►
Description
As a result of voter suppression tactics, millions of minorities, especially Black people, have had their votes go uncounted, purged, or simply not submitted. Five Fifths Voter helps users identify correct polling stations, notifies them of state requirements and deadlines, and provides quick access to information most relevant to their personal circumstances. Join us and hear from the developers who created Five Fifths Voter to empower minorities to overcome voter suppression setbacks, exercise their right to vote, and ensure their voices are heard.
Sign up here to join the community and get started in Github: https://ibm.biz/OSTVAug10
Twitch: https://red.ht/twitch
A
We'll
kind
of
run
through
this
really
quickly
call
for
code
is
a
huge
endeavor
which
really
seeks
to
you
know,
align
technology
with
some
of
society's
most
pressing
issues,
whether
it's
around
natural
disasters,
climate
change,
cova
19,
which
has
clearly
been
affecting
us
for
you
know
the
past.
You
know
I
think
about
like
year
and
a
half,
and
probably
you
know
in
a
couple
more
years
and
then
call
for
co-parental
justice,
which
originated,
as
you
know,
a
spot
challenge.
So
something
that's
really,
you
know
requires
an
immediate
response.
A
You
know
through
call
for
code,
and
but
it
has
since
evolved
since
then,
and
call
for
code
was
really
originated
and
founded
by
david
parkhaus,
and
you
know,
as
kind
of
like
the
technology
gurus
ibm
is
really
helping
to
take
these
solutions
to
the
forefront
and
connecting
them
with
the
communities
that
really
need
it
so
kind
of
how
we
got
here.
This
was
actually
done
in
partnership
with
red
hat,
where
we
were
able
to.
You
know
have
500
volunteers
across
the
globe
contributing
to
this
project
last
year.
A
June
18th
is
when
it
kicked
off
of
2020,
and
since
then
you
know,
we've
been
able
to
really
focus
on
using
open
source
technologies
to
help
build
up
the
solutions.
And
then,
if
we're
talking
about
being
able
to
continue
to
have
the
right
type
of
supports
being
able
to
have
developers
access,
you
know
ibm
technology,
other
open
source
technology
in
order
to
refine
and
continue
to
build
out
these
solutions
for
our
potential
partners
who
want
to
use
these
as
their
ways
of
working,
and
you
have
also
just
listed.
A
You
know
other
types
of
resources,
and
you
know
impact
that
we've
had
you
know
internally
in
the
company
and
what
we're
also
looking
to
do
externally
so
kind
of
giving
perspective
on
where
we
are
today.
There
are
lots,
more
happening,
love
to
share
a
little
bit
more
of
that
within
our
channel,
and
we
will
share
a
little
bit
more
about
that
towards
the
end.
A
But
you
know
providing
additional
context
and
to
call
for
co-parental
justice
again.
That
was
originally
a
spot
challenge.
It
was
in
response
to
you
know
some
of
the
violence
that
we
were
seeing
specifically
against
black
people
with
you
know,
you
know:
police
over
policing
and
ibm's
really
wanted
to
have
a
vehicle
to
express
their
frustration
and
that
really
capitalized
on.
A
How
are
we
able
to
use
the
skill
sets
that
we
have
right
now
in
order
to
have
this
vision
of
you
know,
accessibility,
you,
humanity
and
opportunities
within
you
know,
communities
that
really
need
it
and
with
the
lens
that
systemic
racism,
sometimes
really
you
know,
is
ingrained
in
a
lot
of
the
systems
that
exist
to
you
know
serve
people
so
with
that
lends
we
develop
these
three
pillars
wherein
all
of
our
solutions
fall
in
right
now,
police
induced
reform
and
accountability,
diverse
representation
and
policy
and
legislation.
A
Reform
and
again,
you
know
five
fifths
voter
that
we're
you
know
diving
into
today
falls
under
you
know
the
policy
and
legislation
reform
pillar.
A
So
now,
going
into
a
little
bit
of
a
solution,
I'm
not
going
to
talk
as
much
I'm
just
kind
of
like
setting
the
groundwork
for
the
amazing
team
that
worked
on
this
project
to
you
know,
really
launch
it
off
to
share
with
you
how
we
got
here-
and
you
know,
what's
you
know
coming
forward
and
how
folks
can
get
involved.
I
wanted
to
you
know
just
give
a
little
bit
of
context,
because
again
we're
dealing
with
a
little
more
global
audience
wanted
to.
A
You
know,
set
the
stage
on
how
does
policy
and
legislation
work
within
the
us
providing
you
know
some.
You
know
kind
of
simple
understanding
of
where
we
are
coming
from,
and
we
want.
Voters
to
you
know,
share
their
voices
around
policy
in
this
type
of
work,
so
legislation,
of
course,
being
the
proposed
law
that
would,
you
know
essentially
become
law,
law
of
the
land
and
it's
passed
by
a
legislator.
So
folks
that
you
actually
vote
for
to
get
into
those
positions.
And
then
we
have
our
executive
branch
which
signs
it
into
law.
A
And
then
policy,
which
are
you
know,
are
the
actions
and
standards
set
by
that
executive
branch,
and
then
we
are
able
to
know
follow
that
law.
So
that's
really
like
the
flow
that
we
end
up.
You
know
going
with
here
in
the
states,
but
what
really
ends
up
happening
is
that
the
executive
branch
as
well
as
you
know,
the
legislator
are
folks
that
we
are
able
to
affect
them
being
there.
So
when
we're
looking
at,
why
is
this
important
from
a
voting
standpoint?
A
It's
like
if
I
can't
even
vote
for
the
folks
who
are
passing
laws,
regulations
and
legislation
in
the
country
or
even
in
my
state,
then
I'm
not
able
to
you
know,
articulate
you
know
what
my
desires
and
what
my
wills
are
and
it
you
know,
consent
really
throw
balance
off
for
communities
that
may
be
vulnerable
and
then
next
slide
in
expanding
for
the
solution.
What
could
policy
and
legislation
reform
look
like
from
again
the
lens
of
you
know
the
conflict
of
racial
justice,
and
you
know
looking
at
five
phase.
A
Voter
is
like:
how
can
we
really
explore
technology
to
analyze
and
form
and
develop
policies
around?
You
know
in
areas
that
are
important
to
us
in
a
meaningful
way
and
five
fifths
motor
really
is
focused
on.
How
can
we
inform
people
of
the
ways
in
which
they
can
start
to
affect
change
through
their
voice
through
their
vote?
