►
From YouTube: Summer X - Day 2 - Class Session after Concrete Pour
Description
-----------------
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A
Okay,
so
recording
recording,
okay,
everybody
so
welcome.
So
yesterday
was
an
interesting
day.
We
got
the
first
day
got
right
in
intro
presentation,
then
we
went
out
to
the
side
got
a
foundation
poured
put
in
a
sill
plate
and
today
we're
moving
straight
forward.
We're
going
right
right
into
the
wall
builds.
A
So
actually
the
goal
for
today
is
to
get
all
the
first
floor.
First
floor.
Walls
up,
that's
sounds
ambitious
based
on
our
last
build,
but
actually,
I
think,
with
the
way
we
have
simplified
things
and
made
it
more
transparent.
A
A
That
would
be
great,
at
least
the
walls
and
we'll
see
we'll
see
how
far
we
can
we
can
go,
but
it
does
rely
on
understanding
what
we're
building.
So
I
think,
along
the
lines
of
collaborative
design
or
collaborative
understanding
and
feedback
like
the
way
it
works.
The
best
is,
of
course,
when
each
individual
is
as
informed
as
possible.
A
So
we
do
have
basic
models
in
in
cad
that
are
actually
technically
correct,
that
we
can
take
a
look
at
and
let's
see
what
else,
what
else
any
any
feedback
we
do
have
a
couple
of
new
people
on
site
any
feedback
from
yesterday.
So
what
are
some
comments
from
yesterday?
So
we
we
ended
up
playing
the
well.
The
concrete
went
great.
It
wasn't.
Wasn't
that
difficult
with
enough
people.
A
We
also
put
on
a
soap
plate
for
the
actual
build
so
we're
using
the
pad
that
we
have
the
concrete
pad
to
to
do
the
build
and
we're
actually
gonna.
This
is
gonna,
be
a
model
where
we
build
it
and
we
can
recycle
it.
I
take
it
down
and
use
it
for
the
next
workshop,
so
we
can
run
a
workshop
just
about
every
quarter.
A
A
B
C
A
Yeah-
and
I
also
said
people
who
are
here-
we
want
to
make
sure
you
learn
all
this,
so
you're
invited
back
free
of
tuition
charge.
So
so
that's
we
want
to
make
sure
everyone
can
learn
it,
since
you
guys
are
investing
it
you're
kind
of
the
early
adopters.
A
You
know
we're
making
it
happen,
we're
putting
our
energy
and
resources
into
it
and
we're
all
building
it.
So
that's
that's
awesome.
What's
other
feedback
from
yesterday,
any
any
other
thoughts
buy
your
own.
B
Tool
that
we
had,
we
were
waiting
on
that
dang,
the
big
ol
power
trough.
We
got
power,
trout,
open
hardware,
the
power
truck.
A
Actually,
wouldn't
be
too
too
difficult
and
if
you
think
about
it,
so
we
use
a
lot
of
hydraulic
power.
But
if
you
couple
a
a
regular
motor
like
you
saw-
and
that
has
a
nice
transmission
on
it,
but
it's
actually
very
simple
to
connect
a
hydraulic
pump
and
then
a
hydraulic
motor
which
simplifies
the
design.
It
makes
it
more
modular,
it's
actually
cheaper,
probably
cheaper
than
a
big
transmission.
On
that
thing.
B
A
Was
that
was
a
big
one,
yeah,
okay,
all
right
we're
thinking
about
more
open
source
going
yeah.
It
did
turn
out
to
me
like
the
first,
so
the
city
home
one
I
I
was
out
there
traveling
by
hand
and
yeah.
It
was
like
until
katharina
took
me
home
and
said:
hey,
that's
enough!
You
can
do.
D
A
E
B
E
A
C
E
C
A
Right
so
start
bullfloat
as
soon
as
possible:
okay,
yeah-
we
could
do
that.
We
could
get
somebody
on
that
for
next
time.
Other.
B
I've
been
trying
to
keep
basic
ones,
so
I
I
broke
concrete
up
into
safety
tools,
application
and
then
there's
a
few
others,
but
I
have
been
trying
to
list
them
so
they're
more
like
module
in
a
month,
but
so
I
have
I
was
trying
to
keep
track
of
that.
So
we
could
do
things
like
that.
That's
the
perfect
thing!
B
That's
a
a
bug
fix
right
there,
where
we
have
half
actually
go
and
pull
that,
because
I
think
our
concrete
would
have
been
a
little
bit
easier
to
set
too
if
we
would
have
been
smoothing
where
the
concretes
meet
immediately.
B
A
A
This
is
like
from
a
to
z
and
that's
how
the
thing
actually
is.
But,
okay,
you
got
excavation
the
pattern.
This
is
just
symbolic,
but
basically
these
kinds
of
visual
diagrams,
where
you
can
just
break
it
down
like
each
one
of
these
steps
here
could
be
broken
down
into
many
arrows
and
we
call
that
the
fabrication
diagram.
A
It's
look
at
that
on
a
wiki
but
yeah.
We
do
have
like
too
much
information
on
this.
It's
like
that
people
get
lost
over
here,
we're
just
trying
to
keep
it
simple,
but
we
do
have
the
documentation
that
we
are
keeping
is
time
lapse
of
everything,
so
you
can
go
back
to
the
video
tape
and
say:
okay,
these
are
all
the
specific
items
we
did
that
we
might
even
forget.
Okay,
now
we
move
the
tarp
on
there
and
you
know
we're
trying
to
level.
You
know
square
up
the
form
and
stuff
like
that.
A
B
There
are
some
there's
some
intangible
things,
though,
learning
how
to
use
a
trial
knowing
the
safety
requirements,
yeah.
C
A
We
can
study
this.
This
was
actually
yeah
yeah.
Here
you
can
get
get
into
actually
yeah,
there's,
definitely
subtle
stuff,
but
that's
something
regarding
the
collaborative
documentation
part
like
especially
people
remote.
Take
a
look
at
the
videos.
You
know
if
you
know
about
this
process
annotate
it
like
create
more
information
like
on
the
development
template.
A
You
have
build
instructions,
procedures,
you've
got
concept
of
how
it's
designed
the
build
should
include
everything
like
about
tools
and
safety
and
stuff
like
that,
so
there's
placeholders
for
everything
and
that
does
lend
itself
to
to
a
much
larger
project.
So,
like
we
talked
about
a
little
bit
about
the
development
template,
how
you
you
go
through
all
the
steps
like,
for
example.
A
Well,
if
you
just
go
to
this,
this
big
thing,
the
development
template.
It
includes
a
lot
of
these
things.
So,
okay,
so
development
template.
You
start
with
requirements
and
value
proposition
industry
standards,
okay,
so
we're
building
like
this.
How
are
other
foundations
done
and
stuff
like
that
conceptual
design,
module
breakdown,
there's
3d
cad
is
like
the
most
important
technical
element.
It's
like
that's
where
you
actually
have
reified
design.
A
There's
calculations
like
structural
calculations,
that,
for
example,
an
engineer
could
provide
or
like
say,
we're
doing,
a
four-inch
slab.
If
you
want
to
do
like
something
different,
you
can
calculate
how
strong
it
will
be.
What
are
your
loads
are
for
the
house?
Can
you
go
up
three
stories
on
this
structure?
You
actually
can
you
might
have
to
modify
just
slight
things:
electronics,
design
that
doesn't
apply.
It
applies
to
the
electrical
system
wiring
and
plumbing.
A
So
this
is
like
this
general
template
we
use,
but
you
can
adapt
it
to
just
about
anything
so,
for
example,
an
electronics
design
in
the
other
machine.
It
might
be
your
controller
or
whatever.
Here
it's
well,
you've
got
your
electrical
system
and
you
might
have
automation
and
other
things
in
there
wiring
and
plumbing,
whether
that's
water,
electrical
hydraulic
air
systems,
software.
A
Is
it
like
standard
rough
lumber
or
whatever
this,
or
that
there's
like
tons
and
tons
of
variation,
so
the
bom
you
can
you
can
integrate
that
or
coordinate
that
with
the
cad,
so
the
cad,
when
you're
doing
cad
you're,
not
just
doing
drawing
random
things,
you're
going
to
take
a
look
at
what
is
the
bill
of
materials,
look
like
and
make
sure
that
those
two
actually
correspond?
So,
for
example,
if
you
know
you're
using
a
certain
part
like
say
the
3d
printer,
we
use
these
stepper
motors
well
start
with
that.
A
A
You
know:
how
do
you
attach
the
belt
to
it
like
you
can
literally
go
from
okay
part
one
you
got
you
know
say
on
the
3d
printer
example,
you
got
the
if
you
start
with
a
stepper
motor,
which
is
one
of
the
core
parts.
You
say:
okay,
I've
got
a
coupler
for
the
belt.
The
belt
is
such
and
such
the
attachment
to
the
frame
is
such
and
such.
Therefore,
the
frame
has
to
that
informs
how
the
frame
has
to
look.
A
So
you
can
reconcile
between,
like
it's
really
useful,
to
start
with
parts
that
you
know
are
off
the
shelf
parts
unless
you're
just
building
them
from
scratch,
but
in
which
case
we,
when
we
build
from
scratch,
we
always
use
standard
stock
like,
for
example,
here's
half
inch
steel
plate
that
we're
cutting
parts
for
the
tractor
or
box
beam
tubing.
Well,
that's
exactly
how
it
looks
and
will
completely
determine
how
the
cad
has
to
look
we're
using
these
fasteners,
like
bolts.
A
This
website
is
called
wiki
that
open
source
ecology.org.
Did
you
wait?
