Our ultimate guide to running your own Coolest Projects event

Coolest Projects, our world-leading technology fair for young people, takes place in seven countries this year: Ireland, the UK, USA, Netherlands, Belgium, Bulgaria, and Milan in Italy.

Coolest Projects 2019 Logo

Volunteer-led Coolest Projects events

Teams of marvellous volunteers organise and run the events in the Netherlands, Belgium, Bulgaria, and Milan! They are doing incredible work to give children in their regions the chance to present their tech creations and be celebrated for their skills and creativity.

And we want to support you in our global community to do the same: organise your own regional Coolest Projects events, wherever you are, so that young people near you can showcase their work and be inspired by others’ inventions.

5 reasons to host your own Coolest Projects event

Running your own Coolest Projects is your chance to:

  1. Celebrate the creativity of young creators
  2. Grow your local coding and volunteer community
  3. Engage parents and educators with technology
  4. Develop connections with local businesses
  5. Build the worldwide network of Coolest Projects participants, partners, and volunteers

The Coolest Projects Regional Handbook

We’ve put together a free Coolest Projects Regional Handbook that walks you through everything you need to organise your own Coolest Projects event!

Our brand-new handbook brings together everything you need to plan, prepare for, and host your own regional Coolest Projects event. It includes practical advice on:

  • Building your Coolest Projects team
  • Managing an event budget
  • Choosing a venue
  • Sponsorship and partner management
  • Communications and marketing
  • Coolest Projects licensing

Your regional event does not have to be large or formal — it can be as big or small as your community’s volunteers want it to be, and tailored to your community’s needs and interests.

Coolest Projects UK 2018 Raspberry Pi Foundation CoderDojo

Like the volunteer teams who already run regional Coolest Projects, you too can run your own event — with our handbook as guidance.

Download your free handbook now!

If you’re interested in bringing Coolest Projects to your community, email us at hello@coolestprojects.org so we can connect you to other volunteers in your region who have expressed their interest to us! Letting us know you want to be involved will also enable us to give you more support while you’re getting started.

You’ve only got a little time left to register your idea

To participate in this year’s Coolest Projects, just register your project idea by the deadline (see below)! And don’t fret: you don’t have to have started your project to register, just the idea is enough.

If you don’t want to present something by yourself, you can register in a team of up to five members.

And you don’t need to have finished your project to present it at the event, because the most important thing is to showcase your love and enthusiasm for tech!

Registration deadlines:

Registration and attendance for all Coolest Projects events is free! And you’re also more than welcome to visit and check out the amazing projects without submitting your own. For more information, and to get your free visitor tickets, visit the Coolest Projects website and select your nearest event.

The post Our ultimate guide to running your own Coolest Projects event appeared first on Raspberry Pi.



Source: Raspberry Pi – Our ultimate guide to running your own Coolest Projects event

How to display the severed heads of your enemies, the Iron Age way

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Source: Ars Technica – How to display the severed heads of your enemies, the Iron Age way

Panfrost Mali Driver In Primitive Form Under Review For Mesa

The open-source, reverse-engineered Panfrost Gallium3D driver is now under review in an early form for potentially merging into mainline Mesa in the near future. Panfrost is the current open-source driver community effort around Arm’s Midgard and Bifrost graphics units…

Source: Phoronix – Panfrost Mali Driver In Primitive Form Under Review For Mesa

HMM Gets New Features/Improvements, Nouveau Support Aligned For Linux 5.1

Jerome Glisse of Red Hat has spent the past few years devoted to Heterogeneous Memory Management (HMM) that continues stepping towards taking on bigger roles within the Linux kernel. With the upcoming Linux 5.1 kernel cycle there are slated to be more additions to this code, which is the backbone of allowing the mirroring of process address spaces, system memory to be transparently used by any device process, and other functionality for GPU computing and other modern PCIe devices…

Source: Phoronix – HMM Gets New Features/Improvements, Nouveau Support Aligned For Linux 5.1

Meet the Man Behind a Third of What's On Wikipedia

Thelasko shares a report from CBS News: Steven Pruitt has made nearly 3 million edits on Wikipedia and written 35,000 original articles. It’s earned him not only accolades but almost legendary status on the internet. The online encyclopedia now boasts more than 5.7 million articles in English and millions more translated into other languages — all written by online volunteers. Pruitt was named one of the most influential people on the internet by Time magazine in part because one-third of all English language articles on Wikipedia have been edited by Steven. An incredible feat, ignited by a fascination with his own history.

