Astro Pi Archives – Page 3 of 5 – Raspberry Pi Foundation https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/category/programmes/astro-pi/page/3/
history with Astro Pi Mission Zero Young people don’t need to wait to become astronauts
history with Astro Pi Mission Zero Young people don’t need to wait to become astronauts
Try something new and have a go at the Code Club, CoderDojo, and Raspberry Pi projects available for this year’s Hour of Code.
temperature onboard the International Space Station, and leaves a message for the astronauts
Astro Pi Mission Zero offers young people the chance to write code that will run in space. This free beginners‘ mission opens today.
take a reading from an Astro Pi sensor and display a colourful image for the ISS astronauts
We’ve joined the partner network of edX to bring our high-quality online training to many more educators worldwide and enable them to teach learners about computing.
display at the Science Museum Previous Post Young people designed 15000 images for astronauts
In this round of Astro Pi, over 26,400 young people took part across its two missions — Mission Space Lab and Mission Zero.
Every team whose program ran on the ISS — with their pixel art showing for the astronauts
Astro Pi Mission Space Lab has a brand-new format and we’ve new resources to support teams and mentors, and a special tool to help teams test their programs.
A scientific task For this year’s mission, ESA astronauts have given teams a specific
On Saturday, the half of Cambridgeshire that wasn’t busy footling about in the sun descended on Cambridge Consultants’ offices, kindly lent to the Raspberry Jam folks for the afternoon, for a few hours’ Pi-wrangling. If you’d been there you’d have met a hearty slice of the Pi’s development team: JamesH (and his brother, which surprised…
effect is there, but it doesn’t seem to be particularly significant except for astronauts
Gather your team, stock up on freeze-dried ice cream, and let’s do it again: the European Astro Pi Challenge 2019/2020 launches today!
program to display a message and temperature reading on an Astro Pi computer, for the astronauts
Taking part in the European Astro Pi Challenge builds young people’s confidence and motivates them to try further digital making activities.
to a worldwide group of learners, but also explorers, future scientists, future astronauts
At the Raspberry Pi Foundation we believe ensuring every child knows how to code will equip them with the skills to thrive in the future.
Mission Zero, suitable for beginners, where they code a personalised image for the astronauts