Did
you
get
the
email
today
I
sent
an
email
like
seven
or
something
I
sent
another
one
after
that
with
a
link
to
a
bunch
of
stuff,
but
this
is
this
is
on
a
wiki
and
you
can
find
it
by
going
to
seed
home
v2.
A
It
wouldn't
be
that
attachment
click
on
actual
links
there.
So
for
today
I
sent
a
link
to
a
bunch
of
files
which
are
in
actually
sorry
sweet,
sweet
home,
3d
and
freecad.
So
we
have
that
yeah.
So
yesterday
we
talked
a
bit
about
taxonomy
and
how
the
just
a
little
bit
about
point
is
that
if
you
know
how
to
how
to
look
for
things,
there
is
a
certain
level
of
organization
on
the
wiki
that
you
can
buy.
Topics
like
if
you
know
the
name
of
the
project
etc.
You
can,
you
can
find
it.
A
Yeah
I'm
recording
this
now
yeah
I
am
but
but
I
would
definitely
like
if
other
people
are
also
recording
it.
A
A
B
I
this
is,
this
is
like
so
cool
because
there's
a
this
new,
augmented
reality
where
you
could
take
a
machine
and
then
just
pop
it
out,
and
I
want
to
do
something
like
that,
where
we
can.
A
Yeah
and
you
can
get
to
all
these
things
like
augmented
reality-
I
mean
we
haven't-
really
touched
it
yet,
but
I
mean
you
can
do
once
you
got
the
core:
the
cad,
the
bills,
the
materials
the
builds
like
that
holy
trio
there
right
it's,
the
cad
bom,
build
instructions,
videos
pictures,
then
people
can
swarm
that
you
can
have
huge
teams
working
around
that,
including
like
augmented
reality
collaborative
games.
I
mean
they'll,
be
very
powerful
you're,
actually
building
that
in
a
virtual.
A
A
Yeah,
you
can
do
that
in
a
gaming
environment
yeah
completely,
so
we
kind
of
started
on
this.
We
didn't
get
too
far
on
it
yet,
but
yeah.
These
are
all
things
that
you
know.
You
need
a
team
to
do
that,
but
on
in
this
development
spreadsheet,
you
can
see
kind
of
like
the
the
left-hand
side.
Description
is
the
link
like,
for
example,
when
you
click
on
vbom
this.
This
page
describes
what
that's
all
about
with
that.
A
With
that
example
there
and
then
you
have
the
actual
work
product
like
cd
home
v2,
visual
billet
materials.
Well,
nothing
there
pretty
much
and
then
computer-aided
manufacturing
files
like,
for
example,
if
we
are
now
starting
to
3d
print
this
house.
Okay,
that's
cam,
computer,
aided
manufacturing
files,
cut
lists
like
cut
lists
would
be
now
today
we're
going
to
start
cutting
them
the
modules.
Okay,
that's
that's
not
done,
but
we're
going
to
get
into
that
build
instructions
yeah!
A
That's
that's
big
fabrication,
drawings
like
for
specific
parts,
dimensions
and
stuff
lots
of
stuff
exploded,
part
diagrams
part
explosions.
Actually,
freak
out
out
of
the
box
has
has
a
capacity
where
you
can
just
blow
up
a
design
into
parts
that
works
in
freecad,
19
or
18..
H
A
Yeah
production
engineering,
that's
what
we're
actually
working
on.
So
you
know
we.
We
thought
we
had
it
with
the
last
one,
but
we're
I
mean
it's.
It's
like
depending
how
you
look
at
it.
You
can
say
it's
quite
different.
Well,
the
production
engineering
is
going
to
be
quite
different,
but
the
design
very
very
similar-
I
mean
it's
almost
the
same,
but
then
how
you
build
it
and
how
you
put
it
together
is
going
to
be
night
and
day
for
us.
A
So
the
people
who
were
here
like
can
and
others
who
have
suffered
on
the
last
one.
It
was
hard.
It
was
things
got
in
the
way,
we'll
see
that
okay,
that's
going
to
be
a
little
different,
but
that's
what
we're
evolving
it's!
You
can
have
just
random
standard
procedures.
How
you
build
something
or
you
can
keep
working
on
it,
reiterating
iterating
on
how
effective
you
are
to
make
it
simplifications
of
design,
tooling
process,
it's
all
in
it
and
then
build
pictures
and
video.
A
A
A
Is
what
we
got
right
now?
Actually,
that's
that's!
What's
out,
on
the
other
side,
we're
actually
gonna
work
on
the
interior
part
of
the
house
at
this
model,
but
we
have
all
this
document.
We
have
a
time
lapse
for
just
about
everything.
That's
happened
so
far
from
multiple
angles.
That's
good!
That's
that's
the
build
pictures
and
documentation!
A
That's
the
step
of
pictures
and
video
data
collection.
You
know
anything
that
we
learn,
write
it
down
like
how
level
was
the
foundation
when
we
built
it
yesterday.
So
we
taken
a
bunch
of
notes
here,
that's
from
the
last
version,
but
so
so
data
collection,
future
work,
troubleshooting
and
repair.
A
A
A
And,
what's
that
mean
yeah?
That
is
redirects
you
to
there
21.09?
So
it's
this
is
september
2021,
so
we
like
to
call
it
the
version
where
we
started.
So
we
kind
of
can
coordinate
to
the
time
where
we
did
it
concept
design
not
much
what
we
do
have.
A
So
we
do
have
a
bunch
of
cat
on
this
already
so
there's
on
the
very
top,
oh
yeah,
so
in
the
email,
let's
actually
pull
up
the
email
here,
because
we
can
katrina
just
put
in
a
bunch
of
links
for
the
latest
cad
models
here,
so
updated
wall
modules.
A
All
this,
I'm
gonna
put
that
this
is
fresh.
We've
just
been
updating
this
updated
version
from
yesterday,
but
here
we
should
say:
okay
walls.
Well,
the
walls
are
actually
update.
So
let's
call
it
so
we
can
all
edit
in
real
time.
A
A
We
didn't
finish
up
all
the
feedback
from
the
other
day.
Anything
else
before
we
go
on
because
now
we're
going
to
just
get
into
okay,
here's
the
walls
and
how
do
we
understand
how
they
go
together?
So
we
have
a
good
idea
before
we
go
out
there.
Anything
else
from
yesterday
just
do
catch
up.
I
got
one
more
comment.
A
Right,
sorry,
it
doesn't
exist,
it
doesn't
exist.
Okay,
it
does
exist
like
for
example,
so
this
is
sh2
version.
Two,
for
example,
cut
list.
I
would
I
would
want
it
to
be
well
in
the
build
instructions.
A
A
This
is
the
stuff
that
needs
to
get
updated,
and
this
is
where
once
again
like
the
documentation
is
hard
to
keep
track
of,
but
we
can
now
from
what
we
did
yesterday.
You
could,
for
example,
right
now
say:
you've
got
cdca
home
three
right,
so
you
got
three:
where
would
that
go?
There's?
Actually
a
specific
placeholder
called
cut
list,
so
you
can
go
in
there?
Okay,
and
we
can
say
silplate.
A
Went
to
the
design
rationale,
yeah,
and
I
can
explain
that
we'll
get
into
it
right
now,
because
that's
that's
so
that's
that'll,
be
the
technical
part
right
now
I'll
explain
it
other
comment.
I
noticed
in
a
video
tape.
Okay,
let's
actually
look
back
at
the
video
tape,
because
you
can.
You
can
see
see
that
one
item
that
it
did
stick
out
to
me.
So
if
you
are
looking
here,
wait,
let's
see,
I
want
a
close-up
of
this
I'll.
Look
at
that.
A
A
We
need
to
fix
that
because
there's
probably
about
an
inch
or
so
lower
there
than
here-
and
I
know
we
we're
kind
of
sticking
up
there
and
also
there
may
be
a
little
lower.
We
do
want
to
correct
that
like
put
a
shim
underneath
there
get
a
string
out
there
and
run
a
line
straight
through
that
will
just
make
our
life
easier
for
the
modules.
B
B
H
Short
yeah,
but
I
think
that
one
thing
about
the
bowing
in
the
wood
is
usually
when
you've
got
a
you're
putting
anchor
screws
in
there.
You
end
up
putting
that
under
enough
force
all
the
time
there's
not
much
capacity
for
that
wood
to
actually
change
shape
over
time
to
be
pre-tensioned
into
place.
H
I
think
that
marshall's
exactly
right,
but
if
you
don't
have
a
real
straight
line
there
in
elevation,
we're
gonna
pay
the
price.
A
It's
just
gonna
take
longer
to
fix
stuff
as
we
go
so.
A
Fix
this
not
too
bad,
I
mean
we
run
a
string
line
and
then
just
put
spacers
underneath
so
remember.
This
is
a
thing
that
this
thing
is
going
to
stand
for
a
week
or
a
few
weeks
and
we're
going
to
dismantle
it,
but
we
want
it
to
be
when
we
build
up
make
sure
that
we're
straight
and
then
we
don't
have
enough
band
that
like
if
the
for
example,
wall
is
leaning
out
a
little
bit
well,
it
can
fall
like
on
a
straight
surface.
It
can
pretty
much
stand
there.
A
A
Once
we
put
up
the
modules
actually,
I
wanted
to
get
a
couple
more
impact,
drills,
the
vibrating,
concrete
kind
of
drills.
So
we
can
do
that
easily.
We've
got
a
bunch
of
drills
here,
but
we
want
this
specified
tool
for
that.
We
can
do
that,
so
one
that
that
is
for
uplift.
A
A
A
A
Yeah
we're
kind
of
like
in
a
little
valley
here,
so
here
we
probably
wouldn't
not
too
likely,
because
we've
got
these
little
hills
here.
