Uncategorised – Logged On Foundation https://loggedonfoundation.org Helping Communities in Nepal Sun, 15 Jan 2017 01:24:48 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://loggedonfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/cropped-Logo-Bottom-1-32x32.png Uncategorised – Logged On Foundation https://loggedonfoundation.org 32 32 Earth-Q Premiere Screening https://loggedonfoundation.org/earthq-premiere/ Sat, 04 Jun 2016 02:02:44 +0000 http://54.206.107.202/?p=4341 [...]]]> Our premiere screening of Earth-Q the documentary was held at Kaleide Theatre, RMIT University, in Melbourne City on the 4 June 2016.

The film is a heart-wrenching story about the journey taken by Logged On to help seven schools destroyed by the 2015 Nepal earthquake and the struggles communities now face to provide a quality education for their children.

The event was hosted by A/Prof Christopher Ziguras, RMIT University’s Deputy Dean of International.

Photos of the event are available on the Nepali Times Melbourne Facebook Page.

We would like to thank the Gareth Voigt Trio who entertained our guests with jazz music and Downunder Curry for providing the catering. Special thanks to our hosts RMIT University for providing the venue and publicity.

For more information about our commissioned documentary and screening locations, visit our dedicated website or our project description page.
 
 
RMIT University
 
 
Photo courtesy of Niru Tripathi
 
 

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Perth Fundraising Dinner 16 May 2015 https://loggedonfoundation.org/pfd15/ Mon, 27 Apr 2015 22:30:53 +0000 http://54.206.107.202/?p=3217 Join us for a Fundraising Dinner Party in Perth to help support a project to build a new school and to contribute to disaster relief efforts following the earthquake in Nepal.

<GO TO THE EVENT WEBSITE>

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Melbourne Fundraiser 8 May 2015 https://loggedonfoundation.org/umf15/ Sun, 26 Apr 2015 16:09:27 +0000 http://54.206.107.202/?p=3153 Join us for a Fundraising Dinner in Melbourne to help support a project to build a new school and to contribute to disaster relief efforts following the earthquake in Nepal. The highlight of the evening will be a live performance by the Gareth Voigt Quartet.

<GO TO THE EVENT WEBSITE>

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The story of a remarkable young man named Radi Khan https://loggedonfoundation.org/radi15/ Mon, 16 Mar 2015 15:30:27 +0000 http://54.206.107.202/?p=3054 [...]]]> Radi Khan is a highly innovative young man who was born in a rural Himalayan village in Nepal near the city of Pokhara. Since childhood, Radi has had a passion for scientific inventions and he would spend many hours making things rather than studying or playing the games that other children normally played.

Radi is from a poor village background and due to family financial problems he went to study Education so he could enter the teaching profession. However, he never completed his study because he was more interested in creating his inventions.

Since childhood, Radi has invented many machines that have been helpful and popular with households in the village, such as rat traps, electric dining tables, flying wooden butterflies and robots. He is also highly adept in woodcraft and painting, which adds to the appeal of his inventions and enables him to use his skills in making a small amount of money.

One of the reasons that Radi’s inventions are so popular in his village is because they are of high quality and also visually appealing. Radi’s inventions are purely home-made and most of the material he sources is scrap from the local area.

Radi has excelled at making robots, and has even made an ultralight plane out of scrap materials. Named ‘Machhapuchhre’, after one of the most stunning mountains in the Annapurna region of the Himalayas, Radi was inspired to build the ultralight after he saw similar planes soaring overhead that tour the Annapurna mountain region. Run by a motorbike engine, Radi’s ultralight consists of materials such as iron, aluminum, steel, wood and cloth that he was able to collect locally. Unfortunately, the ultralight was damaged on its maiden voyage when it came into land and crashed on a bumpy runway – there were no injuries!

 
Radi Khan
 

Radi also has a robot named ‘Nepali Babu’, meaning ‘Nepalese Baby’. The amazing thing about Nepali Babu is that it can walk, run, pick up and throw goods without the use of integrated circuits and programming. It is done exclusively through the use of electro-mechanical controls. He also constructed a model excavator from basic material he found or that supporters gave to him. His inventions are highly popular at local festivals and robotic events.

 
Radi Khan
 

Although Radi’s robots and designs are small models, he is confident that he could complete full size robotic projects that would assist with many aspects of daily life in a Nepalese village. The excavator is just one example of a machine that would be useful in local agriculture. Radi has the drive, skill and ambition to do amazing things with robotics, however he is significantly disadvantaged by his economic situation.

It’s not often that you meet a person that you strongly believe will go onto do great things. We are so impressed by the vision and sheer drive Radi has to create mechanical inventions that we are wanting to help this young man realise his dream by investing in one of his projects.
 

Radi Khan
 

We are asking for a very small amount through our crowd funding campaign to allow Radi to turn his small scale prototypes into larger scale project. We believe that by supporting Radi, we are investing in a remarkably gifted young man who will go on to create products that not only help the people of his village, but create solutions that will benefit the people of Nepal.

 
Invest in Radi
 
 
Thanks to Sudip Aryal for bringing us this wonderful story!

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