A
For
the
you
know,
industries
that
will
be
affecting
them
and
it
really
is
like
you
know,
power
is
in
the
hands
of
the
voter
because
you
determine
or
you
have
a
really
really
strong
influence
on
what
legislators
are
creating
and
passing
because
you
know
that's
your
right,
as
you
know,
a
voter
and
being
able
to
see
if
something
is
going
to
affect
you
positively
or
negatively,
being
able
to
share
that
through
your
vote
and
ultimately,
we
really
want
to
focus
on
ensuring
that
citizens,
specifically,
you
know
folks,
who
have
typically
been
disenfranchised
from
voting
and
we're
going
to
share
a
little
bit
more
about
that.
A
Further
on
the
presentation
just
like
on
the
timeline
of
you
know
where
voter
suppression
and
oppression
has
happened,
and
why
we
really
want
to
focus
on
those
groups,
because
accessibility
has
not
really
caught
up
to
speed
for
them,
and
so
this
solution
is
really
going
to
focus
on.
You
know
why
they
should
vote
and
how
to
vote
through
our
accessible
tool
and
through
the
last
kind
of
you
know,
statement
that
I'm
going
to
say
before
handing
this
off
to
alexandria
is
that
you
know
the
problem
that
firefights
builder
is
really
addressing.
A
Is
that
voting
can
be
impossible
and
challenge
or
challenging
due
to
you
know
burdensome
local
processes,
changing
requirements,
regulations
and
lack
of
information
to
voters?
And
you
know
there
are
also
roadblocks
that
exist
when
it
talks
about
not
being
able
to
qualify
to
vote.
When
you
have
voter
purging
that
happens,
unbeknownst
to
you,
you
find
out
that
you're
not
registered,
or
that
you
know
you
have
to
register
because
you
moved
you
don't
have
the
correct
form
of
id
you
have
to.
You
know:
you've
missed
deadlines
for
registering.
A
There
are
just
no
countless
roadblocks
that
really
exists
around
voters
who
are
either
super
busy.
You
know
burdened
with
you
know
some
of
the
more
systemic
issues
that
we're
seeing
within
communities
of
color.
A
I
really
wanted
to
drive
home
that
awareness
is
sometimes
you
know,
kind
of
the
one
of
the
biggest
issues
as
well,
where
if
there
are
changes,
they
may
not
be
the
community
that
first
hears
about
it
or
having
access
or
knowing
where
to
go
to
find
out
information
about
it
is,
is
a
problem
and
then
we're
talking
about
even
accessibility
for
people
who
are
differently
abled.
How
can
we
ensure
that
they
are
still
able
to
articulate
themselves
and
have
a
way
to
vote?
A
You
know
and
the
election
that
they
choose
to
participate
in,
so
hoping
that
this
kind
of
gives
you
a
scope
of
what
we're
talking
about
today
we're
going
to
dive.
You
know
again
into
the
context
of
fireface
builder,
getting
into
you
know
some
of
the
more
technical
components
and
then
seeing
ways
for
you
all
to
get
involved.
So
with
that,
I'm
going
to
play
this
quick
video
and
hopefully
the
audio
and
everything
works-
is
it
working?
A
It
is
not
working.
Let's
see
give
me
a
moment,
so
I
can
pull
up
this
video
because
I
think
it's
really
going
to
help
spearhead
what
it
is
that
we're
talking
about
and
an
introduction
to
the
solution.
C
C
A
group
of
diverse
ibmers
came
together
and
created
an
open
source
solution
that
voters
can
access
to
a
responsive
website,
design
check
your
voting
status,
find
your
polling
location,
get
connected
to
valuable
and
reliable
resources
like
transportation
and
child
care
options.
On
election
day,
the
focus
photo.
Starter
kit
introduces
a
cognitive
solution
built
on
ibm
cloud
with
openshift,
using
watson,
tone,
analyzing
watson,
natural
language,
as
well
as
carbon
design,
open
source
technology
with
custom
components
created
in
vjs,
express.js
and
taikon,
with
additional
strong
api
integrations
more
reliable
resources
and
a
robust
database.
C
Five,
this
voters
can
become
the
go-to
voter
hub
for
once
marginalized.
With
your
help
together,
we
can
expand
and
grow
the
find
this
voter
platform
take
a
peek
see
where
we're
going
and
partner
with
us
to
complete
five.
This
voter.
When
this
happens,
when
you
join
us
together,
we
can
help
speed
up,
is
being
heard
and
counted
in
this
nation.
A
All
right,
and
so
thanks
for
everyone
who
sat
down
and
watching
this
and
I'll
go
ahead
and
kick
this
off
to
alexandria
to
you
know,
introduce
you
know
some
of
the
team.
I
know
everyone
is
on
the
call.
You
see
a
lot
of
faces
on
this
screen,
but
definitely
wanted
to
give
a
platform
for
the
folks
who
are
here
with
us
today
to
share
you
know
what
they
do
in
their
full-time
role
as
well.
D
Hey
everyone.
Can
you
hear
me
yeah,
okay,
great
yeah?
Well,
I
just
it's.
It's
actually
really
heartwarming,
because
which
is
almost
exactly
a
year
ago
we
had
one
of
our
first
meeting
solution
meetings
as
part
of
this
program,
and
you
know
one
of
the
great
things
about
our
team
that
that
I
really
felt.
D
I
think
that
we
all
can
say
is
that
the
way
that
we're
constructed
the
way
that
we
have
so
many
different
backgrounds
on
our
team,
so
many
different
life
experiences,
so
many
different
cultures
viewpoints
understanding
skill
sets.
I
think
that
that
is
a
key
part
of
why
this
solution
can
be
so
effective,
is
because
it's
by
the
people
and
for
the
people
because
of
the
experiences
that
we've
all
had.
D
We
can
dig
from
you
know
those
those
experiences
and
relationships
and
be
able
to
cater
to
the
end
user
and
connect
with
the
end
user,
and
that's
it's
something
beautiful,
because
it's
all
different
types
of
people
and
that's
what
we
ultimately
would
like
to
be
able
to
reach-
and
we
came
together
for
the
for
with
the
motivation
of
tackling
the
systemic
racism
issues.
D
So
that's
something
I
just
found
to
be
very
touching,
and
a
year
later
we
can
say
that
it's
actually
starting
to
get
into
the
hands
of
people
to
be
able
to
improve
their
lives.
I'm
not
sure
who
else
is
on
that
might
want
to.
A
Yeah,
so
you
wanted
to
just
you
know
say
like
what
do
you
do
in
your
full-time
job?
Just
you
know,
so
people
can
understand
that
this
is
a
project
that
a
lot
of
folks
on
the
call
have
done
outside
of
their.
You
know
kind
of
scope
of
work,
just
to
show
that
you
know
folks
are
really
passionate
about
that.
So,
if
you
can
share
with
folks
what
are
you're
doing
outside
of
this
work
and
just
kind
of
giving
a
little
bit
of
context,
you
can
introduce
other
folks.
