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.