
like
cold
still
cold.
My
business
energy
was
very
difficult
to
to
start
up
like
four
years
five
years
ago
and
it's
still
very
difficult.
That's
the
reason
we
did.
C
While
we
are
talking
about
we
when
we
say
take
back
they
do
it
yourself
tools
and
in
your
society
that
it's
really
really
really
different
difficult
for
people
to
understand
what
this
kind
of
this
kind
of
thinking,
model
and
working
model,
community
working,
more
more
means
and
how
it
works.
And
what
can
we
get
from
that?
And
there
are
certain
four
cores
in
Brazil
for
like
getting
people
together
and
those
things
with
them
like
certain
paradigms.
That
are
quite
difficult,
even
for
me
with
which
I
have
linked.
C
Believe
me
here
for
for
four
years,
and
I
am
from
Latin
America
too.
It's
difficult
to
understand,
so
I
really
need
for
to
give
you
an
answer.
I
really
need
to
understand
better,
like
the
the
intention
that
profiles
like
the
costs,
that,
like
there's
a
lot
of
things,
we
should
understand
previous
to
give
an
answer
to
that.
A
C
C
Ability
resources,
then
I
have
been
like
quite
successful
in
getting
some
money
from
like
grants
or
residences
or,
like
you
know,
support
from
some
organizations
and
prices,
and
things
like
that
mixing
from
time
to
time
from
like
stepping,
depending
on
who
is
looking
I
present
myself
up
as
an
artist
as
an
educator
as
a
as
a
maker
or
an
OMG.
You
know
like
it's
kind
of
versatile
and
flexible,
so
we
use
that
translation
to
take
to
speak
about
education,
arts
and
technology.
C
Everything
together
and
before
the
fourth
way
in
which
we
have
been
trying
to
support
ourselves
is
crowdfunding.
He
hasn't
been
that
so
effective
because
it
needs
some
certain
skills
and
education
with
me
right
now,
but
to
solve
that,
we
are
like
launching
a
community
call
in
which,
like
we
are
asking
people
to
like
be
part
of
the
project
and
like
it's
a
it's,
a
very
ambitious
community
interaction
model
in
which
we
try
to
crowdsource
everything
and
I.
Very
I
have
local
faith
in
that
in
that
life
that
we
are
living
right
now.
C
D
C
C
I
think
the
what
is
making
the
difference
is
that
up
there
we
got
that's
MIT,
Media,
Lab
fellowship
and
that
gosh
Creative
Commons
invitation
and
up
the
red
bull
station
red
bull
basement
haka
residency.
Things
started
to
be
like
more.
We
gain
a
little
more
recognition
from
community
because
it's
kind
of
different
difficult
to
sell
this
idea
to
people
that
are
quite
it
like
conservative.
C
In
their
points
of
view,
if
you're
not
liking
some
kind
of
hype,
you
know,
if
you're,
not
famous,
it's
quite
difficult
for
people
to
to
trust
and
as
I
was
telling
you
I
I'm,
not
you
I,
don't
have
like
your
resources
or
or
even
like
capacity.
So
it
is
quite
challenging
in
when
you're
like
nobody
to
explain
the
the
market
or
the
or
the
stakeholders
that
you
have
a
proposal
to
have
like
a
big
differential
value
that
will
make
really
it
will
that
it
will.
C
It
has
talked
to
building
cases
from
the
past
three
or
more,
if
easier,
because
we
have
gained
momentum
and
it
was
quite
relevant
that
I
have
spent
the
last
the
past
three
month
in
Europe.
I
have
a
I,
went
to
Spain,
Portugal
and
Morocco
to
like
give
workshops
and
shared
experiences
and
make
some
residences
and
and
like
network
with
with
a
European
Fab
Lab
and
universities
and
conflict
control,
culture
permaculture
community,
and
it
was
like
much
much
much
easy
to
explain
to
people
what
I
was
doing.
What
would
what
was
our
vision?
C
Why
we
were
doing
it?