D
So
in
my
day
job
I
actually
just
I
got
promoted
to
another
role,
but
I
moved
over
to
the
services
department,
so
my
focus
is
in
data
and
artificial
intelligence
for
expert
labs,
I'm
a
sales
principal,
and
so
I
oversee
I
pretty
much-
have
my
organization,
clients
and
oversee
them
and
deliver
the
services
that
we
have
around
data
and
ai
and
automation,
and
I
find
it
to
be
actually
really
applicable
in
this
project,
because
we
definitely
want
to
be
able
to
leverage
some
of
those
tools
to
be
able
to
connect
with
users
as
much
as
we
possibly
can
and
for
everybody
else
on
the
team.
D
You
know
it's
in
their
myriad
of
backgrounds
that
we
all
have,
but
I
was
a
project
manager
on
the
team
and
you
know
others
have
very
very
demanding
jobs
as
well.
But
again
it
just
shows
the
passion
and
connectivity
that
we
had
in
being
a
part
of
this.
This
program
is
actually
very
accelerated,
so
we
really
had
to
work
together
and
the
respect
that
that
we
all
had
for
each
other
in
each
other's
times,
and
even
for
those
that
were
overseas.
A
Absolutely
so
I
left
the
kind
of
quickly
do
a
round
of
folks
who
are
on
the
call
to
just
do
a
quick
introduction
and
seeing
like
what
your
full-time
job
is.
And
then
you
know
what
you
contributed.
You
know
towards
the
project
and
then
we
can
move
forward.
E
My
name
is
joel
mitchell,
I'm
a
I
work
at
ibm
as
the
architect
for
a
product
called
ibm
developer
for
cos
where
my
primary
job
is
working
on
programming
in
java,
eclipse
and
mainframe
programming
languages,
whether
that's
golang
or
python,
or
cobol
c
hlasm,
which
is
a
similar
base
language
and
that's
that's
my
work
full
time.
F
I
got
I'll
go
after
gerald.
I
suppose
this
is
dave
nixon.
I
also
work
at
ibm
course
and
regular
day.
Job
is
working
working
in
the
client
center
is
doing
technology
for
the
client
centers.
The
ibm
client
centers
on
this
on
this
project,
along
with
the
gerald
and
sid
and
and
and
and
a
bunch
of
others,
doing
just
kind
of
full
stack
development
on
this,
including
the
ujs
stuff
and
back-end
stuff.
A
G
Chris
stefano,
in
my
day,
job
I
work
as
a
project
manager
and
a
business
analyst
in
the
watson
health
provider,
consulting
team,
so
working
on
delivering
analytics,
etc
to
healthcare
clients.
G
H
Hi
my
name
is
sebastian
and
I
am
on
my
day
job,
which
is
pretty
much
the
same
thing
that
I've
I'm
doing
for
five
fits
voter.
I
am
a
senior
designer
in
account
based
industries,
marketing
and
my
day-to-day
is
creating
assets
that
are
client-facing,
and
it
really
helps
tell
the
human
story
behind
the
technologies
that
we
offer.
Thank
you.
A
And
that's
sebastian
right
there,
just
you
know
kind
of
circling
that
and
I
think
we
got
everyone
on
the
call
and
I'm
sabine
I'm
not
on
this
list,
but
I
I
serve
as
a
kind
of
the
product
manager,
product
manager,
for
you
know
all
the
solutions
for
call
for
co,
racial
justice,
so
ensuring
that
the
team's
you
know
hard
work
and
the
solutions
that
they
produce
is
available
to
the
developer
community
as
a
whole
and
as
well
as
you
know,
organizations
that
will
be
on
the
receiving
end
of
these
solutions.
A
So
I'm
kind
of
let's
back
over
to
alexandria.
So
you
know
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
like
what
five-fifths
is.
You
know
how
it
works,
and
then
you
know
kind
of
going
through
that
process
so
alexandria,
take
it
away.
D
So
wi-fi
fest,
so
I
I
believe
it.
I
really
like
this
demonstration
of
it,
especially
with
the
hand
because
in
many
ways
with
the
hand
it's
kind
of
like
we
want
to
stop
and
say,
stop
to
the
the
perpetual.
You
know
systemic
racism
and
bias.
That's
been
a
part
of
a
lot
of
part
of
human
interaction
in
general,
but
particularly
in
the
voting
space
as
well
as
fifth
equals
a
whole
from
the
standpoint
of
each
and
every
person
being
able
to
have
an
equal
opportunity
to
exercise
their
voting
rights.
D
As
you
can
see
to
the
right,
there
are
several
issues:
voter
suppression-
I
know
we've
all
heard
gerrymandering,
you
know,
spelling
you
know
if
you've
been
accused
of
selling
or
if
you've
been
charged
or
convicted
of
something.
Rather,
you
know
a
lot
of
people,
don't
know
what
exactly
their
rights
and
capabilities
are
and
what
we
want
to
do
again,
to
be
able
to
bridge
that
divide
and
be
able
to
create
more
opportunity
in
the
community,
but
we're
encouraging
another
major
issue.
D
I'll
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
that
in
the
following
slide,
but
really
making
sure
that
we
have.
We
provide
all
the
schools
necessary
for
individuals
to
be
able
to
bridge
those
gaps,
and
you
you'd
imagine
that
being
in
2021
that
a
lot
of
these
things
would
be
solved
and
rectified
and
we'll
again
talk
later
more
about
it
in
the
timeline,
seeing
how
the
voting
capabilities
have
grown,
and
maybe
not
growing
so
much
over
time.
So
we
really
want
to
get
a
stronghold
on
that.
D
We
want
to
do
it
in
a
different
type
of
way.
So
five
fifths
again,
I
believe,
is
great
because
of
the
the
why
and
mom
and
the
people
that
came
together
to
make
it
are
so
different
and
have
so
many
amazing
skills
and
talents
to
bring
to
people
and
can
relate
to
the
people
that
we're
reaching
out
to
as
well
as
the
fact
that
you
know,
we
really
want
to
create
differentiate
ourselves
in
the
way,
in
the
way
that
we
approach
this
by
leveraging
the
technology
that
we
have.
D
We
are
on
ibm
open
solution,
but
there
are
all
these
skills
that
are
at
our
within
our
hands
literally,
and
we
want
to
be
able
to
use
it
to
revolutionize.
The
voting
experience
to
be
able
to
make
it
more
personable
make
it
personal
to
each
individual
because
it
ultimately
is
each
individual's
decision
and
media
can
be
very
influential
and
friends
and
family
can
be
very
integral
influential
positively
or
negatively.
So
we
really
want
to
be
able
to
create
an
opportunity
for
people
to
have
an
interactive
and
accessible
experience.
