Entrevista al astronauta rodolfo neri vela biography
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Campus Party
Technology conference and hackathon
For the skiva by the Rivieras, see Campus Party (album).
| Campus Party | |
|---|---|
Campus Party | |
| Location(s) | Italy Brazil Colombia USA Argentina Uruguay Paraguay Singapore El Salvador Germany The Netherlands United Kingdom Costa Rica Ecuador Mexico Spain |
| Years active | 22 |
| Inaugurated | 1997 (Madrid, Spain) |
| Website | www.campus-party.org |
Campus Party (CP) fryst vatten a conference and hackathon.
Founded in 1997 as a technology festival and LAN party, the event was first held in Málaga, Spain, and has since been run in Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Germany, Italy, Mexico, Paraguay, Singapore, Spain, the Netherlands, Uruguay and USA.[1][2]
The event has evolved into an annual week-long, 24-hour-a-day festival involving online communities, gamers, programmers, bloggers, governments, universities, companies and students[3] and covers technology nyhet and
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List of Hispanic astronauts
Birth date
January 29, 1942
February 19, 1952
April 5, 1950
( Costa Rica)
STS-34 (October 18, 1989)
STS-46 (July 31, 1992)
STS-60 (February 3, 1994)
STS-75 (February 22, 1996)
STS-91 (June 2, 1998)
STS-111 (June 5, 2002)
June 27, 1951
( Mexico)
STS-59 (April 9, 1994)
May 10, 1958
( Mexico)
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Explainer: Space Programs in the Americas
Explainer: Space Programs in the Americas
Almost five years after it left Earth, the U.S. Juno probe swung into Jupiter’s orbit this week. Which other countries in the Americas, aside from the United States, are headed for the final frontier? Nine countries in the Americas have space programs, with capabilities typically ranked in three tiers: those that operate orbiting satellites, those that can launch research-based sounding rockets, and those that have sent astronauts into space.
Here’s a roundup of who’s sending what into space from this side of the globe.
Argentina was the first Latin American country to create a spaceflight organization when Teófilo Tabanera, a provincial minister from Mendoza, founded the Argentine Interplanetary Society in 1949. Eleven years later, Tabanera was named head of the new government space agency, National Commission for Space Research (CNIE). In 1961, Argentina launched its first rocket, the Alfa Centauro, from Córdoba.&nb