So
we
haven't,
we've
had
tornado
warnings,
we
never
had
anything
like
actually
touched
down
in
our
place
or
anything
yeah
yeah,
so
yeah,
and
if
we
get
the
forestry
up
to
nice
and
tall
we'll
have
an
extra
layer
of
protection
right.
A
So
that's
a
detail
that
we
will
have
to
address
what
I
see
there
is
chalk
line,
just
a
string
line,
spacer
just
shims,
just
pieces
of
wood
that
are
half
inch
plywood
or
maybe
like
stick
in
a
couple
of
them
or
where,
as
we
need
to-
and
I
see
that
the
other
sides
look
actually
well
the
back
side,
at
least
on
the
left
side.
Look
really
good
the
one
on
the
right
here.
I
do
see
a
slight
rise.
A
That
might
be
a
rise
there
too,
and
this
is
kind
of
nice,
because
this
is
telephoto
lens,
not
telephoto.
It's
it's
not
two
telephoto,
but
yeah.
It
kind
of
amplifies
like
when
you
go
at
this,
this
flat
kind
of
like
from
a
low
angle.
You
can
kind
of
amplify
that
what
you
can't
see
when
you're
actually
standing
on
it
yeah,
but
we'll
do
that,
so,
let's
get
into
the
design.
So
what
do
we
do
here?
So,
let's
actually
talk
about
the
last
version.
A
This
is
this
is
cool
we're
moving
on
straight
from
the
last
version,
which
we
did
quite
recently
and
let's
see
what
about
the
sill
plate.
So
in
the
last
version
we
did
two
different
things:
one
we
used
mud,
sil
anchors
for
those
of
you
who
don't
haven't
heard
it
has
anyone
heard
of
mud,
seal
anchors.
A
These
are
what
they
are,
so
we
embedded
them
in
the
concrete
in
the
last
version
and
then
wrapped
them
around
the
wood
to
hold
it
down.
So,
instead
of
using
screw
down
like
the
black
bolts
or
anchors
right
now,
we're
going
to
anchors
why
well,
these
have
a
little
when
they
hang
over
the
edge
they're
a
little
protrusion.
So
when
you're
actually
working
the
concrete,
it's
a
little
harder.
A
The
second
thing
is:
when
you
fold
them
over
parts
of
the
they
don't
really
have
hold
down,
they
will
work
once
you
put
them
around,
but
there's
like
initially
there's
like
a
little
gap
there,
so
you're
not
really
flat
against
the
ground
there.
That's
all
right
main
thing
for
not
using
these,
I
think,
is
ken.
What
was
it?
What
do
we
like
about
it?
A
A
A
What's
a
good
good
picture
of
that?
That's
how
they
look
well
here,
they're
using
them
yeah!
Okay,
this
one
here
is
that's
what
you
would
start
with
that
that
is
before
the
concrete
is
poured.
So
you
embed
the
single.
A
Yes
and
that's
part
of
it,
we
wanted
to
keep
the
pores
simpler
and
the
foundation
laying
simpler.
So
we
didn't
have
to
worry
about
any
of
this
at
the
foundation
forming
stage.
So
that's
that's
an
advantage,
but
you
can
see
it
does
have
a
finite
height
and
when
you
are
screening
or
screening,
yes
and
traveling,
it
gets
in
the
way
that
I
definitely
did
not
like
otherwise
they're
convenient,
because
afterwards
you
just
wrap
them
around.
A
So
if
you
embedded
so
the
industry
standard,
a
lot
is
you
do
anchor
bolts
that
stick
through,
but
then
you
have
to
drill
the
sill
plate
now
for
us,
we
not
only
would
have
to
drill
the
sill
plate,
but
the
actual
wall
module,
because
the
wall
module
sits
on
the
sill
plate
too.
So
there's
a
double
layer
of
holes
that
you'd
be
doing
precision
there.
A
A
So
here
this
is
my
log
right,
so
this
is
we
keep
a
time
graph
by
the
way,
just
a
little
note
on
here
so
work
log.
What
you
do
is
date
put
like
all
links
to
what
you
do
if
you
do
that,
we
also
have
this
time
graph.
So
all
our
hours
are
actually
we're
kind
of
like
not
documenting
hours
here,
but
you
have
this.
We
have
this
form
here
time
sheet.
A
So
if
we're
doing
I'm
like
doing
70
hours
a
week,
pretty
constant,
but
you
have
this
log
that
you
can
do
and
that
would
actually
feed
into
the
main
log.
So
if
you
set
up
a
wiki
account,
we
can
set
you
up
for
that.
So
you
all
here
should
do
that,
so
that
our
hours
actually
feed
into
this
overall
graph.
But
here
what
I
meant
to
show
is
screw
down.
A
A
No,
that's
mud
cell
anchors
anchor
cheat
sheet.
No,
I'm
gonna
go
screw
down
anchors.
A
A
These
are
what
these
things
look
like,
so
not
these.
So
this
is
another
version.
This
is
an
expansion
type
of.
So
let's,
let's
actually
explore
this,
so
you
know
what
to
do.
Yes,
you
can
do
this
wedge
anchor.
A
A
So
when
you
screw
it
down,
the
the
flanged
out
part
goes
against
this
collar
and
it
expands
it
and
it
locks
in
cool,
not
super
reliable
either
I
mean
use
these.
They
can
come
out.
A
lot
of
people
say
that
the
latest
you
know
like
if
you
go
on
internet
people,
people
argue
over
what's
the
best,
there's
a
lot
of
guys
that
say:
okay,
well,
the
plane
anchors
yeah,
that's
what
we've
done
for
ages.
A
A
I
mean
this
is,
if
you
search
a
little
bit
around,
because
we
were
looking
at
it
like
okay,
we
don't
want
to
put
in
them
beforehand,
so
we
don't
have
to
do
precise
whole.
So
just
you
just
drill
through
the
wood
and
then
install
this
easy
cool
so
and
then
we
looked
at
okay
forums
and
stuff.
These
do
appear
to
be
okay.
This
is
the
latest
like.
Why
are
all
these
old
people
just
sticking
to
stuff
when
this
is
easier
and
actually
has
the
proper
engineering?
I
I
A
B
A
B
A
Yeah
you'll
you'll
kind
of
like
grind
into
the
concrete,
so
you're
as
strong
as
like,
once
the
teeth
kind
of
wedge
in
a
little
bit.
How
much
force
it
takes
to
get
all
those
teeth,
but,
okay,
so
here's
basic
calculations,
you
can
say:
okay!
Well,
we
can
actually
do
that
in
our
head
right
now.
What's
the
force
required
to
pull
this
out?
How
would
you
do
that?
You
got
steel
and
you
got
concrete
which
is
weaker.
Concrete
is
weak.
Your
concrete
is
4000
psi.
A
Steel
is
50
000.,
so
you
would
take
50
000
and
you
would
look
at
the
surface
area
of
those
teeth.
So
then
you
take
okay,
that's
a
half
inch
bolt.
How
long
is
that
run
that
screw
say
it's
like
10
or
20
inches
across
you've
got
four
inches
of
screw
it's
about
20,
inches
or
so,
and
then
how
how
big
are
those
little
little
teeth?
They're,
maybe
like
an
eighth
inch
or
something
eighth
inch
times,
20
inches,
I'm
I'm
seeing
like.
A
I
don't
know
a
couple
of
square
inches,
a
few
square
inches,
maybe
like
two
to
four.
Well,
then
my
basic
principles,
calculations
say
well.
If
the
psi
of
concrete
is
4000,
that's
the
weak
part
because
those
teeth
are
not
going
to
break
the
concrete
is
going
to
break.
A
You
got
about
two
square
inches
times,
4
000
psi.
So
roughly
you
need,
like
8
000
pounds
to
pull
it
out.
So
then
you
look
at
the
tables
healthy
anchor
tables,
and
what
is
that.
A
The
concrete
will
crumble
at
a
force
of
4000
psi.
That's
like
the
generic
figure
of
how
strong
it
is.
That
means,
if
you
have
4
000
pounds
pulling
or
pressing
down
on
it,
it
will
not
break
and
it's
spread
over
that
square
inch.
So
the
the
logic
here
is:
it's
like
very
fuzzy.
It's
very
like
back
of
the
envelope
calculation
thing
you're,
taking
a
look
at
the
area,
the
amount
that
you
have
to
hold
against,
and
we
said
okay
well.
That
thread
ends
up
being
all
together
that
many
square
inches
of
surface
area.
A
That's
hitting
against
that
concrete
and
that's
how
we
get
it
it
will
and
that
concrete
will
crumble.
That's
that's
the
weak
part.
Well,.
J
A
A
B
Just
real
quick
on
that,
you
pre-drill
and
that'll
smooth
the
surface
to
where,
whatever
you're
eating
in
there
that
screw
won't
eat.
A
Yeah
in
the
in
this
in
the
anchors,
the
hole
is
actually
slightly
undersized,
so
the
teeth
only
are
biting
in.
But
if
you
look
at
the
example
of
you
know
say
a
four
inch
screw
into
say
four
inches
of
styrofoam
well,
say
you
got
still
that
even
it's
like
I
said,
half
inch
bolt
into
that
styrofoam
say
we
got
that
same
two
inches
of
surface
area.
Well,
two
two
square
inches
times,
10
psi
or
so
is
20
pounds.
Can
you
pull
it
out?
A
You
could
probably
pull
20
pounds,
but
if
that
was
20,
not
20,
20
psi,
but
8000
psi.
You
can
see
that
it
kind
of
gives
you
the
first
order
of
magnitude
to
show
that
oh
yeah,
that
concrete
is
going
to
stick
in
there
because
concrete.
Is
that
hard?
It's
it's
a
rock!