How
it
was
easy
to
like
be
part
of
and
how
it's
bad?
How
is
body
involved
in
the
independent
in
the
community,
building
and
and
I
think
that
next
year
will
be
quite
different,
because
we
are
gaining
a
lot
of
support
from
from
Portugal
and
Spain
problems
and
university
and
communities
and
designers
communities
so,
and
we
just
went
to
like
low
Europe
countries,
I
have
been
never
have
never
been
to
Germany
or
Netherlands
or
Belgium,
or
things
like
that
that
invest
much
heavier
and
education
and
social
and
social
impact.
C
C
D
A
C
So
you're
checking
how
open
source
ecology
have
influences
that
Americans.
Are
you
talking
about
that
yeah?
My
shock,
so
I
share
that
the
view
that,
like,
for
instance,
knowledge
should
be
free
there,
like
that?
That's
a
very
philosophical
and
technical
and
economical
principle,
I
share
and
that's
that's
the
main,
the
roots
for
everything,
because
I
I
have
seen
it,
as
you
always
say
about
like
the
Linux
industry
or
the
province
of
software
and
architecture
model,
how
it
changes
everything
in
the
in
the
World
Wide
Web,
yeah,.
A
C
And
how
we
can
all
benefit
shafts
for
sharing
that?
What's
something
else
happening
that
1+1?
You
know
when
you,
when
you
share
something
else,
is
happening.
I
have
seen
it
real
time
with
when
I
went
to
to
Europe
like
it's
not
just
about
taking
some
cold
knowledge
and
and
with
releasing
it
in
a
cold
warehouse.
It's
like
people
getting
together
bonding,
exchanging,
not
only
experiences
but
dreams
needs
expectations.
C
Fun.
You
know
like
there's
a
lot
I
could
be
like
producing
spare
toys.
I
could
be
making
these
things
for
people
to
make
like
build
things
and
have
a
limited
experiences
regarding
using
and
I'm,
not
interested
in.
That
I
mean
I'm
interested
in
sharing
knowledge
in
a
way
and
and
empowering
people
with
like
knowledge
about
materials,
knowledge
about
tooling
knowledge
about
the
waste.
We
share
the
the
the
the
models,
so
we
the
different
ways
in
which
we
can
adopt
that
technology
and
adapting
the
local
technological
and
previous
knowledge
we
have.
C
So
it's
not
about
just
the
product
is
about
the
experience
of
the
sharing
and
and
I
think.
That's
something
modern
relevant
in
the
open
source:
ecology
that,
like
the
community
and
the
an
invention
of
building
upon
a
community,
conscious
concerns
and
unconscious,
you
know,
consciousness
is
like
I.
Think
that
is
more
is
more.
C
Experience
and
point
of
view
we
will
a
port
will
add
to
the
project,
even
though
you
need
not
be
so
technical
skill,
but
there's
something
on
your
presence
being
part
of
the
process
that
will
change
everything
and
we'd
like
influence
the
whole
process
and
they
hold
results
of
the
of
the
product.
So
here.
D
C
Don't
I'm
a
believer
in
that
in
that,
in
that
sense
and
I
really
think
we
should
be
doing
this
at
a
very
higher
scale
and
I
have
been
looking
for
spaces
were
to
develop
these
philosophies
and
and
to
learn
from
these
technologies
and
methodologies
and
way
of
like
administrating
everything
and
I'm
I'm
really
really
happy.
We
are.
We
are
speaking
right
now
and
I
think
it's
kind
of
for
sure
me
until
I
got
here.
Yeah.
D
C
Practical
proposal
in
which
you
have
like
micro
units,
the
diversified
all
around
the
world
in
each
direct
lots
of
them
in
each
carries
you
in
each
neighborhood.
That
makes
a
lot
of
sense.
A
lot
of
sense
to
have
like
small
units,
local
small
units
running
with
local
available
materials,
will
local
feasible
machinery
with
like
technique
with
issue
of
local
tradition.