How much money does he make from his work? None. “The idea of making it all free fascinates me. My mother grew up in the Soviet Union … So I’m very conscious of what, what it can mean to make knowledge free, to make information free,” he said. Pulling from books, academic journals and other sources, he spends more than three hours a day researching, editing and writing. Even his day job is research, working in records and information at U.S. Customs and Border Protection. He joked that his colleagues probably think he’s nuts. To put in to perspective what it took for Pruitt to become the top editor, he’s been dedicating his free time to the site for 13 years. The second-place editor is roughly 900,000 edits behind him, so his first place status seems safe, for now.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Meet the Man Behind a Third of What’s On Wikipedia

PUBG's new tool will show you kills caught on Twitch streams

There’s a huge number of PUBG streamers out there, so if you want to know if your kills have been broadcast on Twitch, you’ll need something to help you out. Like PUBG Report: the online multiplayer game’s new tool that gives you a way to search for…

Source: Engadget – PUBG’s new tool will show you kills caught on Twitch streams

NASA Is Back To Work, But the Effects of the Government Shutdown Linger

Following a record 35-day government shutdown, thousands of civil servants and contractors are heading back to work this week at NASA’s various centers throughout the country. “These first few days back on the job will be consumed with practical matters, such as figuring out employee backpay and how to dive back into projects,” reports The Verge. “The shutdown will undoubtedly result in delays for some of NASA’s long-term programs, too, but it’ll be a while before the space agency can fully assess the extent of the damage.” From the report: To explain how NASA is adjusting in the wake of the shutdown, the space agency’s administrator Jim Bridenstine addressed employees during a town hall meeting this afternoon at NASA’s headquarters in Washington, DC. “Welcome to 2019,” he said during the meeting, which was live-streamed on NASATV. “NASA is now open and we’re very thankful for that.” The comment was met by applause from those in attendance, while Bridenstine went on to acknowledge that it’s been a rough start to the year for the agency. “I want to say thank you for your patience and for your commitment to this agency and to the mission we all believe in so dearly.”

Bridenstine told the room that some NASA employees did leave during the shutdown, though it wasn’t a substantial amount. “We didn’t have a mass exodus,” he said. “I think had this gone on longer, we would have. But we did lose people — onesies and twosies — across the agency and even here at headquarters. That is absolutely true.” Perhaps those hit hardest at NASA were the agency’s contractors. […] Each company funded by NASA has its own contract with the agency, and the provisions of those agreements differ from contract to contract. Some contractors were paid their funding in advance of the shutdown, allowing them to continue working mostly unfazed. However, the employees of contractors who did not receive funding in advance were unable to bill for the hours that they worked during the shutdown. And it’s possible they’ll never receive compensation for that time. “NASA is in the middle of selecting new planetary missions to pursue, as part of its New Frontiers and Discovery programs — and the shutdown may have delayed that process, says Casey Dreier, chief advocate and senior space policy adviser at The Planetary Society,” reports The Verge. “Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’s associate administrator for science, pushed back the date for when the agency would accept applications for new science research proposals. And there’s uncertainty surrounding the new giant rocket NASA is working on to take astronauts to the Moon and beyond, called the Space Launch System.” Boeing told Politico that the shutdown delayed testing of the rocket’s hardware.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – NASA Is Back To Work, But the Effects of the Government Shutdown Linger

Facebook Is Paying Teens to Install a 'Research' App That Lets It Monitor Their Phones

Facebook has stealthily launched a service similar to Onavo Protect, its vampiric psuedo-VPN that claims to protect users’ privacy but actually collects and analyzes their data. This time it’s worse—Facebook is targeting teens to install a similar app via third-party beta testing services, in possible violation of…

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Source: Gizmodo – Facebook Is Paying Teens to Install a ‘Research’ App That Lets It Monitor Their Phones

iRobot's New Robot Lawn Mower Sure Looks Like It'll Piss Off Your Neighbors

After years of rumors, iRobot’s finally announced its robot lawnmower: the Terra. Now, instead of getting up early and mowing and annoying the neighbors, you can sleep in and let the robot do it for you. On top of being able to mow your lawn, it seems the Terra will borrow quite a few features from iRobot’s successful…

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Source: Gizmodo – iRobot’s New Robot Lawn Mower Sure Looks Like It’ll Piss Off Your Neighbors