That
is
very
much
fun.
A
And
I
think
it
also
is
great,
especially
just
even
thinking
about
the
name
like
five-fifths
voter.
It
really
kind
of
touches
back
on.
You
know,
african-americans,
not
being
you
know,
even
considered,
like
full
beings
to
have
a
vote
to
own
graham,
and
you
know,
that's
like
the
two-fifths
rule
that
you
know
folks
want
to
be
able
to
look
that
up
where
you
only
kind
of
consider
two-fifths
of
a
person
and
so
again
the
five-fifths
equaling
a
whole.
It
could
have.
A
Still
a
whole,
but
really
around
kind
of
some
of
the
historical
implications
I
think,
for
what
was
you
know,
considered
humanity
to
own
land
to
cast
a
vote
to
be.
You
know
self-sufficient
and
your
own
person
being
able
to
capture
that
in
that
fight.
This
name,
I
think,
is
really
impactful.
A
D
Absolutely
and
sorry,
I
actually
forgot
to
mention
that
that
was
actually
one
of
the
main
motivations
before
we
saw.
These
are
the
initial
additional
implications
and
really
kind
of
piggybacking
off
of
that
the
three
e's.
So
you
know
those
are
the
pillars
that
that
we
have
that
represent
what
our
goals
are
in
this
with
the
solution.
D
The
education
piece
again
really
goes
back
to
at
least
the
ridiculously
high
numbers
of
voter
purging,
the
voter
suppression
in
the
forms
of
just
not
having
that
knowledge
and
not
knowing
when,
when
voting
registration
ends,
because
some
states
are
very
strict
and
if
you
miss
it,
you
miss
your
opportunity,
you
know
and
not
knowing
how.
How
do
you
register
not
knowing
if
you're
already
registered,
not
knowing
about
early
voting
capabilities,
and
I
will
preach
this,
because
I
have
preached
this
every
single
time
I've
talked
about
you
know.
D
The
solution
is
that
I
mean
I
can
say
as
a
testament
myself.
I
had
never
voted
early
before
and
because
of
our
solution,
I
was
able
to
seamlessly
and
even
not
even
just
vote
early
but
seamlessly
literally
10-15
minutes,
for
both
of
the
races
that
you
know.
I
was
able
to
vote
for
so
just
being
able
to
have
that
knowledge
and
knowledgeability
is
power
and
that's
definitely.
The
first
key
thing
is
knowing
what's
out
there
and
having
the
awareness,
the
empowerment
piece.
D
Is
it's
really
taking
a
step
forward
from
that
and
again
creating
a
community
and
creating
unity
throughout
this
process
and
the
empowerment
sometimes
is
the
next
step
from
knowledge?
Because
once
you
know
what's
at
your
disposal,
you
realize
how
much
power
you
do
have.
I
think
we
all
definitely
saw
the
last
year,
the
power
in
numbers
and
the
power
in
people
acknowledging.
You
know
their
value
and
acknowledging
the
influence
that
going
can
have
over
your
individual
life
and
collective
lives,
so
empowering
people
in
multiple
ways.
D
We
really
want
to
be
able
to
do
our
platform
by
keeping
individuals
educated
and
informed,
as
well
as
connected
and
and
also
being
being
able
to
have
specific
specifications
for
their
particular
situation,
so
that
they
don't
feel
as
though
they're
just
a
number
and
that
they
are
an
actual
person
that
has
meaning
enablement
again.
D
So
a
couple
of
things
that
we've
done
to
be
actionable
is
create
avenues
not
just
and
do
enablement
by
showing
people
how
they
can
register
and,
if
they're
registered,
but
taking
that
step
forward
and
showing
them
where
they
will
go
based
on
their
particular
situation,
which
is
why
another
reason
why
personalization,
I
think,
is
very
important
because
they
can
see
where
they
are
and
based
on.
You
know
their
capabilities.
They
want
to
drive
if
they
want
to
take
uber
lyft
they
want
to.
However,
they
would
like
to
get
there.
D
We
show
different
ways
to
be
able
to
get
to
these
locations.
We
are
also
connected
with
showing
what
some
of
the
regulations
are
within
certain
states
and
that's
going
to
continue
to
build
in
certain
jurisdictions,
and
we
also
are
looking
to
to
build
even
more
so.
The
enablement
for
those
who
may
be
disabled
in
certain
ways
again
for
those
who
may
have
been
convicted
of
felonies
and
things
like
anything
that
are
not
quite
aware
that
they
have
certain
additional
things.
D
They
need
you
to
be
able
to
to
vote
even
if
they're
not
aware
that
they
can
so
the
enablement
ability
is,
is
extensive
and-
and
I
really
and
we,
as
a
team,
are
really
admitted
about
really
using
this
technology,
using
these
coding
capabilities
to
be
able
to
bring
as
many
as
many
as
much
of
a
wealth
of
knowledge
and
capability
to
our
project,
and
I
just
rolled
into
why
voting
is
important.
Voting
you
know
is
your
voice.
D
It's
your
choice,
your
right
and
your
power,
and
again
it's
very
individual,
but
it's
also
very
much
a
community
engagement
as
well
and
for
us
to
be
able
to
come
together
and
focus
on
our
similarities
of
need
and
the
similarities
of
me
and
attacking
those
together
rather
than
socializing
on
silos
and
the
differences.
D
It
enables
us
to
see
how
we
can
be
able
to
impact
our
future.
A
Awesome
so
we're
gonna
actually
go
into
a
demo
of
the
by
face
filter
site
and
I
yeah
okay.
Now
I
can
stop
sharing
my
screen
because
I
know
that
sebastian
is
actually
gonna
walk
us
through
this.
As
our
wonderful
designer
you
know
to
give
us
the
the
hands-on
experience,
so
you
all
can
see
what
the
solution
does.
H
Great,
we
are-
and
I
would
like
to
actually
just
so.
This
is
the
landing
page,
and
I
really
would
like
to
point
you
all
to
this
countdown
clock
as
the
team
and
I
were
working
on
the
design
and
the
ux
ui
office.
What
was
something
we
could
have
very
upfront
to
show
this
sense
of
urgency.
This
sense
of
need
to
have
an
action
be
committed
and
done
so.
H
So
as
the
user
scrolls
down,
we
actually
have
enlarged
our
scope
and
included
more
disenfranchised
folks
and
community.
So
there's
a
wider
representation
in
the
imagery
and
as
the
user
goes
through
the
website,
we
have
solidly
used
imagery
to
really
help
reinforce
the
humanity
and
why
it
is
so
important
for
everyone
to
be
involved
and
to
vote
so
more
to
come
as
we
talk
more
in
the
design
process.
But
now
I
would
like
to
kick
this
back
to
sabine.
