Joe Chavez is the local organizer for the NASA Space Apps Challenge, a two-day technology development event in which people around the world try to solve current problems. His background is in computer science, and he currently runs a mobile software development company and started up Mambo Health, a crowdfunding campaign. The Space Apps Challenge will take place on April 12 and 13 in the DeLaMare Science and Engineering Library. The event will kickoff on April 9 at 5:30 p.m. at the Reno Collective.

So whatโ€™s the Space Apps Challenge all about?

Reno is one city out of 93 around the world who are participating in an international hackathon put on by NASA. Itโ€™ll be a 48-hour period, and Reno will start at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday and end at 6 p.m. on Sunday. Itโ€™s a hackathon-style event, and NASA has published 50 challenges that they would like the participants to work on, to select from.

Thatโ€™s a lot of different challenges, but what does it all boil down to? Whatโ€™s the goal?

NASAโ€™s goal is to figure out if there are interesting solutions to problems that they have that they havenโ€™t found yet. So they kinda categorize the challenges into five categories: human space flight, space technology, earth-based things, robotics, and some โ€ฆ not science, but farming and other types of things. The idea there is that I could work on a challenge with somebody from another city, or we can find a team here and work on challenges as a team.

For app-based solutions?

Yes, thereโ€™s a lot of words like app in there. Thereโ€™s a lot of website stuff. Some of itโ€™s data. Some of itโ€™s actually making design hardware. Just tech-based.

How are you involved?

I used to work for NASA back in the last decade basically, and I heard about this through a friend. So I applied last year as the city of Reno, so we participated in the event last year, same time-frame. So this year came back around, and I said, letโ€™s do it again.

Why is this important?

I think itโ€™s important because, in terms of getting people interested in science and technology, I think this is a good way to do it because it kind of brings this big agencyโ€”NASAโ€”out into the public. We also encourage students of high school age or older to participate, so thereโ€™s interest there. Weโ€™re doing a collaborative event with the university this year, so itโ€™ll be in their science library. So I think it also brings a certain amount of visibility to Reno as a place to do business for technology and other things. Reno and Seattle are the only cities on the west coast doing this, so it kind of gives us a little status.

Cool. Talking about last year, what came out of it from Reno?

Last year it was a pretty small event. There were several reasons for that. It mostly had to do with marketing starting late because the government did a mini shutdown, sequester thing, and they werenโ€™t sure if they were actually going to have the event until about 10 days before it happened. So it was a smaller scale thing. We had 17 people go in, and out of the 17, nine of us [collaborated] on a remote control system for an underwater rover basically. So we participated with a team from Australia, San Francisco, UC Berkeley and New York and came up with a proposed solution to that problem.

Are you planning on working on a challenge this year?

You know, Iโ€™d love to, but I think weโ€™re going to be a lot bigger this year and Iโ€™ll probably be doing more organizational things. โ€ฆ Weโ€™re also partnering with Microsoft this year and theyโ€™re going to handle a lot of the logistical side, so that might give me some free time. But I have a feeling that itโ€™s not going to turn out that way.

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