CoLab Mailing List
Random Hacks of Kindness (RHoK)
Random Hacks of Kindness
The Disaster Relief Codejam
When?
Thursday, November 12, 2009 at 6:00 PM
- to -
Saturday, November 14, 2009 at 5:00 PM (PT)
Where?
Hacker Dojo
140 South Whisman Road
Mountain View, CA
What is Random Hacks of Kindness?
It is an initiative that brings together disaster relief experts and software engineers to work on identifying key challenges to disaster relief, and developing solutions to these critical issues. This Codejam is the first of a series of Random Hacks of Kindness (RHoK) events that will bring the best and brightest together for a "give camp" to solve real world-problems related to Crisis/Disaster Relief.
Objectives:
This event is the first step in building a global community dedicated to solving disaster relief challenges through technology.
At the RHoK Codejam, programmers will partner with subject matter experts to tackle “real world "problems. These challenges have begun to be defined (see preparation), and will continue to be refined during the event.
The software created at this first event will continue to be developed at subsequent RHoK events, and openly shared with the international community. Our hope is that this software will address some of the serious challenges facing the disaster response community, and evolve in response to their needs.
Background:
In May 2009, the first ever Crisis Camp barcamp was held in Washington, DC. During one of the opening sessions an industry panel including representatives from Microsoft, Google and Yahoo! agreed that some matters supersede competitive concerns. We agreed to cooperate to mobilize our developer communities to create interoperable solutions/code that will have real impact in the field. We have partnered with NASA and The World Bank to make this happen.
Organizers:
Microsoft, Google, Yahoo, NASA and The World Bank.
Preparation:
We want our hacks to make an impact. To that end we need the problem definitions as tight as possible before we begin coding on the 12th. The following is a link (see here) to the preliminary project definitions. Please contribute by adding new ideas and/or refining ones that are already there.
Hotel:
We have block ordered a number of rooms at the Crestview Hotel until November 6th. To make a reservation call 650-966-8848 and book under "Random Hacks of Kindness" group. The rate is $69 a night.
Luna Philosophie: Hitch-hiking to the Moon
Wednesday September 23, 2009 from 6:00pm - 8:00pm
Scribd
539 Bryant St. (2nd Floor)
San Francisco, California 94107
Luna Philosophie is regular salon and discussion coordinated by the NASA Lunar Science Institute and Spacehack.org, sponsored by Scribd. They occur on (or close to) Full Moons in San Francisco, as part of an effort to bring NASA and space exploration to the San Francisco Bay Area community. Each Luna Philosophie meeting has a different theme, and will involve a presentation and open discussion for philosophizing. Anyone who is interested in an open, creative dialog on human, space related topics is encouraged to attend.
Hitch-hiking to the Moon: LCROSS (Lunar CRater Observation and Sensing Satellite) Model, a novel space mission and approach
Dr. Ennico will provide an overview of the NASA LCROSS mission, a secondary payload that hitch-hiked aboard an Atlas V rocket with the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter on June 18th, 2009. LCROSS was a fast-paced mission concept that embraced risk and utilized off-the-shelf components, to meet a rigorous budget and schedule profile. Scientifically, LCROSS is looking to confirm the presence or absence of water ice in a permanently shadowed region on the moon. The impact location is a crater on the lunar south pole, where LCROSS will meet its spectacular end on Oct 9th, 2009. The impact is expected to be visible from Hawaii and the western continental US. The speaker will share all the neat things she has learned on this very hands-on and engaging project and how this type of mission concept is an excellent training experience for spacecraft engineers. Dr. Ennico will also touch on how NASA has been expanding the concept of “participatory exploration,” with LCROSS as an example, and looks forward to a lively discussion.
SPEAKER BIO: Dr. Ennico has been a staff scientist at NASA Ames Reasearch Center since September 2000. She volunteered to work on the LCROSS mission in the summer 2006 and has been the LCROSS Payload Scientist and the LCROSS Payload Integration & Test Manager, while supporting other mission work. She is excited to be a part of this exciting phase in NASA’s exploration program and also part of NASA Ames’ approach to innovative & participatory small space missions. After launch, she sits at the science payload operations chair in the LCROSS Mission Operations Center here at NASA Ames.
WHEN: Wednesday, September 23, 2009 from 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM
6:00 – 6:30 PM Socializing
6:30 – 7:30 PM Presentation by Dr. Kim Ennico & Discussion
7:30 – 8:00 PM Socializing
WHO: All are welcome!
Please RSVP to Delia.L.Santiago@nasa.gov, snacks and drinks will be served but space is limited.
Unable to attend?