A
Perfect,
I'm
actually
gonna
we're
doing
lots
of
volume
over
here,
but
you
know
you
all
can
see
that
you
know
the
demo
site
right
now.
It's
up
and
it's
running,
but
we're
going
to
go
a
little
bit
more
into
the
technical
details
of
the
solution,
as
illustrated
by
our
wonderful
tech
folks,
on
the
line
and
I'll
hand
it
over
to
david.
F
All
right,
so
this
is
just
a
c4
diagram
to
show
kind
of
the
breakdown
of
the
system
context,
so
that
part
in
the
middle
is
us
that
blue
part
in
the
middle
is
us,
and
then
this
is
the
things
we
connect
to,
including
some
secretary
of
state
sites
vote.org.
We
pull
some
javascript
embedded
tools
from
there
and
from
vote
voting
info
project.
F
We
pull
from
there
a
lot
of
the
stuff
we
get,
especially
on
the
pages
where
you're
looking
for
the
early
voting
location
or
your
day
of
polling
locations
that
comes
from
the
google
civic
api
and
then
we
do
have
a
a
little
bit.
I
don't
want
to
over
emphasize
what
we
have
for
amplitude
in
terms
of
statistics.
We
really
just
have
page
visits
as
our
statistics
that
are
getting
fed
back
to
the
amplitude
system.
F
So
that's
the
big
system
I
want
to
zoom
in
on
on
that
box
in
the
middle,
and
that's
going
to
be
on
that
next
slide.
So
this
is
the
same
box
in
the
middle,
and
so
we
have
a
typical
three-tier
website
here.
So
we
have
our
services
back
in
that's
a
new
express
component
that
talks
to
a
database,
it's
cloudant
on
the
ibm
cloud.
F
The
only
thing
we
write
right
now
to
the
database
is
some
cache
data.
For
instance,
when
we
get
polling
locations
from
secretary
of
state's
sites
that
will
go
into
that
cache
database,
so
we're
not
trying
to
pull
it
or
scrape
it
every
time
and
that
back-end
service
is
also
what
talks
to
the
google
civic
api
to
pull
in
what
the
current
elections
are,
and
you
can
see
that
on
the
site
it'll
list,
the
current
upcoming
elections,
there's
three
elections
today,
actually
there's
one
in
michigan
and
utah
and
oklahoma.
So
it's
a
good
thing.
A
Yeah-
and
I
really
want
to
kind
of
tie
this
back
to
you-
know
kind
of
some
of
my
natural,
like
questioning
thoughts
and
what
some
other
folks
may
be
thinking.
Well,
if
these
are
the
sites
that
you're
currently
using
to
pull
the
information,
why
can't
I
just
go
there
if
again
we're
talking
about
accessibility
for
communities
that
don't
even
know
that
these
things
exist?
You
know
what
happens
if
I
go
to
you
know
my
local,
you
know
grassroots
organization
or
civic
engagement
organization,
and
they
point
me
to
this
tool.
A
They
don't
have
to
send
me
to
you,
know
three
different
sites
or
even
like
one
site
to
say
all
right.
These
are
the
instructions
for
you
to
how
to
vote
within
your
within
your
state.
You
can
really
kind
of
come
here
and
it
you
know,
point
you
in
the
right
direction
without
having
to
navigate.
You
know
all
of
these
different
places.
A
So
I
think
that
that's
also
why
we're
trying
to
show
that
we're
able
to
make
those
connections
across
a
myriad
of
places
that
host
that
information
and
playing
it
in
a
single
location.
So
it's
more
accessible
to
folks,
who
maybe
don't
know
these
other
places
exist.
You
know,
can
have
a
little
bit
more
time
to
understand.
You
know
the
context
and
the
the
ways
in
which
they
can
vote,
and
so
this
is
just
you
know
supposed
to
be
like
a
central
place
that
they
can
access
as
part
of
their
voter
journey.
A
So
just
wanted
to
say
that
yeah
we're
pulling
from
lots
of
places
and
information
where
folks,
probably
wouldn't
you
know,
access
it
in
their
normal
lives
to
understand.
You
know
how
and
where
to
vote
so
I'm
just
doing
that
random
plug,
but
can
you
get
back
over
you?
Should
I
mean
to
the
next
slide
david.
F
Let
me
just
cover
the
last
couple
here,
but
that
is
great
context
of
you
and
I
appreciate
that
context,
because
that
is
that's
that's
our
goal.
So,
okay,
just
on
the
on
the
ui,
it's
you
it's
the
one!
It's
that
piece
of
it
is
one
that's
pulling
in
the
embedded
tools
from
these
other
places
and
also
doing
the
reporting
out
to
amplitude
for
our
minimal
statistics
that
we
keep
there
and
then
the
next
slide
is
just
the
same
system,
but
in
a
from
a
deployment
point
of
view.
F
So
there's
the
three
tiers
you
can
see
there
there's
the
services
here
in
the
middle
here
with
that
is
a
node.js
container
that
there's
actually
two
pieces
to
that.
F
99
of
what
we
do
on
the
services
end
is
node.js
the
twitter
stuff
that
we
do
is
from
a
python,
a
piece
of
python
code
that
we
have
so
that's
the
services
in
the
middle,
the
web
site
talks
to
that
services
through
a
proxy
and
that's
the
reporting
out.
So
we
get,
you
know
we
report
out
the
amplitude
and
the
the
back
end
is
fed
by
all
these
different
services,
some
from
the
ibm
cloud,
some
from
elsewhere.
So
we
have
a.
We
have
the
the
google
civic
api
as
a
service.
F
The
the
cloud
as
a
server
is
coming
into
the
back
end.
The
twitter
services
is
coming
in
from
the
back
end
through
this,
as
well
as
the
natural
language
processing
which
is
part
of
the
twitter
code
and
the
tone
analyzer,
which
we
also
use
with
the
twitter
code.
So
that's
the
deployment,
that's
the
top
level
deployment
on
the
ibm
cloud.
F
I
think
that's
the
last
slide
for
me.
Oh
no,
sorry,
there's
one
more
for
me,
so
we
do
have
a
a
a
a
pipeline
that
gets
executed
when
changes
are
made
to
the
site
and
I
don't
think
gerald
is
going
to
be
able
to
demo
that
today.
So
I
I'll
probably
kick
off
the
bill
during
the
call
here
and
we'll
show
the
pipeline
in
progress.
F
But
basically
it's
exactly
what
you
expect
there's
a
little
bit
of
a
test
stage
in
the
pipeline
that
that
checks
the
code
before
it
actually
does
any
deployment,
there's
a
build
for
the
ui
and
that
produces
that
we
use
an
nginx
web
server
as
a
front
end
and
that
build
builds
the
the
vue.js
into
something
that
nginx
can
use
and
then
there's
a
bill
for
the
there's,
a
deploy
for
the
services
employee
for
the
ui.