C
Perhaps
you
have
like
some
some
blessed
community
that
still
know
how
to
make
a
shoe
or
still
know
how
to
fish,
how
to
make
a
boat
or
same
or
same
things
like
that
and
I
respect
and
III
I'm
part
of
a
often
of
like
a
family.
That
comes
from
that.
You
know
my
grandmother
used
to
swim
underneath
my
grandfather
was
a
novel
carpenter,
so
he
used
to
like
build
boats
and
repair
them,
and
my
brother
he's
a
rocket
engineer.
C
So
there
was
something
there
that
is
actually
connected
in
taking
the
tools
and
doing
things
and-
and
we
are
quite
proud
of
that-
and
I
metrical
itself
is
a
way
for
transferring
all
that
heritage
in
the
smallest,
as
it's
all
the
smallest
amount
of
molecules
possible
and
I'm.
You
know,
like
the
there's,
a
20
minute
entry
barrier
here
in
which
a
Pagar
a
seven-year-old
girl
and
arise,
telling
what
are
you
doing?
I,
don't
know
what
you're
doing
I
would
like
to
play
with
you.
C
C
Let
me
show
you
and
that's
that
system
in
which
we
can
replicate
in
that,
like
geometry,
symmetrical
scale
is
like
my
passion
and
and
an
ability
of
what
like
modern,
communications
and
and
technologies
and
and
and
and
the
whole
point
of
view
of
our
era
is
capable
to,
and
we
can
do
a
lot
of
change
in
very
little
time.
If,
if
we
use
the
quote
the
the
actual
human
technology,
yeah.
A
D
B
A
Know
how
much
you
studied,
but
we
have
to
go
through
them
day,
one
for
for
detail
and
detail
and
see
what
see
what
what
you
would
be
able
to
help
us,
because
work
is
making
the
road
together
and
wrote
together
we're
gathering
a
team
gathering.
All
of
us
are
going
to
make
this
happen
and
make
this
happen
right
and
then
right
and
then
so.
There's
a
diagram
a
little
there's
only
I
grabbed
works
but
open
source.
A
As
soon
as
you
certain
all
this
other
stuff,
that's
all
I
or
that
either
we
have
done
or
other
people
have
done
or
other
building
on
it.
Well,
they
got
it,
but
the
question
to
you
would
be
you'd,
be
what
do
you
think
you
can?
What
do
you
think
you
can
attack
all
there
as
far
as
something
that
you
can
do
to
help
develop
the
career,
because.
B
A
After
the
first
event
of
gonna
keep
improving
it
and
proving
it,
but
for
the
first
one
the
first
event
would
be
the
hardest
part,
and
it
requires
some
heavy
lifting
and
people
to
people
who
actually
make
it
happen.
Make
it
happen,
yeah
I
mean
we've
got
a
lot
of
these
all,
but
it
all
needs
to
be
all
it
needs
work.
It
needs
to
to
be
may
presentable
and
presentable,
really
high
quality,
high
quality.
A
We
need
somewhere
and
eat
some
work
like,
for
example,
we
have
enough
I
haven't
built
the
3d
printed
motor
and
motor,
but
other
people
have
arrived
so
we
need
to
either
find
them
and
write
that
mark
or
develop
it
ourselves.
B
A
C
Accent
and
no
no,
it
makes
completely
sense
and
I
want
to
be
completely
like
sincere
with
you
I
I
I'm,
not
so
skilled
pearl
product
developers.
So
I
can
tell
you
hey
leave
the
link
that
motor
with
me
I
will
I
will
develop
it
and
I
will
psychology's
and
prototype
it
and
document
it,
and
it
will
be
ready
in
like
30
to
30
days
time.
I
cannot.
C
D
C
D
C
Yeah
yeah
and
I
and
I
focus
a
lot
in
the
base
of
the
Bahrami
I.
Don't
mainly
focus
on
people
that
know
nothing
about
technology
and
I
optimized
for
the
first
degree
for
the
first
barrier,
I
worked
with
them
with
the
minimum
possible
barrier
to
enter
a
world
of
of.