You
know
it's
rock
that's
been
fried
and
then
reformulated
by
adding
water
to
it,
so
just
general
kind
of
principles.
But
you
got
to
think
like
that
when
you're
designing
this,
it's
like.
Okay.
Is
this
going
to
work
at
all?
A
Well
from
first
principles?
Yes,
it
could
work
and
then
let's
get
more
specific
and
stuff
like
that,
but
that
will
nail
out
things
that
are
like
that
half
inch
bolt
going
into
that
styrofoam,
which
is
kind
of
obvious,
but
you
have
to
get
those
kinds
of
well,
I'm
just
saying
it's
useful
to
get
even
those
very
basic
principles.
So
you
you
don't
do
stuff,
that's
type,
one
errors,
er
things
that
definitely
do
not
work.
You
know
you
gotta
start
with
things
that
you
think
definitely
work.
You
know
and
then
you
can
work
from
there.
A
That's
how
we
think
a
lot
here.
It's
like
okay!
I
look
at
anything
and
I
say:
okay,
how
are
these
guys
designing
and
you
study
industry
standards?
And
you
say:
okay,
it
doesn't
make
sense
if
it
does
yes
great.
If
not,
why
not?
And
then
you
can
actually
start
understanding
the
system
when
you
turn
from
a
builder
to
a
designer
which
is
the
progression
like
once
you
build
enough,
you
can
start
designing
things
that
will
actually
work.
A
So
this
house,
like
here,
that's
when
we're
working
on
a
carport-
let's
say
that
exterior
sheeting
there
we
use
that,
both
as
the
sheathing
for
on
the
frame
and
the
final
finish
two
in
one.
That
provides
a
few
challenges
there
in
the
sense
that
we
had
to
in
this
design.
Here,
we'd
have
to
have
this
flashing,
so
let's,
let's
zoom
in
on
that
there,
because
this
is
exactly
what
we
did
last
time
and
let's
explore,
and
this
is
gets
into
like
too
much
information
here.
A
I
don't
know
how
much
we
want
to
go
to
so.
Stop
me
if
I'm
going
too
far,
but
because
we
did
this,
we
had
to
now
introduce
this
back
water
stop.
That
goes
all
the
way
down,
because
the
rain
would
come
down
the
sheeting
and
down
here.
If
you
don't
have
another
layer,
which
is
your
final
exterior
siding
because
we're
using
the
siding
both
for
the
structure,
sheathing
and
the
final
finish
rainwater
waterproof
barrier
there.
A
So
we
had
to
do
that
another
detail
of
the
flashing
so
that
water
doesn't
go
kind
of
wick
up
here
right
now,
we're
gonna
have
the
sill
plate
we're
going
to
have
the
osb
just
kind
of
like
they
do
in
standard
construction,
osb
oriented
strand
boards
plywood
like
structure
over
that
we
have
the
final
finish,
but
right
now
we
can
simply
go
and
put
let's
see
if
we
look
at
the
cat.
Let's
look
at
the
update
from
so.
If
we
go
to.
A
So
I
can
always
access
it
here,
instructions,
no,
how
about
cad?
Let's
look
at
so
do
we
have
a
detail
of
the
first
story
assembly,
that's
probably
where
we
want
to
go
vertical
assembly,
folder,
updated
wall
modules.
Okay,
let's
go
here.
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
So,
let's,
let's
talk
about
the
solutions
we
don't
have
to
go.
Don't
necessarily
want
to
go
into
the
detail
exactly
why?
Okay,
we
can
talk
quite
a
bit
about
what
the
last
version,
what
happened
there
and
what
we
do
now,
but
I
think
for
now
we
can
say
that.
Okay,
if
you
have
this
rail,
then
use
the
concept
of
poke
something
that
fits
only
one
way
like
a
lego
block
snapping
into
another
right.
So
we're
doing
that
and
that's
what
they
do
in
structural
insulated
panels.
A
Structural
insulated
panels
are
foam
core
with
two
pieces
of
osb
on
the
side.
They
basically
go
on
on
the
bottom
plate
and
on
top
top
there's
also
another
plate
that
goes
in
to
align
them
and
that's
exactly
what
we're
going
to
do
here
with
our
module.
So
how
do
you
do
that?
So,
let's
turn
off
okay.
So
let's
start
turning
layers
on
here.
But
what
do
we
see?
So
it's
an
entire
wall
system.
So
let's
look
at
the
individual
module,
so
that's
also
so
go
back
these
files.
I
sent
you
guys.
A
A
You
can't
really
like
on
the
wake
you
can
index
things
here.
You
can't
really
index
things
and
you
really
need
to
set
up.
I
mean
katarina's
doing
this
and
I'm
telling
her
like
not
to
do
it
this
way
she
likes
it.
This
way
this
will
blow
up.
If
you
have
enough
versions,
this
is
not
scalable
forking
into
a
separate
iteration
is
scalable,
but
here's
the
modules
folder.
A
B
So
this
is
just
you
there's
a
google
application.
I
don't
know
if
you
would
want
it
or
not,
but
you
could
sync
all
those,
so
they
look
like
local
files
at
all
times
on
your
computer.
It's
something
that
you
would
never
have
to
download
again.
A
Oh
yeah,
you
can
do
that.
That's
that's
easy
to
do.
The
more
important
thing
is
indexing
that
like
say,
you're
keeping
version
control
not
over
this
project,
but
let's
say
the
next
hundred
years.
B
A
Yeah
yeah
not
a
problem,
not
a
problem
at
that
level.
It's
the
file
management
is
easy.
We're
talking
about
infinite
numbers
of
people
in
infinite
numbers
of
locations
working
on
an
infinite
number
of
projects
at
which
point
wiki
actually
suffices
github
does
some
of
that
github
is
really
good
for
software.
Software
is
a
part
of
it.
So
we
always
get
into
this
argument.
Why
aren't
you
just
using
github?
Well,
you
can
only
do
so
much
there
too
yeah
right.
No
thanks!
That's
right!
A
The
software
guys
a
lot
of
software
guys
just
kind
of
keep
pushing.
We
always
have
this
kind
of
debate,
but,
okay,
here's.
A
A
So
we
can,
after
we
have
any
of
these
walls
up.
We
already
have
self
aligning
locations
at
the
edges,
at
least
at
the
four
foot
marks
for
the
joists,
and
then
you
have
to
put
one
in
the
middle,
but
this
is
really
cool
because
then
the
the
rim
joist,
you
put
it
up
there.
It's
not
going
to
fall
on
somebody's
head
and
you
can
attach
it
readily
to
that.
So
this
is
like
I
mean
this
is
like
very
simple.
A
It
does
require
10-foot
osb,
which,
for
example,
in
this
case,
was
special
order.
Standard
is
eight
so
little
details
like
that.
But
it's
definitely
you
can
source
it
many
places
now,
so
I
actually
drew
this
up.
Let's
just
take
a
look
at
more
of
the
detail,
it's
kind
of
a
little
hard
to
navigate.
You
can't
really
look
at
the
bottoms
well
and
so
I'll
go
to
freecad.
B
Real
quick
on
cost
special
order
versus
common
was
it?
Do
you
know
what
that
charge?
Resin
percentage
yeah
it's.
A
Let's
take
a
look,
because
that's
actually
so
that
was.
A
A
16.
so
you're
paying
quite
a
bit
almost
twice
for
25
percent.
More
so
it's
it's
not
good
on
price,
but
good
on
workflow,
so
someone
who's
building
this
and
they
maybe
want
to
compromise
a
little
bit
more
time
here.
We
are
just
optimizing
for
speed
quite
a
bit.
A
If
you're
optimizing
for
cost
you'd
have
to
do
a
cut,
you
would
need
blocking
on
the
panel
see
one
of
the
details
about
this
design.
Using
a
ten
foot
sheet,
we
used
eight
foot
sheets
before
one
of
the
details,
you'll
see
on
the
back
side.
A
If
you,
if
the
eight
foot
ends
up
there,
we
needed
blocking
on
top,
we
removed
that
if
you
use
the
eight
foot,
you've
got
a
bit
of
work,
one
you
gotta
cut
the
other
sheet
and
then
you
gotta
fit
them
it's
a
bit.
I
lost
you,
gotta
do
the
blocking
at
the
back
screw
against
that.
B
A
A
Moving
on,
I
wanted
to
boot
up
the
let's
here's
the
build
materials.
Let's
look
at
once
again
on
seed
home
three.
Now
looking
at
the
cat,
I
like
to
work
in
the
freecad.
A
So
we
do
have
a
freakout
model
here.
Various
things
so
actually
went
over
this.
You
can
take
a
look
at
this
design
lesson
and
where
we
described
this
system,
we've
already
talked
about
this
in-house,
but
here's
the
actual
module
in
freecad
and
we
call
it
the
diy
structural
insulated
panel
and
it's
got
the
structural
insulated
panel
concept,
but
it's
not
a
structural
insulated
panel
which
has
foam
core
plus
glue
on
both
sides
that
make
it
actually
structural
here,
we're
doing
a
regular,
framing
and
using
soft
insulation
just
fiberglass
insulation.
A
B
Yep
and
the
the
the
component
trusses
went
with
steel
trusses
rather
than
wood.
No,
no.
A
Well,
the
steel
are
for
another
structure,
we're
not
using
the
steel
here-
oh
okay,
okay,
we
would
like
to,
but
that
would
be
a
special
code
provision
for
that.
You'd
have
to
get
a
lot
of
engineering
done
on
that,
because
you'd
have
to
prove
to
your
your
building
department
that
this
is
structurally
sound.
It's
not
a
standard
material,
welded
rebar
trusses
are
not
a
standard
construction
material.
