Cam is dipping a grilled cheese sandwich into a bowl of tomato soup when he feels the summons. He goes ahead and grabs it. Doesn't even drop the sandwich.
Steel says, "You're probably going to go get your shuttle, so I'll just follow it in the Earthbus when it takes off."
Cam goes and gets in his shuttle and leads the bus to his island. He should name his island, hmmm.
Two families and ten individuals want apartments. One family and two people each want little beach-houses. The doctor wants a clinic built for him, and one of the families suggests they could run a 'shop' that collects requests for things and distributes the created things as required so Cam doesn't need to bother with the busywork.
There is plenty of apartment in the apartment building Steel lives in to go around. Cam can do cute little beach houses, inspired by local architecture but with full complements of gadgetry (with signs) and in cheerful colors and summoning-age materials. The clinic takes some consultation of his notes to fully outfit; he puts it convenient to the apartment building. And he puts in the bridge, and puts the request-collection shop near the bridge, and tells this family he's willing to give them a try even though he doesn't know much about them personally, but if he doesn't like how they do their job he will go back to taking his own requests or try automating it somehow - customer service can be terrible but just because they are volunteers does not mean they can snap at people or anything.
The family nods and agrees. "I think we'll deliver, at first. What would be a convenient way to contact you?"
"Ideally you'd send me computer messages. I don't have anything set up to do voice recognition in this language and I won't for a while, but there's a way to write messages by pushing buttons with letters on them, and then I can show you how to send the complete message to me. If that's annoying I can handle the voice recognition part sooner rather than later and take un-textified voice recordings, though - typing's a useful skill but it takes a learning curve to be good at it."
"I know Henta," the mother volunteers, "If you make it so I can press buttons with their alphabet on them, that will work."
"I'm not really fluent in Henta. ...I could probably make character recognition work in a short while. If you write with a particular pen on a particular surface. Yeah, let's go with that." He fiddles with his computer for a moment, then snaps his fingers and there is a surface and a pen in the shop. "Write whatever you want to send to me on the blue area, it'll slide the characters up and out of your way as you run out of room, tap the green thing on the right to send. Sound easy enough?"
She tries it out, writing the names of various objects on it. "This will work, thank you. But how can I erase a mistake?"
"This is a very interesting... Thing. I'll try to collect nice big batches for you. I'll start with some things I expect people to want, since you're already here..." She names about two dozen items, including things such as '100 bars of soap' '40 sets of shaving razors' and 'a dozen 20 pound sacks of flour'.
"Oh, about a third of the way up on the apartment building is a residential warehouse thing stocked with reasonable quantities of nonperishables. If you want to keep an eye on the supply in there that would be nice but I don't think anything will be gone yet."
The doctor solicits a phone capable of calling Cam, having heard of the things from Steel. "If there's anything I'm not totally sure how to treat, I'd rather talk to the source of my new medicine and knowledge."
"Of course. Let me give you a tour of the place, there's only so much the pictorial guide can do." Cam shows the doctor all the stuff and quizzes him on diagnostics to make sure they aren't laboring under any desperate misapprehensions about anatomy, infection, etcetera.
The doctor understands anatomy and the body's response to injuries very well. He knows about infections, and the distinction between bacteria and viruses, but his biochemistry is shaky and their antibiotics are not very effective. Usually, treatment for infectious diseases involve suppressing the symptoms and spraying disinfectant on everything rather than killing the microbes. This... Usually works.
...Cam points out the antivirals and the antibiotics, reminds him of the importance of making sure he's using the right one of those, mentions that some of the antibiotics will also handle worms and protozoans and fungi but there are more specialized medicines that will do better, and shows him the snazzy diagnostic gadgets.
The doctor takes lots of notes and reiterates that he's going to call Cam whenever something he's not absolutely positive on comes up.
Okay, good. "As soon as my computer can translate things into local languages I will get you books," he adds.
That seems to be it as far as pressing needs from his new citizens go. It's well past sunset by now.
Cool. Cam spends the night slurping coffee, nudging his computer repeatedly on-course and pronouncing words for it while it works on the corpus of local texts it has, setting up the bridge and its train, and finalizing designs for a communication satellite to allow easy communication between his unnamed island and Opri. He should name his island. Hmmmmmm.
At the end of the list is, Apologies if these requests seem greedy. Several people seem to desire setting up crafts of sorts- the fabric is for an aspiring tailor. I believe this should be encouraged. Will you be minting a currency unique to this island?