Do
yourself
and
he/she
know:
digital
prototyping
start
analogical
I
used
all
those
such
old
pliers
like
as
it
was
my
tooth,
but
you
know
like
everyday
basis
with
that
tool
and
I.
A
Yeah
I
think
that
I
think,
probably
once
we
develop
more
of
this
of
all
of
you
on
a
teaching
side
in
the
meantime,
you
can
look
at
look
at
I,
don't
know
if
you
know
you
can
look
into
more
detail
into
the
curriculum
itself
and
see
if
there
is
anything
that
didn't
help
us
develop
as
well.
You
know,
if
you
don't
see
it
in
the
prior
art,
we
have
to
develop
it
like
there's
some
very
specific
things
that
we're
building
during
the
lecture
during
the
camera.
B
D
A
Mainstream
people
there
are
some
mainstream
people
like
equal
life,
like
Republican
businessman
that
come.
Let's
see
the
promise
of
enterprise
that
can
come
out
of
it,
but
mostly
is
mostly
very
progressive.
Like
like
a
if
I
could
name,
one
person
offers
it's
the
computer
program
or
the
Browns
hands-on
skills,
and
it's.
C
C
A
A
C
Trying
to
make
their
own
business
with
this
old
school
or
capitalist
point
of
view,
but
they
are
not
taught
like
how
you
engage
the
power
of
the
color.
Also,
things
like
that,
I
have
like
rustic
experience,
some
some
boot
camps
with
with
these
kind
of
groups
and
the
parties.
The
interest
part
is
interesting.
Part
is
that
you
will
have
to
deal
with
the
European
Union
partnership
with
some
University
of
England
Ida
for
the
payment.
C
A
C
A
C
B
C
A
metal
shield
and
point-of-view
philosophical
point
of
view,
which
itself
payable
I,
really
believe.
That's
possible.
I
have
been
looking
having
seen
it
in
work.
I
I
met
some
co-working
spaces
and
permaculture
spaces
that
were
getting
some
Erasmus
funding
for
getting
some
Erasmus
grantees
and
making
workshops
with
them
comes,
and
it
really
worked
for
everybody.
So
that's
the
kind
of
thing
that
it
really
worked.
Some
partnership
with
we
purchased
practical
work
to
like
I,
really
think
of
running
some.
Some
pilot
programs
with
like
Spanish
or
Portugal
people,
I,
really
believe
that
can
work.
A
C
Get
what
I'm
talking
about
I
I
think
you
need.
You
need
a
to
gain.
Some!
You
need
to
gain
people
you'd
need
to
that
people
to
be
able
to
pay
for
themselves
on
somebody
to
pay
for
day
or
for
the
participation
of
paying
for
everything
that
is
involved
and
you
need
to
spread
the
world.
You
really
need
to
make
some
partnership
with
other
kinds
of
organizations
that
have
similar
and
complementary
points
of.
C
Yeah,
that's
what
I'm
talking
about
I
think
that's
not
a
bullet
time.
One
room,
one
time
shot!
I
think
this
is
something
you
can
execute
one
time
after
the
other
in
each
city,
every
six
months
you
know,
I
can
really
believe
that
that's
the
kind
of
thing
that
can
be
done
and
about
from
Erasmus.
There
are
a
lot
of
other
other.
A
B
A
D
A
A
D
A
C
But
if
you
like
partner
with
some
periphery,
all
organizations
the
you
have
Prado
has
that
problem,
which
is
a
very
cosmopolitan
space
that
ends
up
being
quite
slow.
You
know
when
I
have
been
like
very
successful
more
in
the
periphery,
because
people
are
much
more
grateful
and
respectful
for
you
for
your
work,
because
not
they
are
not
getting
so
many
projects
visiting
them
and
they
are
not
valuing
a
lot
and
doing
a
lot,
much
effort
for
you
to
be
there
because
they
Union.