A
They
are
much
cheaper,
like
half
to
one-third
the
cost,
sure.
No,
absolutely
we.
We
know
it
all
works,
but-
and
we
probably
would
want
to
end
up
with
a
lower
cost
house-
that's
stronger
using
these
steel
rebar
welded
trusses.
Now
that
means
someone's
got
to
weld
them
the
code's
not
going
to
be
too
bad,
because
once
once
you
figure
it
out
for
a
few
locations
just
say:
oh,
but
the
other
guys
did
it
and
it's
okay
and
it'll
be
fine.
It
just
might
take
a
little
time.
A
A
The
blocking
okay,
so
that's
your
rail,
you
put
a
top
plate
on
it
and
it's
auto
aligning
great
on
the
bottom
so
that
now,
let's
look
at
the
bottom
here
once
again,
just
this
tab
now
this
tablet
needs
to
be
inset.
Here,
that's
not
correct
here.
It
needs
to
be
there's
like
a
male
and
female
part.
So
this
this
this
plywood
goes
over
three
quarters
of
an
inch,
so
in
other
words
to
the
middle
of
a
stud
which
is
1.5
and
on
this
side
it's
inset
by
three-quarter.
A
I
A
This
is
the
interior.
The
exterior
is
out
on
the
other
side
there
after
we
install
them,
and
then
we
screw
it
down
to
the
bottom
plate
yeah.
We
can
remove
them
because
it's
already
aligned,
yep
and
yeah.
You
got
drywall
issues
right,
so
we're
using
beaded
plywood
on
the
inside.
So
this
this
is
more
discussion
on
design.
Why
do
we?
We
actually
have
two
two
mil
studs
before,
because
we're
using
beaded
plywood,
which
is
3
8
inch
plywood,
which
requires
18
inch
or
16
inch
screw
pattern
every
every
16
inches?
A
What
we
need
to
do
now
on
an
interior
to
in
order
to
do
this,
we
need
to
use
lading
strips
across
this
in
order
to
mount
the
interior
plywood,
not
too
bad.
We
don't
like
that.
As
I
mean
that's
more
work,
but
you're
saving
that
little
stud
saving
on
weight
and
the
lath
strips
not
too
bad.
I
mean
they're
light
lightweight
one
by
twos,
something
like
that
acceptable
and
we'll
see
in
practice.
You
know
we
might
after
we
do
it.
A
We
might
say
otherwise,
but
it's
a
good
guess,
so
we
can
still
use
the
same
kind
of
interior
plywood.
That
we're
using
bead
board,
it's
called
just
wood,
so
I'm
gonna
build
a
bunch
of
these.
How
many
of
them
it's
a
whole
bunch.
B
Rather
than
this
looks
really
great,
but
rather
than
having
the
panel
on
one
by
one,
I
know
that's
how
we
want
we
weren't
popping
on
problem
pop
them
on.
B
B
Right
so
this
this
is
penalized,
but
whenever
we
put
them
together,
it's
only
the
interior
kind
of
keeping
them
together.
A
Well,
it's
exteriors
bonding
them
together
with
this,
with
this
overhang
here
being
screwed
to
the
next
panel.
Oh.
A
Yeah,
so
these
are
overlapping,
so
you're
addressing
so
this
is
a
big
deal
here,
we're
addressing
that
gap
between
the
studs,
we're
closing
it
up
before
we
left
that
gap,
because
the
wood
was
exactly
on,
and
that
meant
we.
We
would
have
to
use
batten
strips
and
more
waterproofing
there
right
now.
That
issue
goes
away.
We
can
use
house
wrap
we're
done
with
the
seams.
A
H
A
A
B
A
E
H
A
A
A
A
A
Right
so
the
so
to
explain
what's
going
on
here,
one
of
the
features
of
the
cdca
home
is
expandability,
and
to
do
that,
this
structure
is
designed
to
add
another
thousand
square
feet
on
the
back:
we're
pre-framing
at
1v5
door
module.
So
in
other
words,
it's
ready
to
accept
the
door,
but
it'll
be
closed
off
at
the
beginning.
A
A
Okay,
yeah
no
they're
cool,
so
let's
take
we're
looking
at
it
always
from
the
outside.
So
let's
look
at
one
r,
r2,
sorry,
one
r1,
which
is
after
we
complete
the
front
module.
We
can
insert
that
as
the
first
one,
so
where's
one
r1,
so
you
go
down.
A
A
48
is
the
reference
to
the
width,
so
this
means
this
would
be
all
the
wall.
Sections
on
the
front
are
48,
except
for
the
adjustment,
which
is
one
and
a
half
inches
shorter,
then,
on
the
side.
Walls,
because
you've
got
the
thickness
of
the
front
and
back
wall
you're
going
to
need
to
reduce
the
size
of
the
ones
on
the
corners
by
5.5,
inches.
A
A
A
A
A
A
E
A
A
Yeah,
I
got
it
right
here:
okay,
so
katrina
will
come
down,
come
on
down
and
we've
got
the
mouse
and
computer
here.
So
you
can
navigate
and
I
can
explain
yeah
so
come
on
down.
B
Well,
the
thing
is,
like
you
know,
there's
like
eight
of
them
that
are
the
same
thing
right.
M
A
J
H
H
A
A
A
We
do
know
a
bunch,
but
there
is,
but
then
we
don't
know
a
lot,
because
the
corners
are
different
right,
though
they
are
mirror
images,
so
one
of
the
corners
will
be
just
like
the
other
one.
A
We
can
just
go
out.
Okay,
so
does
one
of
these
diagrams
show
how
many
of
the
standard
ones?
Yes,
it
does
okay.
So
this
is
good
here.
So
this
is
the
standard
module
here
and
the
stuck
in
red
shows,
which
ones
those
are
and
so
you're
kind
of
one,
two,
three,
four,
five,
six
seven.
So
we
can
build
go
into
the
workshop
to
build
seven
of
these
right
now.
That'll
be
one
thing
to
do
like,
for
example.
Why
is
I
1l3?
Not
one
of
them?
Well,
it's
the
shortened
one.
It's
the
one!
A
C
A
B
A
A
We
did
not
want
to
complicate
those,
because
those
are
all
the
same
in
terms
of
the
basic
framing
concept,
so
we
left
the
adjustment
to
be
done
in
very
specific
places
because
at
the
advantage
of
uniformity
along
everything
else,
so
once
you
get
familiar
with
this
once
you
build
this,
you
can
probably
we're
not
saying
this
is
the
final.
There
may
be
a
better
solution.
This
is
what
we
think.
After
doing
this
a
few
times.
B
A
We're
pre-framing
at
39
so
that
if
it's
36
or
it's
30,
36
for
a
window
or
38
for
a
door,
it
can
accept
both
by
shimmy
on
the
side.
So
we
simplify
the
framing
to
be
just
one
kind
of
a
aperture
size.
So
it's
just
much
easier
to
think
about
it.
A
lot
of
places
here
we're
just
trying
to
simplify
so
you
can
even
just
remember
stuff,
like
I
know,
part
of
the
apprenticeship
was
a
lot
of
stuff
was
okay.
What
is
this
distance?
What
is
that?
A
This
is
all
kind
of
all
over
the
place
here.
It's
like
very
few,
like
the
bottom
hangout
one
inch.
The
bottom
hang
out
on
the
second
floor,
two
inches
every
aperture
39
every
wall,
48
my
except
for
the
ones
that
are
one
and
a
half
shorter
for
the
adjustment.
A
A
J
A
A
A
A
Well,
we
couldn't
make
it
one
way
from
the
corner,
because
it's
a
door,
so
we
said:
okay,
let's
go
the
next
one
over.
For
that
reason,
it's
not
there,
because
we're
going
from
left
to
right
and
other
important
thing
for
this
to
work
out
that
has
to
be
gotten.
Is
that
the
shift
which
way
does
the
panel
slide
over
you're
working
on
it
say
convention
is
as
if
you're
looking
from
the
outside?
A
A
D
A
And
the
last
one
we
had
95
in
freecad
80
in
sweet
home.
Here
we
have
very
little
in
both
oh
okay.
Well,
we
have
the
individual
modules.
We
don't
have
the
whole.
I
mean
this
because
we
just
like
after
the
last
build,
we
said.
Okay,
we
want
to
change
a
few
things,
so
it's
almost
the
same
as
last
time,
but
no
you
can't
build
from
that,
because
it's
a
new
model
that
it's
just
two
two
weeks
old
or
whatever.
D
A
That
it's
pretty
good!
Okay,
so
let's
look
at
say:
we
were
already
looking
at
it
and,
let's
pull
up
do,
can
we
make
sense?
Okay,
that's
a
corner.
Let's
not,
let's
get
rid
of
that
one.
Let's
look
at
one
that
was
already
opened!
No,
not
that
this
was
the
whole
arrangement
of
them.
But
let's
look
at
the
other
one.
A
A
Yes,
that
does
reconcile
with
the
sweden,
so
both
are
actually
okay,
but
we're
saying
that
plywood
is
shifted
to
the
left,
so
that
your
stud
you
actually
it's
sticking
out
this
way
three
quarter
inches
so
pop
quiz.
A
D
That's
that
is
not
the
songwriter
everybody
to.
A
M
A
The
blocking
compared
to
the
plywood
it
kind
of
follows
it
right.
So
here
the
this
blocking-
and
we
said
nominally
four
by
six-
just
cut
little
four
by
six
out
of
out
of
plywood,
just
half
inch
plywood.
It
follows
the
same
as
the
the
front
osb,
meaning
it's
like
directly
behind
it.
A
A
This
is
so
you
align
the
top
yeah
you
want
it
there,
otherwise
the
top
would
have.