Watch the livestream of this event or sign up to receive an email about future Luna Philosophies.
Website: http://spacehack.org/luna-philosophie
Reminder: Luna Philosophie tomorrow/ Nov. 11th-- Seth Shostak
Seth Shostak is simply a fantastic speaker. Don't miss it! You'll learn a lot, and surely laugh quite a bit as well!
WHAT: The fourteenth Luna Philosophie will feature Seth Shostak, Senior Astronomer at SETI Institute.
WHEN WILL WE DISCOVER THE EXTRATERRESTRIALS?
The scientific hunt for extraterrestrial intelligence is now into its fifth decade, and we still haven't uncovered a confirmed peep from the cosmos. For that matter, we still don’t know if life – at any level of intelligence – exists beyond Earth. Could this mean that finding aliens, even if they’re out there, is a project for the ages – one that might take centuries or longer?
New technologies for use in the search for extraterrestrial biology suggest that, despite the continued dearth of hard evidence for life elsewhere or signals from other societies, there is good reason to expect that success might not be far off – that within a few decades we might find evidence of sophisticated civilizations.
Why this is so, what contact would tell us, and what such a discovery would mean, are the subject of this talk on the continuing efforts to establish our place in the universe of thinking beings.
WHEN: Tuesday, November 11, 2008 from 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
6:00 - 6:30 PM Socializing
6:30 - 7:30 PM Presentation by Seth Shostak & Discussion
7:30 - 8:00 PM Socializing
WHERE: Yahoo! Brickhouse, 500 3rd St, in San Francisco ( http://upcoming.yahoo.com/venue/59350/ )
WHO: All are welcome!
Please RSVP to shanley@yahoo-inc.com, snacks and drinks will be served but space is limited.
For more information on Luna Philosophie, visit: http://colab.arc.nasa.gov/luna
Unable to attend?
Watch the livestream of this event at http://ustream.tv/channel/lp1 !
Reminder: Luna Philosophie this Thursday!
Note: Apologies if you recently received an outdated email about "this is your future - why the moon?" - this was an error on my part - please feel free to disregard!
Just a quick reminder that the next Luna Philosophie event is this Thursday! This discussion will feature Patricia Burchat on the subject of dark energy and dark matter. Earlier this year, Burchat spoke at TED: http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/patricia_burchat_leads_a_search_for_d... .
More information about Luna Philosophie: The Dark Side of the Universe can be found at http://colab.arc.nasa.gov/node/137 .
Also, a reminder that if you're unable to attend the event in San Francisco, we will be livestreaming it at approximately 6:30pm PT on October 16 at http://ustream.tv/channel/lp1 !
Thanks and see you there!
--
Ariel
NASA CoLab program coordinator
Luna Philosophie: The Dark Side of the Universe (Oct. 16, 2008)
Luna Philosophie: The Dark Side of the Universe (Oct. 16, 2008)
WHAT: The thirteenth Luna Philosophie will feature Patricia Burchat, Chair of the Physics Department at Stanford University. She will discuss a 21st century view of the universe around dark matter and dark energy.
THE DARK SIDE OF THE UNIVERSE
A scientific revolution in our understanding of the universe is under way. In the last decade or so, cosmology has become an observational science that has led to two mysterious observations: about a quarter of the universe is "dark matter," which gravitationally attracts but is otherwise invisible, and about two-thirds is "dark energy," which causes space itself to expand at an ever-increasing rate. That means only a small fraction of the energy in the universe is due to matter that we understand! In this presentation, we will explore the evidence for dark matter and dark energy, and the experiments being developed to investigate their fundamental nature.
WHEN: Thursday, October 16, 2008 from 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
6:00 - 6:30 PM Socializing
6:30 - 7:30 PM Presentation by Patricia Burchat & Discussion
7:30 - 8:00 PM Socializing
WHERE: Yahoo! Brickhouse, 500 3rd St, in San Francisco ( http://upcoming.yahoo.com/venue/59350/ )
WHO: All are welcome!
Please RSVP to shanley@yahoo-inc.com, snacks and drinks will be served but space is limited.
For more information on Luna Philosophie, visit: http://colab.arc.nasa.gov/luna
Unable to attend?
Watch the livestream of this event at http://ustream.tv/channel/lp1 !
Luna Philosophie: NASA's High-Impact Return to the Moon (Sept. 17, 2008)
Luna Philosophie: NASA's High-Impact Return to the Moon
September 17, 2008
WHAT: The twelfth Luna Philosophie will feature Brian Day, Educational Technology Technical Lead at NASA Ames
Research Center. He will discuss the current mission to the moon to find water and what it means for building an antarctic station there for people to occupy long-term.