So
those
all
run
in
sequence.
Here.
A
Awesome
and
I
think
that
gerald
I'm
crossing
my
fingers
that
you
are
good
to
go,
I
mean
it's
it's
one
of
those
versus
like
when
you're
called
on,
like
your
computer
shuts
down.
A
E
I'm
involved
with
multiple
clubs.
This
shirt
came
from
a
previous,
but
it
was
the
right
shirt
to
wear
today.
So
I'm
hoping
you
can
see
my
screen
because
I
can't
see
what
you
can
see.
E
All
right
great,
so
I'm
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
what
I'm
about
to
show
you.
So
this
is
the
github
call
for
code
for
racial
justice,
firefox
voter.
I
actually
had
to
start
from
scratch
this
morning.
So
this
is.
This
is
absolutely
alive
as
you
can
get,
and
what
what
I
actually
had
to
do
is
I
had
to
come
through
here,
find
the
getting
started
document
figure
out
how
I'm
going
to
contribute
and
everything.
E
We
have
all
this
great
information
about
how
to
start
video
architecture,
all
the
things
that
we
just
talked
about,
as
well
as
links
to
understand
all
the
open,
the
source
technology
that
we
use
everywhere,
the
ibm
technology
we're
using
and
how
we're
using
it
and
all
of
that-
and
I
actually
had
to
kind
of
start
from
scratch
here,
because
this
is
my
personal
machine.
My
work
machine
became
unavailable
today,
so
I
came
in.
I
was
like
okay,
great
I'm
gonna
do
some
work
in
vs
code.
E
I
came
to
this
page
for
getting
started.
I
literally
followed
these
steps.
I
installed
yarn
python
3
in
docker
and
I
was
like
okay,
I
have
a
certificate
of
origin
and
I'm
going
to
do
project
setup,
and
so
this
is
where
I
am
I
came
in.
I
did
the
project
setup
I
attached
to
the
the
github
at
fifth
voter
and
was
able
to
put
pull
down
the
code
and
github.
I
follow
the
instructions
to
create
this
env
file.
E
I
am
not
sharing
my
keys
here
in
case
you
were
wondering
these
are
not
my
keys.
I
have
actual
keys,
but
I
I
didn't
want
to
share
them
on
video,
so
other
people
wouldn't
be
using
them
as
they're
my
personal
development
keys,
but
really
I
wanted
to
be
able
to
show
the
development
process.
So
if
you
look
here
in
the
developers,
I'm
not
joking.
All
of
this
was
literally
starting
from
scratch.
E
I
had
to
do
the
yarn
install
set
up
the
services,
build
docker
for
the
first
time
set
up
my
nodes
and
everything-
and
I
did
this
all
at
the
beginning
of
this
call.
So
if
you're
wondering
how
long
it
takes
to
get
set
up
and
running
this
started
as
this
call
started
at
one
o'clock
and
I'm
up
and
running
now,
I
actually
have
my
own
instance
here.
Up
and
running
five
is
voter.
You
can
see
it's
running
on
my
local
hosts.
Everything
is
here,
it's
all
running.
E
If
I
want
to
make
a
change,
I
can
make
a
change
and
push
it
up,
but
I
actually
for
for
the
few
minutes
that
I
I
have
you
today.
I
wanted
to
actually
kind
of
go
through
a
little
bit
of
the
source
code
and
kind
of
what
david
was
talking
about
at
a
kind
of
code
level,
and
so
you
can
kind
of
see
you
know
we
have
these
services
and
I'll
talk
about
the
services.
First,
we
have
mock
data
here
that
we
provide.
E
I
have
the
ballot
returns.
The
early
voting,
really
everything
I
need
to
do
to
kind
of
run
the
services
in
the
back
end.
You
can
see
that
the
service,
the
js
file
kind
of
sets
up
these
constants
and-
and
we
have
the
apis
here
and
can
test
them,
and
so
I
can
come
through.
I
can
look
at
the
twitter
so
that
twitter
we're
actually
using
tweepy
for
the
kind
of
twitter
interface
we're
using
the
watson,
natural
language
understanding.
E
We
have.
You
know
the
import,
the
features
for
sentiment,
options
and
emotions,
and
some
of
these
concepts
and
all
the
code
is
right
here.
So
there's
nothing
hidden.
Everything
is
open.
You
can
see
exactly
what
we're
doing
for
the
language
apis.
E
E
All
the
ui
is
here,
and
so
let
me
see
if
we
can
go
to
one
specific
component,
so
you
can
see
the
ui.
Actually,
we
have
a
ui
for
the
tweets
and
how
we
handle
the
twitter,
the
page
views
and
it's
all
using
the
carbon
and
view
level
of
view,
and
you
can
kind
of
see
the
different
ones
that
we're
pulling
in
by
default
and
how
we
mount
those
and
it's
all
packaged
up
and
and
we
we
use
docker
files
right.
E
So
none
of
the
none
of
this
is
hidden
anywhere.
You
can
see
each
activity
as
it
happens.
As
I
build
through
yarn,
you
can
see
it
creates
the
docker
instance.
Let
me
pull
over
when
I
created
the
database
all
right.
I
have
this
image
over
here.
I
can
see
what
it's
doing.
You
can
see
my
my
shards
and
everything,
and
so
as
I
do
my
development,
I
can
do
all
my
local
development
and
then,
when
I'm
ready,
I
can
have
somebody
do
a
review
see
here.
E
For
some
reason,
it's
not
bringing
my
window
back
up
there
we
go,
you
know
I
can
you
can
see
that
you
know
we
have
our
issues
out
here
and
you
can
see
that
we
go
through.
You
go
through
a
pull
request
and
you
can
see
the
closed
ones
like
there
was
an
update
just
two
days
ago,
david
merged
in
and
we
do
everything
in
the
open
through
github.
E
A
Awesome
thanks
so
much
for
that,
and
also
to
the
point
where
he
said
that
he
was
able
to
spin
this
up,
and
you
know
the
amount
of
time
from
the
beginning
of
this
meeting.
I
too
I'm
taking
a
python
class,
and
so
I'm
hoping
eventually
I'll
be
able
to
you
know,
start
doing
these
live
and
say
all
right
crash
course.
A
You
know
coding
with
dummies
I'll,
be
the
dummy
and
show
folks
that
it's
actually
possible,
because
they're,
really
the
instructions
within
our
github
are
supposed
to
be
really
consumable
for
anyone
who
has
you
know
the
the
technology
installed
to
you
know,
move
through
it
and
for
it
to
actually,
you
know
execute,
as
it's
you
know
illustrated
so
I'm
not
gonna
hand
it
off
to
sebastian
who's.