It
could
be
like
this
when
you're
putting
it
on
and
someone
has
to
hold
it
hold
one
on
the
other.
It's
kind
of
hard
to
do
that
if
you're
reaching
over
that
plywood
that
no
brainer
don't
have
to
worry
about
alignment,
if
you
did
not
have
that
there.
Some
of
these
would
end
up
not
not
not
right.
Next
to
each
other,
they'd
be
offset,
there's
no
way
you
can
get
it
offset.
If
you
have
that
in
place.
A
And
this
one
here
also
follows
the
plywood:
it's
on
the
on
the
left
side,
there,
the
ones
on
the
bottom.
Yes,
the
same
they're
offset
in
the
same
direction
so
on,
and
that
that
in
the
corner
there
that
one
needs
to
be
fixed,
but
so
pop
quiz
number
two.
How
much
is
the
plywood
sticking
down
an
inch
one
inch.
A
A
Right
and
right
and
that's,
we
could
get
into
an
issue
there
actually.
So
in
the
worst
case,
we
have
to
take
a
slice
with
a
saw
at
the
very
top
if
you've
got
like
a
quarter
inch
interference,
hopefully
not
what
other
properties
here.
What
are
we
using?
So
this
is
a
nine
foot
panel,
so
people
who
know
about
framing
what
are
we
using
for
these
studs
two
by
sixes.
D
A
A
You
could
do
two
by
fours,
but
I
think
the
main
art
well
at
least
for
this
area
that
doesn't
work
for
insulation
value
since
we're
building
here
we're
using
two
by
sixes.
You
can
do
two
by
four
now
two
by
fours
tend
to
warp
on
you
much
more
it'll,
be
just
a
little
more
difficult,
but
they're
lighter,
so
it
would
be
easier
to
carry.
A
B
A
A
B
I
would
say
in
more,
obviously
you
want
to
build
for
things
like
hurricanes
and
climate
change
and
all
the
things
we
don't
know
that
are
coming,
but
the
thing
about
seed
eco
is
cost
right,
we're
going
to
utilize
an
element
of
that.
Nobody
else
can
get
to
and
that's
cost
that's
true
and
then
add
later
I'm
saying
2x6
is
the
way
to
go
in
climates
like
especially
for
building
in
north
america,
but
not
everywhere.
Talking
about
in
places.
You
know
africa
doesn't
have
the
same
type
of
weather.
We
do
right.
B
D
D
Benefit
comes
in
that
with
the
reductions
of
the
the
extra
seam
within
the
so
so
you
need
an
extra
seam
with
a
16
inch
gap.
You
then
have
to
have
more
insulation
and
that
insulation
has
a
seam
and
that
seam
causes
you
to
lose
energy
through
the
gap
there
and
then,
additionally,
the
2x6
is
able
to
have
a
stronger
structural
integrity
growing
up
and
you
get
a
better
manufacturing
of
the
the
wood
itself
versus
two
by
fours
generally.
Just
get
jumped
so
yeah,
always
two
by
six
is
on
okay.
H
A
A
Color
scheme
is
a
little
off
here,
but
what
do
we
know
about
this,
then?
So
in
any
module
that
has
an
aperture
you're
going
to
need
a
header,
because
you
need
to
prevent
the
weight
of
the
top
floor
from
busting
down.
B
The
windows
need
to
be
double
plated
on
the
top
and
bottom.
B
L
I'm
together
I'm
a
merchant's
partner,
which
I
wasn't
here
this
morning
or
yesterday
I
was
like
trying
to.
We
just
had
to
do
some
last
minute,
design.
C
A
Yeah,
can
we
have
two
two
or
more
introductions
lance
since
you
yeah,
maybe.
K
N
I'm
lance
gatlin
from
all
over
most
recently
atlanta
and.
N
Essentially,
I
want
to
start
a
non-profit
kind
of
modeled
on
what
osc
is,
but
on
the
east
coast
and
specifically
to
target
the
southern
appalachian
region,
with
the
look
to
doing
like
economic
development
as
our
current
system
collapses.
And
so
you
know
trying
to
keep
things
local
and
making
the
you
know.
N
It'll
be
like
northern
georgia,
south
carolina
kind
of
in
the
north
west
and
then
parts
of
north
carolina
depending
on
how
these
restrictions
are,
but
most
likely
we'll
be
all
right
in
the
mountains,
I'm
sure
so.
N
I
N
That
as
a
sort
of
a
belly
button
to
both
like
create
projects
and
engage
the
community-
and
I'm
sorry,
I
don't
have
a
name
for
this
concept
yet
other
than
open
source
ecology.
But
I
think
that
this
is
the
model
for
going
forward
because
of
what
I've
seen
coming
next.
C
J
C
J
A
O
O
Yesterday,
yeah,
okay,
so
I
I
wanna,
I'm
focused
on
creating
distributed
enterprise.
I
wanna
build
a
system
that
can
create
or
transform
society.
You
know.
M
O
O
Program
now
and
I've
been
here
for
a
month,
I'm
learning
a
lot
and
creating
a
lot
of
different
skills
and
developing
myself
and
in
a
lot
of
ways-
and
I
think
my
focus
nowadays
is
in
understanding
what
does
collaboration
mean
with
us?
How
can
we
collaborate
more
efficiently,
not
only
off-site,
but
more
importantly
on-site?
O
How
can
we
create
change
with
all
of
us
working
together?
How
can
we
create
this
workflow
that
can
effectively
create
better
results,
more
inclusive
outcome
outcomes,
so
the
philosophy
behind
ofc?
I
think
it's
something
that
really
it's
very
appealing
for
me.
I
think
it's
one
of
the
most
tangible
solutions
to
words,
creating
real
and
substantial
change
in
this
society,
and
I
think,
like
more
more
than
anything
focused
on
the
third
world
country,
really
need
something
that
can
empower
them
and
give
them
agency
capacity.
O
G
Rid
of
the
food
desert
sentences
and
I'm
originally
from
new
york
and
from
a
poor
town,
that's
just
outside
of
new
york
city,
so
yeah
literally
outside
of
the
south
bronx.
A
Yeah
I
actually
got
started
in
agriculture
with
distributed
urban
gardening.
I
got
a
donation
from
stark
brothers
and
I
just
planted
a
bunch
of
fruit
trees
around
madison
wisconsin,
then,
a
few
years
after
there
was
a
lot
of
bounty
from
it.
It
was
really
cool
people's
backyards.
I
just
hey,
can
I
plan
here?
A
L
Oh
really,
okay,
yes
exactly
so
it
was
a
long
time
ago.
I've
done
I've
been
through
several
phases:
3d
printers
smart
materials,
high
load
tags,
so
I
like
to
combine
like
very
cool
materials
and
use
them
in
ways
that
are
unusual,
so
those
kind
of
like
the
things
that
I
do
for
fun.
L
On,
from
a
philosophical
point
of
view,
I
was
born
in
a
war
zone
under
a
fascist
dictatorship.
So
I
guess
that
my
goal
in
life
is
to
make
sure
that
that
is
happening.
It
will,
of
course,
but
you
know,
to
try
and
at
least
stop
from
a
more
practical
point
of
view.
Our
current
focus
is
on
depressing
housing.
L
So
I
think
that
in
general
the
idea
is
to
create
a
line
of
a
toolkit,
a
line
of
solutions
at
every
stage
like
if
you
can't
build,
you
can
find
someone
to
go
through
if
you
can
build.
You
know
your
plan,
so
basically
several
different
products
within
the
toolbox
that
are
because
they
are
fitted
to
different
needs
and
different
resources.
People
might
have
some
people
have
tough
times.
L
You
don't
have
plans
right
and
in
terms
of
what
I
personally
more
like
the
personal
niche
of
this
is
like
what
I
would
like
to
do,
and
what
I've
been
trying
to
do
is
like
every
time
I
want
to
design
a
house
that
me
and
another
woman
can
go
by
ourselves.
So
I
always
like
my
designers
always
thinking
about
weight
and
how
hard
it
is
to
do
something,
and
can
I
do
it.
F
I'm
curtis
murphy
I'm
born
and
raised
in
chicago
and
michigan.
My
parents
bought
a
farm,
so
I'm
great
on
the
farm,
and
you
know
I
went
to
after
90
cents.
F
You
know
started
going
back
and
forth,
but
I've
been
there
constantly
now
for
the
past
10
years
and
I
live
in
a
rural
area.
So
it's
a
it's
a
rice,
condensing
building
and
everything
was
done.
F
All
the
agriculture
was
done
with
the
machine
and
I
was
like
it
was
tripping
me
out
because
I
I
grew
up
with
tractors.
You
know
fixing
their
tractors
and
everything
all
to
implement
for
attracting
this
thing
and
getting
it
and
I'm
seeing
something.
That's
I
don't
even
know
how
you
can
do
it,
but
then
I
saw
a
need
so
schooling,
I
was
into
investment
technology,
machine
tools
and
all
that
so
I
was
like.
F
I
saw
a
name
and
I
started
looking
for
a
way
to
work
out
some
of
the
problems
and
I
found
open
source
he
factored
from
on
the
internet
about
2015..
F
I
started
following
it
and
ran
into
the
issue
of
no
virgin
steel.
You
know
in
the
in
the
country
so
like
that
that
almost
stopped
the
idea
and
then
the
3d
metal
printer
came
out.
Like
a
creator
said:
hey,
okay,
you
can't
get
no
burgers
here.
Somebody
came
up
with
a
3d
metal
printer
and
then
my
my
map
can
turn
it
on.
What
can
I
do?
F
How
can
I
use
this
technology
and
solve
the
problem
of
no
virgin
steel,
but
plenty
of
resources
aren't
or
everywhere
the
things
that
you
need,
but
how
do
you
get
it
to
where
it's
actually
benefiting
the
people
that
that's
it
so
I've
been
through
the
wikis
I've
studied.
