Participants flag audio problems and plan inventory of devices to improve hearing at meetings
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Speakers said meeting audio was choppy and hard to hear for attendees; they proposed an inventory of devices and consulting a specialist to resolve the problem.
Multiple participants raised concerns that meeting audio is choppy, voices move or cut out, and that attendees are having difficulty hearing proceedings. The group discussed inventorying devices and seeking a specialist to improve sound and accessibility.
One participant said the audio felt “choppy and difficult to hear” and that voices appeared to move around; another suggested inventorying private devices and consulting a specialist. A participant said, “I feel like I do these doors. Hyperguts move around this firm. They will now I'm at the same and I don't know if this idea is steady, but you look you should be this very uncomfortable list too because it seems almost like they're voice acting,” Speaker 1 said (transcript phrasing is fragmented). Another participant recommended inventorying equipment and checking whether people attending the meeting had difficulty hearing.
Nut graf: The group identified audio quality and hearing accessibility as a recurring problem and agreed to check equipment and consult technical support before the next meeting.
Participants discussed private devices and the possibility of acquiring a dedicated device or specialist support; one participant said they would inventory what was on hand. There was no formal motion recorded; participants agreed to follow up on technical fixes and to contact individuals (for example, Tom) to assist with troubleshooting.
Ending: The item concluded with a plan to inventory meeting audio equipment and pursue specialist assistance, with follow up expected outside the meeting record.