Gonna
talk
about.
You
know
our
design
approach
and
giving
again
a
little
bit
more
context
into.
H
Thank
you
very
much
team
and
gerald
that
was
truly
inspiring.
I
too
now
will
pledge
that
I
will
be
learning
to
code,
so
be
ready
for
all
my
questions.
B
H
Perfect,
thank
you
so
sabine,
thank
you
so
much
to
for
saying
the
the
words
human-centric
design
and
to
really
look
forward.
Let's,
let's
step
back
a
little
bit
and
look
at
where
we
were
as
a
nation,
so
1776
only
caucasian
men,
usually
christian
and
over
21,
were
allowed
to
flow.
H
It
was
up
until
1870
that
black
men
was
according
to
the
50,
with
the
passing
of
the
15th
amendment
was
given
the
right
to
vote,
but
that
didn't
mean
that
they
were
allowed
to.
They
could
access
voting
1920
women
and
women
suffrage
gave
women
the
right
to
vote,
but
it
was
not
a
universal,
especially
if
you
did
not
have
citizenship.
That
meant
asians,
that
meant
native
americans
in
1924.
H
Universal
citizenship
was
granted
to
native
americans
and
therefore
giving
them
the
right
to
vote,
but
that
does
not
mean
that
native
americans
were
not
disenfranchised
as
an
american.
I
was
beyond
shocked
that
within
my
father's
lifetime
my
father
was
born
in
1952
one.
It
was
1952
that
asian
americans
were
granted
the
right
to
be
us
citizens
and
given
the
right
to
vote,
however,
it
was
up
until
1965
that
they
finally
had
legislation
to
say
it
is
against
to
law,
in
theory,
to
prevent
people
from
voting.
H
So
next
slide,
please
I
mean
where,
where
where
were
we
in
2020,
we
still
saw
record
record
amounts
of
inability
to
for
blacks
and
brown
communities
to
access
voting,
and
why
was
that?
What-
and
this
is
and
with
those
insights
and
pain
points
is
how
we
actually
got
to
the
next
slide.
Please
our
design,
thinking
session,
where
led
by
the
incredible
sabine.
We
really
reinforce
our
our
messaging
to
see
who
our
doctors
are,
who
our
citizens
are
and,
of
course,
the
development
community
in
our
solution
for
five-fifths
voter.
A
And
also
just
to
kind
of
touch
on
this
when
we're
really
again
relating
this
back
to
community,
we
had
experts
who
are
focused
on
you
know:
civic
engagement.
You
know
how
technology
can
be
used
for
voter
enablement
to
come
and
give
us
again
that
kind
of
external
lens
that
I
think
you
know
can
be
lacking
when
we're
talking
about
technology.
That's
supposed
to
be,
you
know
focused
on
folks
who
are
typically
either
marginalized,
so
being
able
to
make
that
connection
is
what
we're
really
intend
on
doing.
A
I
think
that's
what
five
faced
voter
is
doing
so
well,
is
that
we
know
who
we're
focusing
on
folks
who
don't
normally
have
access
to
information
on
how
to
vote,
and
then
you
know
those
who
are
in
the
technology
space
giving
us.
A
You
know
a
little
bit
more
information
on
what
we
can
do
to
improve
our
solution
to
again
make
accessibility
more
prominent,
but
then
those
who
are
also
working
deep
in
those
communities
and
just
understanding
their
problems
and
what
they
would
actually
need
to
cast
their
vote
being
able
to
have
that
inform
some
of
the
work
that
we're
doing
so
again.
Rounding
this
out,
we
didn't
just
say
we
have
a
great
idea,
let's
put
all
of
our
assumptions
into
this
and
execute
it.
A
H
Amazing,
thank
you
sabine
and,
of
course,
we
couldn't
build
a
robust
product
without
a
real,
deep
understanding
of
the
user
demographic
who
are
we
trying
to
design
the
solutions
too?
We
definitely
had
a
very
thorough
examination
of
the
different
communities
that
we
were
solving
too
were
was
every
questions
like
did
everybody
have
the
same
kind
of
access
to
mobile
devices?
H
H
So
we
could,
instead
of
just
making
blind
assumptions,
we
actually
had
very
educated,
informed
decisions
for
features
informed
by
specialists
in
the
field
as
well
and
next
slide,
please
sabine
and
finally,
some
of
the
three
main
pillars
as
you've
heard
on
the
top
of
this
call
being
education,
empowerment
and
enablement.
H
I
wanted
to
align
that
with
pathos,
ethos
and
logos
pay,
those
being
the
emotions
and
the
value
that
we
want
to
convey
to
the
user
path
ethos
being
the
credibility
are,
the
sources
are,
are
representing
unbiased
information.
H
So,
regardless
of
whether
you
vote
one
color
or
another,
we're
presenting
to
the
user
very
unbiased
fact,
checked
information
and
then
finally
logos.
What
is
the
reality?
What
is
the
reason-
and
this
is
really
just
based
on
the
fact
that
five
bits
makes
a
whole
and
we're
all
whole
beings
participating
in
a
whole
community
in
a
whole
global
system,
and
thank
you
so
very
much
back
to
you
today.
A
Thanks
so
much
sebastian
and
so
kind
of
moving
into
kind
of
the
this
is
the
running
pipeline.
So
the
example
that
gerald
so
adequately
shared.
I
know
that
he
said
he
wasn't
able
to
use
his
current
machine
to
you,
know
kind
of
push
that
out
and
then
have
david
showcase
that,
but
I
know
that
david
wanted
to
show
a
little
extra
something
before
we.
You
know
open
the
floor
up
for
questions,
and
you
know
give
you
all
a
little
bit
more
information
on
how
to
get
involved
david.
F
Sure
so
so
gerald
was
not
able
to
make
a
code
change,
but
so
we
got
close,
but
I
just
the
idea
was:
I
was
going
to
show
that
his
coach
were
working
his
way
through
the
pipeline,
so
instead
I
just
pushed
something
just
a
sample
change
to
actually
update
the
readme
with
the
the
diagrams
we
saw
earlier
in
this
chat,
so
the
readme
had
a
version
of
those
so
after
the
readme
and
then
now
it's
just
running
through
the
pipeline.
F
So
we
just
wanted
to
show
that
running
and
that's
probably
it
unless
there's
questions
there
but
I'll
hand
it
back
to
you.
A
Okay,
but
yeah
y'all
are
seeing
things
like
the
was
it
the
sausage
being
made,
but
sausage
is
usually
kind
of
gross,
so
we'll
say
like
the
pie
being
made,
because
everyone
took
pie
exactly,
and
you
know,
to
kind
of
just
like
bring
things.