F
I've
stayed
pretty
good
to
where
I
I
had
dreams
like
I
already
built
the
thing,
but
when
I
come
here
now,
I'm
actually
touching,
but
I
spent
a
lot
of
time
going
through
the
wikis
and
all
of
that.
So
now
it's
practicality.
For
me,
my
main
focus
on
the
tracking
aquaponics
I
had
been
introduced
to
so
I'm
kind
of
so
familiar
with
the
construction.
F
H
H
Okay,
in
fact,
for
interest
in
that
the
the.
F
Voters
they
don't
produce
them
folks
here,
but
china
has
a
a
school
boat
machine
out
there.
Okay
take
that
and
then
scanner.
Maybe
I
can
feel
it
and
then
that
open
source
hit
that
that
enterprise
section
to
it,
which
which
it
would
it
would
be
ideal.
F
So
I'm
definitely
right
there,
where
you
at
chris
and
saying
like
when
you
set
up,
say
that
I
think
I
counted
96
parts
that
like
track
six
and
then
how
many
of
those
different
parts
you
can
do
an
enterprise
with
this
disappointment,
gunners,
don't
supply
nothing,
everything
you
got
to
get,
and
so
even
for
the
tractors
instead
that
they
bought
that
you
found
alex
changed
that
massive
ferguson.
F
F
Instead
of
trying
to
wait
and
you
when
you're
doing
agriculture,
your
crops,
your
crops,
if
that
stuff
got
a
amount
time
that
you
got
to
get
everything
done,
you
know
you
can't
wait
two
weeks
to
fix
that
right,
exactly
exactly
so
with
that
idea
said:
okay,
what
I
saw
from
office
or
just
open
source
effect,
along
with
the
possibility
of
creating
everything
you
need.
E
By
using
free
gas
and
reading
another
term
and
stuff
like
that,
all
right.
E
Software
dev,
traditionally
so
fast
deer
stuff
and
found
open
source
technology
from
my
roommate.
Actually
who
was
studying
landscape
architecture
and
because
you
know
I
was
really
an
open
source
stuff.
It's
out
of
my
way.
It's
really
interesting,
currently
looking
into
career
opportunities
outside
of
computer
science,
trying
something
different,
so
three
opportunities,
education
opportunities,
volunteer
opportunities
or
entrepreneurial
opportunities.
E
So,
first
and
foremost,
I
want
to
contribute,
because
I
think
you
know
talks
a
lot
about
collaboration.
What
that's,
what
it
means
so
really
that
that's
priority
number
one
is
I
want
to
want
to
give
back
to
school
project,
and
the
close
second
to
that
is
is
networking
seeing
exactly
what
I
want
to
do
with
skills
land
or
you
know
how
I'm
gonna
move
forward.
So
I
ended
my
last
software
contract
in
august.
My
list
expires
in
the
middle
of
october
and
we
got
to
figure
out
something
after
that.
E
B
Name
is
anthony
last
year,
kobe
and
george
floyd.
I
was
living
in
chicago
doing
cyber
security,
making
a
ton
of
money
living
life.
Having
a
great
time,
george
floyd
and
covid
happens.
My
aunt
calls
me
tells
me:
they
ain't
got
internet
in
wayne,
county
a
whole
bunch
of
them.
We
all
reacted
to
it
differently.
B
Radicalized
me,
I'm
kind
of
on
the
same
wavelength
with
lance.
I
started
studying
the
great
depression
and
power
in
general
and
I'm
from
ohio,
rust
belt,
basically
commodity
they
had
commodities.
Somebody
else
could
do
them
cheaper,
so
they
took
them
out
and
it
devastated
me.
We
all
know.
Michigan,
ohio,
pennsylvania,
know
the
story.
B
So
a
new
era
is
coming
a
decentralized
era
and
I'm
playing
with
the
idea
of
reindustrialization,
which
is
bringing
some
of
these
things
back
into
our
communities.
I
do
have
a
name
for
it.
The
name
is
victory,
so
taking
the
concept
from
the
30s
of
the
victory
garden,
where
you
did
everything
yourself,
I'm
trying
to
reimpose
that
idea
for
in
a
way
that
regular
people
can
do
it,
and
I
think
this
is
very
close.
B
My
what
I'm
going
to
do
is
I'm
going
to
build
a
cd
go
home
on
premise
at
my
house,
so
you
guys
are
all
welcome
when
that
happens,
I'm
going
to
use
that
as
a
mechanism
to
build
capital
to
build
what
I'm
calling
the
victory,
one,
which
I
have
some
different
ideas
about
building
materials.
I
think
icf
is
the
future
building
material.
B
In
my
opinion-
and
I
want
to
do
my
own
icf
block
made
of
hemp,
crete
with
a
geopolymer
concrete
and
hemp
that
will
be
filled
with
a
geopolymer
concrete
that
will
build
the
structure
and
there's
a
lot
of
ideas
flying
in
there.
I
don't
know
I
didn't
know
anything.
B
Last
july
I
was
radicalized,
moved
back
to
ohio,
renovated
two
houses
bought
a
farm
and
started
emailing,
marcy,
craig
and
stuff.
So
mine
is
called
victory.
It
will
be
completely
open
source
if
there
will
be
a
model
like
red
hat,
you
can
get
support,
you
can
get
the
tools
or
you
can
get
it
all
we'll
build
it.
For
you,
mine
is
about
power.
B
I
want
to
give
people
their
power
back.
I
want
to
give
the
community
some
power
back.
Some
semblance
of
power
back
and
I
want
to
take
power
from
areas
where
it
is
concentrated,
so
so
I'm
kind
of
in
the
same
minds
to
you.
I've
gotten
less
romantic
about
some
of
my
ideas,
which
is
why
I
focus
on
power
now,
but
the
I
making
this
an
idea
that
can
make
money
is
critical
to
our
mission.
B
You
must
start
making
money.
This
thing
is
going
to
catch
like
a
wildfire.
I
can
promise
you
that
I've
seen
I've
seen
decentralized
products
just
over
and
over
software
devs.
You
guys
know
that's
the
space
that's
happening
in
first,
so
I
look
forward
to
you
know
creating
relationships
with
y'all
and
and
getting
on
the
same
level
and
creating
some
businesses
but
yeah
victory
home.
B
It
cost
me
an
inordinate
amount
of
money
to
buy
the
domain
rights
for
victory
homes,
limited
victory
homes.com,
so
that
is,
I
just
got
those
domains,
so
the
site
will
be
coming
up
and
it'll
just
say
something
like
victory
is
coming
and
it'll
have
a
flag
waving
or
something
until
we
have
some
more
attention.
A
D
I'm
maddie,
I
guess
primarily
just
kind
of
I
don't
know.
I've
been
working
for
home
last
two
years
and
kind
of
just
I've,
gotten
like
a
bad
spot
like
mentally,
physically
spiritually,
and
so
I'm
just
trying
to
do
like
a
three
month
like
boot
reboot
for
myself,
trying
to
quit
smoking
here,
I'm
on
like
day
two
so
yeah.
D
It
is
so
yeah,
that's
kind
of
I
found
mark
sheen's
work,
probably
at
11
years
ago,
when
I
first
went
back
to
school
for
civil
engineering,
and
I
thought
it
was
brilliant.
I
liked
it
a
lot.
I've
been
doing
like
utilities
here
for
the
last,
like
six
seven
years
and
yeah,
it's
all
good
stuff.
I
like
what
you
guys
are
saying.
I
think
you
guys
are
all
very
positive
people.
D
I
think
some
places
I
worked
at
are
really
strong,
like
stem
culture,
as
far
as
like
collaboration
adaptation
and
like
just
traditional
like
stem
values-
and
I
guess
that's
one
of
the
things
that
I
get
a
lot
from
this
group
is
a
lot
of
those
values
which
then
those
values
seem
to
work
out
quite
a
bit
better
than
not
having
those
ones.
I
A
B
H
C
H
C
C
K
B
C
A
Now
we
have
any
sound
issues:
sorry
you're
kind
of
very
low,
all.
O
A
Actually
did
get
a
mic,
a
bunch
of
mics
their
usb
connected.
We
can
put
a
couple
of
them
there
back
there
so
anyway
yeah
we
can
set
it
up
somewhere
back
there
yeah,
but
well,
let's,
let's
take
care
of
that.
So
let's
have
katarina
take
us
to
school,
since
she
knows
quite
a
bit
about
this
subject
matter
as.
A
A
E
L
Care
of
okay,
so
that's
the
main
change
that
we've
made
in
these
modules
is
basically
have
a
rail
to
align
them
with.
So
I'm
not
sure
how
the
tail
is
in
terms
of
like
your
knowledge
about
these
things
and
how
deep
we
need
to
go.
A
We
want
to
talk
about
it
with
respect
to
build
like
so
we're
pretty
much
getting
pumped
to
build.
We
said
that.
C
L
Straightforward,
because
what
happened
was
I
we
couldn't.
I
couldn't
finish
last
night,
all
the
we
have.
C
L
A
little
primer
just
so
before
we
go
to
the
workshop,
can
you
zoom
this
out
for
me?
One
thing
that
like
did
you
explain
the
names
of
things,
because
when
we
refer
to
things
okay,
so
it's
easier
to
know
what
we
call
each
part,
so
we
refer
to
them.
C
L
So
these
vertical
pieces
here
they're
generally
called
studs
right
then,
within
the
window,
you
have
two
types
of
stats.
You
have
the
kinksters,
which
are
the
tall
ones
that
go
all
the
way
to
the
top,
and
you
have
the
jack
stand.
