Some of the notes that I got from my colleagues who took the notes had all the names, but I took the names out when I sent them around, in case somebody forwarded or somehow lost control of the copy.
That’s because we met for many hours a day, for meeting, after meeting, after meeting. They knew who the speaker was by the context, and I didn’t have to write it down because I wasn’t going out to the world, necessarily.
It was quite effective, but it was laborious to produce those. I think that the recording and transcription process is much less laborious.
That’s fabulous. That’s an excellent suggestion, and it would have saved us a lot of work and given people the chance, like you say, to make themselves clearer, to make themselves better understood by better word choice or acronym expansion. That’s terrific.
I mean that will be great when we do that next time. [laughs]
I don’t know where I went. [laughs]
I finally can see you, yes. Maybe I should have done that a long time ago. [laughs]
Making tea. I was listening with great interest to the tea-making story.
Unless you’re like me, and unfortunately, I’ve lost my video of you again. I don’t know what it is going on. [laughs]
Yeah.
You as well, thank you very much.
Bye-bye.