D
A
C
Luca
project
is
something
quite
interesting,
is
some
kind
of
network.
It's
a
collective
of
people
trying
to
network
every
Fab
Lab
in
the
European
Union
make
some
Lobby
upon
the
European
Union
shots
for
Fablab
mobility
funding.
So
this
is
the
kind
of
of
clustering
structure
you
need
to
partner
with
because
they
have
250
other
ways
of
problems
in
Europe
I
have
when
I,
when
I
went
to
Europe
I
the
people-
and
they
told
me
well
tell
me:
where
are
you
going?
C
Contacts
from
problems
and
I
ended
up
working
with
three
of
them,
so
it
was
very
effective
because
in
three
weeks
time
I
was
like
partnering
with
three
different
problems,
because
they
they
introduced
me
and
that's
the
power
of
the
networking,
and
today
they
are
trying
to
make
that
kind
of
service
as
a
business
model,
but
I
think
in
the
cut
in
the
actual,
in
the
certain
partnership
model
you
can
like
both
of
you
can
come
already.
Yeah.
C
They
have
named
a
capital,
they
have
250
contacts,
actual
real-life
contacts
in
Europe,
updated
and
that
was
I
was
trying
to
tell
you
about
they.
This
is,
it
was
for
me
it
was
a
wonderful
experience
not
only
because
I
didn't
have
the
contacts
and
I
ended
up
having
and
ended
up
building.
You
know
like
executing
workshops.
It
was
like
to
see
it
was
wonderful
to
see
how
table
managers
were
eager
to
invite
me
and
and
was
like
paying
for
my
trade
and
I'm
paying.
C
C
D
B
A
C
So
folks
have
already
the
old
infrastructure
you
need
to
like
build
up
the
seats
you
need
to
like
keep
on
developing
products,
and
they
already
have
community
engagement.
They
already
have
infrastructure,
they
already
have
and
organizing
workshop
training
they
they
already
have
like
half
of
the
of
the
needs
you
have
for
building
and
for
executing
your
your
plans.
They
are
already
there.
You
don't
have
to
explain
much
what
you
are
doing
to
the
kind
of
people,
so
it
is
a
global
platform
that
is
ready
to
plug
and
play.
That's.
C
There's
like
one
hand
ones
are
open
and
200
permaculture
villages
in
you
know,
there's
a
blog
in
which
you
can
find
a
list
of
them.
You
can
partner
with
the
like
clusters
of
cultural
communities.
Like
one
month
ago,
there
was
a
meeting
in
Galicia
that
was
like
people
from
like
HD
communities.
Permaculture
communities
in
Spain
were
getting
together
once
a
year
just
to
discuss
permaculture,
and
if
you
go
on
our
part
of
that
events,
you
will
be
like
showing
up
for
a
lot
of
potential,
but
not
spare.
C
People
like
collectives
I
think
that
the
networking
networks
is
much
more
powerful
and
effective
than
targeted
like
standalone
funds
and
and
not
be
like
I,
think,
there's
some
kind
of
role
of
programming
in
there.
For
example,
the
British
plastic
community,
which
is
like
full
of
outsiders,
use
it's
full
of
like
browsed
Instagram
accounts
of
people
with
no
ensuring
engineering
or
or
making
knowledge
trying
to
like
fill
up
their
first
shredder
or
injection
or
whatever,
and
it's
like
some
kind
of
blur.
C
You
know
like
it's
not
actually
effective
or
efficient
to
have
so
many
people
from
with
no
background
trying
to
enter
the
game.
It
is
wonderful
as
a
movement,
but
it's
not
effective
and
and
and
I
prefer,
dealing
with
communities
that
are
already
engaged.
Alright,
people
that
have
no
know
what
their
actual
rural
or
urban
or
suburban
realities
are
they're
there.
They
have
the
means
they
have
experience
and
they
have
the
commitment
to.
C
A
C
Regional,
it's
like
there's
a
Spanish
network
of
permaculture
I.