So
this
is
like
the
cards
right,
which
are
the
smaller
ones
that
go
up
to
there.
L
These
are
horizontal
pieces
here,
they're
called
headers,
so
they're.
Basically,
you
know
in
this
case
they're
called
headers
they're.
Basically
little
beams
and
you're
going
to
see
heathers,
I'm
going
to
see
heathers
on
the
stairwell
you're,
going
to
see
how
those
are
over
windows
and
doors,
and
the
basic
concept
of
everything
is
that
you
have
loads,
usually
coming
from
the
sky
right,
you
have
rain,
you
have
snow,
you
have
the
weight
of
the
building
itself,
so
we
so
one
of
the
things
that
we're
addressing
here
are
vertical
goals.
L
L
Of
loads,
so
one
load
that
the
header
addresses
is
just
imagine
that
you're
putting
weight
on
something
in
that
way
it
needs
to
follow
a
path.
So
the
load
path
is
the
thing
that
we're
always
thinking
about
now.
Here
normally
on
a
window,
you
have
like
a
stud
here.
So
that's
clearly
the
path
right
like
it
comes
from
the
top.
It
goes
on
the
vertical
thing,
but
when
you
have
a
window,
you
need
to
send
it
like
that.
L
L
If
you
don't
see
a
clear
path,
there's
something
wrong
with
the
design,
and
you
need
to
think
about
that
now,
there's
more
to
it,
can
you
flip
it
so
that
I
can
see
it
from
the
front
now
yeah
so
now,
clearly
the
load
path
goes
through
here
down
the
sides
there
now.
C
L
L
L
This,
on
the
other
hand,
is
a
flat
header,
so
you'll
get
the
hang
of
all
of
this,
and
this
on
the
back
here
is
the
osb,
so
that's
kind
of
like
the
thing
in
the
front
for
a
support,
coordinate
well
building.
This
is
kind
of
like
it.
It's
a
lot
to
memorize
like
getting
yourself
familiar
with
the
names
of
things,
because
then
that
allows
us
to
say:
hey
everyone
put
a
stud
on
the
right
or
something
like
that.
You.
L
Hey
jeff,
okay,
now
in
terms
of
how
we're
gonna
coordinate,
is
we
try
as
much
as
possible
for
modules
to
be
standard?
But
the
thing
is
the
reality
of
construction
is
that
that
is
really
hard,
because
you
need
to
address
these
nodes
and
the
vertical
one
being
just
one
of
them.
We
can
talk
more
about
that,
so
we
ended
up
having
several
different
types
of
washers
that
are
only
slightly
different
because
they
they
they
respond
to
different
needs.
L
So
one
thing
to
watch
out
for
when
we're
in
the
workshop
is
we're
going
to
probably
be
working
in
pairs
is
don't
necessarily
copy
what
the
people
next
to
you
are
doing,
because
they
might
be
doing
something
that
is
only
like
a
quarter
inch
or
three
quarters
of
an
inch
different
and
that's
enough
to
you,
know
kind
of
like
create
confusion.
L
So,
oh
my
gosh.
L
L
L
L
Down
into
files,
just
because
I
was
working
on
this-
and
it's
so
much
easier
for
me
to
work
in
a
single
file,
because
I
want
to
make
a
change
making
all
of
them,
but
you
know
for
now
assume
that
when
you
open
this
file,
you're
actually
looking
for
your
module,
it's
not
the
whole
thing,
it's
just
one
specific
module
and
I
started
them
by
making
like
I
put
the
mario
s
in
the
order
in
which
we
were
supposed
to
build
them.
L
L
L
Oh
boy,
okay,
what
should
I
do
about
this
I'll?
Just
make
it
a
different
color.
B
Within
the
drawings
and
designs
so
she's
having
an
issue
because
the
varsity
didn't
have
the
necessary
colors
to
pull
the
into
the
cad
file
right.
B
L
Okay,
I'm
gonna
have
to
do
something
here
that
you
guys
shouldn't
have
to
see,
but.
L
D
I
think
it's
white
and
blue
is
the
official
layering
colors.
L
C
L
Then
it
has
a
two
by
four
here.
The
reason
why
this
module
looks
like
this
is
because
this
is
the
corner
that
another
module
needs
to
be
attached
to.
So
we
need
to
make
a
box
here.
Basically
that's
the
logic
of
this
right
and
then
that's
usb.
L
L
Think
about
you
know
like
how
curtains
that
run
on
tracks
are,
so
you
have
a
track
right
and
then
you
have
two
tabs
on
each
side.
So
when
you
put
the
curtain,
it
just
aligns
with
the
tracks
right,
that's
what
those
tabs
are
doing.
They're
our
tracks,
they're
going
to
be
removed
later,
because.
L
L
I'm
calling
them
tabs,
I
think
I
don't
know
we
could
call
them
something
else,
but
that's
all
they
do
they.
Let
you
take
them
off.
Okay.
So
let's
just
talk
about
things
in
general,
these
tabs
here,
usually
the
tabs,
are
always
aligned
with
usb
behind
it
and
much
talked
about
the
offset.
L
So
these
are
offsets,
so
they
can
fit
into
each
other,
and
this
will
become
clearer
when
we
start
building
the
first
ones
in
the
corner,
ones
they're
slightly
different
because
they
need
to
be
out
of
the
way
when
we
install
the
second
module
right.
So
we'll
just
keep
have
to
keep
that
in
mind
and
then
basically
we're
just
gonna
go
through
a
bunch
of
these,
and
I
mean
I
don't
know
that
people
are
not
gonna
memorize,
there's
no
point
in
going
through
each
one.
Individual.
L
E
D
Could
print
something
out
over
a
long
ship?
Also,
the
the
lengths
of
what
each
of
the
pieces
are
the
spacing
on
them.
Okay,.
C
M
L
E
L
So
we
could,
we
could
print
out
this
one
for
people,
it's
like
the
thing
is
like
we
don't
have
for
all
of
them.
That's
the
the
difficulty
here,
but
we
could
do
it
like,
while
people
build.
A
E
L
C
L
A
C
A
Yeah
one
is
an
adjustment
yeah,
the
complication
gets
into
where,
while
it's
pretty
much
all
the
same,
one
little
difference
and.
L
I
think
that,
just
to
to
to
get
the
sense
that
I
mean,
for
example,
like
christian,
you
could
build
a
corner
right
right
right
now
with
no
problem.
L
Oh
you
weren't
here
for
the
modules.
Okay
right
again
can
was
here
right
exactly
so
you
guys
could
build
a
corner
and
then
the
rest
of
the
group
will
see
others
and
I'll
we'll
put
out
the
dimensions
for
the
remaining
motions.
While
we
do
that,
we
won't
need
to
do
it
in
order
like
the
window
is
the
next
one.
Where
is
that?
Oh?
Do
you
want
me
to
do
all
the
playing
walls?
You
know
the
modifications
and
then
doing
those.
A
C
L
L
A
Yeah
so
we're
close
to
lunch,
which
is
which
is
noon.
What
else
do
we
want
to
go
on?
I
mean,
if
you
were,
if
you
were
to
this,
like,
if
you
think
about
how
you
can
distribute
this
knot,
it.
C
A
A
Even
right
now,
just
so
you
get
okay,
so
you
just
get
the
idea,
because
the
ideas
are
the
critical
is,
if
you
can
say,
okay,
this,
this
wall
module
goes
here
this
one
there
this
one,
this
kind,
the
other
kind
it's
in
a
dock,
it's
in
a
written
dock,
so
the
step
after
that
is
just
blindly
saying:
okay,
here's
a
full
building
role,
module
1
through
24.
A
A
So
it
actually
makes
sense
like
which
one
goes
where,
because
it
actually,
that
part
is
actually
documented.
So
that
would
be
what
you
can
do
if
we're
going
to
go
into
the
workshop
and
build
the
same
one,
so
we'll
be
busy
for
like
an
hour.
A
So,
if
we're
trying
to
get
the
whole
first
floor
done
that
way,
the
only
way
that
would
happen
is
if
some
more
people
can
actually
study
some
of
the
modules
and
because
there's
enough
variance
that
I
couldn't
like
go
through
everyone
and
tell
everybody
how
to
do
it
so
that
that
is
the
bottleneck
like
instructional.
Instructions
are
typically
a
bottleneck
in
this
kind
of
operation,
because,
because.
L
That
it's
very
hard
to
convey
how
to
build
something
of
this
type.
L
On
paper
like
with
no
human
telling
you
what
to
do
even
on
video,
it's
incredibly
hard
to
show
you
the
details
of
how
you
slide,
two
paths
together.
L
So
we
keep
struggling
with
what
is
the
workflow
that
allows
us
to
distribute
this
while
people,
so
people
can
work
in
parallel,
and
if
anyone
has
ideas.
B
Yeah
on
the
cd
go
through
binders
there'd
be
a
binder
for
everything.
Everything
you
want
to
modularize
all
right,
go,
grab
binder
and
then
go
to
the
the
fab
lab
area,
and
then
you
could
go
to
that
part
of
the
thing.
It
would
have
your
your
your
designs
right.
L
A
C
B
C
L
H
L
Was
I
did
one
quick
test
of
the
first
four
walls
assembling
them
just
to
make
sure
that
my
it
checked
out
like
the
wooden
tabs
that
were,
but
even
that
is
outdid,
because
then,
after
that
we
decided
to
remove
the
nailing
board
or
the
the
the
blocking.
So
even
that
is
slightly
outdated,
but
there
is
a
model
somewhat,
which
is.
L
A
L
L
C
C
A
We're
actually
gonna
take
this.
I'm
gonna
stop
here,
but
take
this
to
the
workshop.