Software Development
Events / Hackathons / Science

Make a space app at this weekend’s NASA hackathon

The local edition of the International Space Apps Challenge will be held April 11-12 in Laurel.

Build an app for that. (Photo via Wikimedia Commons)

We know astronauts love to tweet, but they need some more apps to help with the day-to-day space grind.
For that, NASA is hosting a hackathon this weekend.
The International Space Apps Challenge, held April 11-12, looks to bring teams together to “tackle space science and technology problems.” The event poses 35 different challenges to solve in four categories: outer space, Earth, humans and robotics. Teams get access to open data to develop the apps.
The event is happening at locations around the world. For the Baltimore-Washington area, the two-day session will take place at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md. Teams will get a chance to work in Building 200, which is APL’s Space Exploration Sector building. It’s one of the places where probes that were sent to Pluto and Mercury were developed.
Register
“We’re going to share what we know about working on challenges with the teams to help them produce open-source solutions for global needs in space and on Earth,” APL event organizer Daisy Zhang said.

Companies: Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory / NASA
Engagement

Join the conversation!

Find news, events, jobs and people who share your interests on Technical.ly's open community Slack

Trending

Baltimore daily roundup: Gen AI's software dev skills; UpSurge Tech Ecosystem Report; MD service year program

Baltimore daily roundup: Mayoral candidates talk tech and biz; a guide to greentech vocabulary; a Dutch delegation's visit

Baltimore daily roundup: An HBCU innovation champion's journey; Sen. Sanders visits Morgan State; Humane Ai review debate

Will generative AI replace software developers?

Technically Media