You
know
kind
of
back
to
no
we're
saying
this
is
again,
and
you
know
most
of
our
not
the
most,
but
the
solution
is
that
we're
presenting,
especially
under
copper,
copper,
racial
justice.
A
It's
meant
to
not
be
biased
among,
like
you
know,
political
affiliations,
political
lines,
even
though
we
know
that
sometimes
these
issues
can
be
politicized,
but
we
are
really
focused
again
on.
How
can
we
address
voting
issues
like
if
you
want
to
be
able
to
vote?
How
can
we
allow,
you
know,
encourage
you
in
power
and
enable
you
to
do
so,
and
you
can
actually
find
out
a
lot
of
information
on
what
is
currently
happening
around
you
know,
voter
id
laws
for
suppression,
redistricting
redlining
that
really
affect.
A
Typically,
you
know
black
and
brown
communities
from
casting
their
votes,
and
so
we're
just
again
trying
to
be
able
to
be
that
bridge.
You
know
as
an
application
for
folks
to
feel
like
they
can
make
decisions
on
their
own.
They
have
information
and
they
are
able
to
move
forward
in
casting
their
ballot,
and
so
you
know
moving
forward.
We're
still
going
to
continue
to
make
sure
that
you
know
the
basic
capabilities
of
five
fifths
is
working,
so
you
know
checking
if
you're
registered
to
vote
if
you've
moved.
A
Have
you
updated
your
address,
so
you
know
update
your
registration
if
you
have
to
have
different
ids,
like
you
know,
being
able
to
navigate
that
and
being
able
to
provide
those
those
updates,
hours
and
locations
of
absentee
vote
drop-offs,
and
you
know,
tons
more
issues
that
we
have
within
the
github
right
now,
and
you
know
specific
roles
that
we're
also
going
to
call
here
where
we
would
love
to
have
people
from
our.
A
You
know
the
the
community
be
able
to
contribute,
and
if
you
reach
out
to
us
in
slack,
I
promise
we
will
respond
and
you
know
demian
she's,
not
on
the
call
right
now,
but
she's
listening
somewhere
in
the
ethers.
A
You
know
it's
also
really
diligent
about
welcoming
folks
and
to
call
for
code
virtual
justice
how
you
can
get
started
and
then
our
github
is
also
a
great
place
for
you
to
understand
first
issues
and
where
you
can,
you
know,
start
to
support
and
I'm
gonna
hand
this
over
just
to
chris
really
quickly,
who
has
been
you
know,
really
instrumental
in
helping
us.
A
You
know
to
execute
on
on
some
of
the
projects
that
we
have
upcoming
and
you
know
also
illustrating
you
know
some
of
the
help
that
we
would
like
to
have
in
the
couple
months.
G
Again,
I'm
chris
stefano
and
we
are
welcoming
everyone.
Anyone
who
is
motivated
by
things
you've
seen
today
to
get
involved
as
it
relates
to
this
issue.
If
you
have
a
concern
for
yourself,
your
family
members,
your
loved
ones,
your
community,
in
terms
of
your
ability
to
vote
and
protecting
the
right
to
vote,
there's
an
opportunity
for
you.
Regardless
of
what
skills
you
have
to
come
and
participate,
so
you
can
see
the
list
there.
G
Certainly
technical
skills
are
relevant
and
user
experience,
skills,
research,
skills,
data,
analysis,
marketing
project
manager,
whatever
sort
of
role
you,
whatever
sort
of
skills
you
might
bring
to
the
table,
are
welcome
and-
and
I'm
guessing
that
on.
The
next
slide
is
how
to
get
in
touch
with
us.
So
yeah.
G
A
Skills
feel
free
to
you
know,
take
a
you
know,
pull
up
your
phones
and
follow
this.
This
qr
code
join
us
in
this
black
community
you'll
be
able
to
also
you
know,
get
started
on
ibm
cloud
with.
You
know,
200
worth
of
credits
in
order
to
you
know,
start
building
out
your
your
own.
Businesses
are
doing
some
testing
within
our
solution,
and
you
know
staying
connecting
with
us,
and
there
are
other
resources
that
we
can
provide
for
you
to
be
brought
up
to
speed
around.
A
A
We
welcome
the
discussion
again
we're
not
trying
to
make
this
about
just
ibm,
even
though,
of
course,
you
see
ibm
about
this,
we
really
want
to
be
able
to
be
kind
of
a
point
of
access
for
folks
all
over
the
globe
who
want
to
you
know,
learn
more
about
these
systems
being
able
to
provide
their
technical
expertise
and
advancing
what
justice
can
look
like
in
these
communities
and,
essentially
just
being
you
know,
another
opportunity
for
folks
to
really
you
know,
put
their
heart
as
we've
seen
from
this
project
team
into
a
solution
that
is
actually
being
adopted,
and
you
know
plug
for
this-
is
that
we
are
focused
on
adoption
and
we
have
our
you
know.
A
You
know
some
good
news
coming
in
the
next
couple
of
months
around
how
five
fifths
voter
is
going
to
be
able
to
operate
at
scale
within
a
really
well
known
and
really
well
respected
organization
around
voter
engagement
and
empowerment.
So,
thank
you.
I
think.
That's
all
the
words
we
got
today,
chris
didn't
know
if
there
were
any
additional
questions
from
the
chat
that
we
wanted
to
bring
up.
B
No
additional
questions,
but
I
love
the
teaser.
That's
that's
awesome
I'll,
be
keeping
my
eye
out
for
that
one,
but
folks,
please,
if
you're
interested
get
involved,
I
just
dropped
the
link
in
the
stream
chat.
If,
if
you
have
any
questions
or
comments,
feel
free
to
reach
out
to
me
or
any
sabine,
anybody
on
this
call
can
kind
of
help
you
out,
but
I
greatly
appreciate
y'all
bringing
this
to
openshift
tv
and
I
really
think
this
is
an
important
effort.
So
thank
you
very
much.
A
And
I'm
saying
thank
you
to
the
to
the
project
team.
I'm
different
fan
girling
and
I
appreciate
everyone's
time
and
effort
and
excited
to
grow.
This
up
more
you'll
be
hearing
more
about
what
this
great
solution
is
doing
awesome.
We.
B
Can't
wait
to
see
more
of
it.
So
thank
you
very
much
and
we'll
see
you
we're
doing
another
one
of
these
next
week.
Right.
B
Stick
around
folks,
as
always,
you
know
check
out
the
streaming
calendar
if
you
want
to
be
kept
up
to
date
on
everything
subscribe
to
it
and
you'll
have
that
calendar
in
yours
and
until
next
time
I
hope
you
all
stay
safe
out.
There.