Don't
remember
right
now,
the
name
of
the
institution,
but
they
can
send
you
the
link,
my
friend
single
EC,
our
part
of
the
world,
don't
know
they're
organizers
and
they
are
like
everybody
knows
each
other
in
that
kind
of
network.
So
it's
not
difficult
to
get
through
there
in
your
search.
Another.
C
Space,
it's
a
vertical
in
which
you
will
find
a
lot
of
skilled
people
that
will
rapidly
be
able
to
adopt
your
proposals
and
that
they
are
quite
efficient
in
many
ways
and
I
think
that
make
nothing
that
kind
of
fools
would
be
like
like
it
is
a
good
investment.
You
know
you
will
repay,
because
you
are
dealing
with
pros.
You're
dealing
with
committed
people
know
what
they
are
doing.
I
wish
that
I
valued
our
thoughts,
yeah.
A
D
C
C
C
C
And
distributed
like
they,
they
speak
each
other
in
a
quite
smooth
way,
so
you
can
make
something
distributed
in
ways.
You
make
one
machine
in
each
table
or
you
get
one
one
teacher
from
each
table
and
they
work
out
together.
How
do
you
make
a
little
come
in
which
you
English
for
problems
or
makers,
places,
communities
and
workshops.
C
Working
together,
that
would
be
like
much
more
near
of
what
you
need
done.
Taking
one
people
from
one
side
and
an
ensemble
owner
from
other
putting
everything
together.
Yeah
I
was
telling
you
they
are
almost
ready
to
go.
They
are
they
have
the
tools,
they
have
the
knowledge
they
have
the
community,
they
have
the
organizing
training
experiences.
They
have
some
because
housing
they
have
yeah.
D
A
C
Why
I
was
talking
about
this
kind
of
all
that
I
session?
That
I
already
have
something
that
is
paying
for
the
bills?
They
have
their
own
spaces
and
they
do
you
that
everything
is
given,
for
instance,
some,
for
example.
In
this
one,
you
have
a
public
Manteca
which
is
in
the
in
in
the
sub
like
it's
it's
located
at
the
University,
so
they
already.
A
B
C
A
D
C
A
A
C
C
C
B
A
B
B
C
C
A
C
B
C
D
D
B
A
A
B
B
D
A
D
C
She's,
not
she's,
not
from
the
hardware
background
she's
like
more
much
more
concept:
low,
okay,
yeah
she's,
our
scope,
she's
more
like
conceptual,
but
not
that
in
loves
that
in
technology
and
how
hard
were
actually
is
one
layer
of
the
of
what
she's
talking
about
I.
Think
that
what
is
more
to
reach
is
to
have
like
diversity
in
the
kind
of
players
that
are
part
of
the
pool.
So
you
have
some
people
from
soft
skill
universe,
mixing
with
people
with
mixing
with
like
people.
B
B
C
B
C
D
A
C
A
A
C
C
C
B
A
C
C
B
D
A
A
C
C
Curriculum
so
I
can
like
say
well
here
is
something
I
can
I?
Can
I
I
don't
feel
like
taking
the
responsibility
of
saying
this
is
much
I
will
leave
this
unit
because
I'm
not
like
I,
don't
feel
I
have
the
engineering
proficiency
you
need
right
now,
but
I
can
I
can
really
be
quite
effective
in
transmitted
and
to
share
it
was
once
it
is,
is
like
prototype
environment
and
yeah
yeah.
They
can
be
quite
useful
in
this
layer
of
thinking
together.
Getting
some
contacts.
B
B
B
A
B
A
C
C
B
B
C
B
B
B
C
D
A
D
C
B
C
B
A
A
D
A
D
C
A
D
C
D
A
C
C
A
Theme,
camp
candidates:
it's
the
business
model.
If
you
can
work
out
some
of
the
numbers.
For
that
I
mean
we
have
the
numbers
worked
out,
I
mean
just
a
basic
business
model
for
how
the
economics
work
here.