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Featured article: August 16, 2009

Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver is a third-person action-adventure video game developed by Crystal Dynamics and published by Eidos. It was released for the PlayStation and Microsoft Windows in 1999 and for the Dreamcast in 2000. As the second game in the Legacy of Kain series, Soul Reaver is the sequel to Blood Omen: Legacy of Kain. Soul Reaver was followed by three games, one of which, Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver 2, is a direct sequel. Taking place 1500 years after the events of Blood Omen, Soul Reaver chronicles the journey of the vampire-turned-wraith Raziel, lieutenant to the vampire lord Kain. Raziel is killed by Kain, but is revived by The Elder God to become his "soul reaver" and to exact revenge. Raziel shares this title with Kain's sword, Soul Reaver, which he acquires during the game. Crystal Dynamics began development of the game in 1997, but a deteriorating relationship with Silicon Knights, who had developed Blood Omen, created legal problems. This and other delays forced material originally planned for Soul Reaver to be instead released with later games of the series. Soul Reaver was generally well received by critics and praised for its intriguing gothic story and high-quality graphics. However, the game was criticized for simple and repetitive gameplay and an unsatisfying climax. The game is included on Sony's "Greatest Hits" list. (more...)

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Featured picture: June 07, 2009

Crochet

Detail of a Portuguese crochet tablecloth, from about 1970. Crocheting, similar to knitting, consists of pulling loops of yarn through other loops. Crochet differs from knitting in that only one loop is active at one time (the sole exception being Tunisian crochet), and that a crochet hook is used instead of knitting needles.

Photo credit: Joaquim Alves Gaspar

Featured list: Timeline of first orbital launches by nationality

     Confirmed orbital launch      Unconfirmed (claimed) orbital launch      Future (planned) orbital launch

This is a timeline of first orbital launches by country.

Order Country[0] Satellite Rocket Location Date (UTC)
1  Soviet Union[1] Sputnik 1 Sputnik-PS Baikonur, Soviet Union (today Kazakhstan) 4 October 1957
2  United States Explorer 1 Juno I Cape Canaveral, Florida, United States 1 February 1958
3  France[2] Astérix Diamant A Hammaguir, Algeria 26 November 1965
4  Japan Ōsumi Lambda-4S Uchinoura, Japan 11 February 1970
5  China Dong Fang Hong I Long March 1 Jiuquan, China 24 April 1970
6  United Kingdom[3] Prospero X-3 Black Arrow Woomera, Australia 28 October 1971
7  India Rohini 1 SLV Sriharikota, India 18 July 1980
8  Israel Ofeq 1 Shavit Palmachim, Israel 19 September 1988
 Ukraine[4][5] Strela-3 (x6, Russian) Tsyklon-3 Plesetsk, Russia 28 September 1991
 Russia[4] Kosmos 2175 Soyuz-U Plesetsk, Russia 21 January 1992
9  Iran Omid Safir-2 Semnan, Iran 2 February 2009

Notes

0 Countries and successor states indicated in bold retain orbital launch capability.
1 The Soviet Union's successor state, Russia, took over the Soviet space program after the Soviet Union's dissolution.
2 France launched its first satellite by its own rocket from Algeria, which had been a French territory when the spaceport was built but had achieved independence before the satellite launch. Later France provided a spaceport for ESA space launchers in French Guyana.
3 The UK only self-launched a single satellite and that from a foreign (Australian) spaceport. Later it joined the ESA.
4 Russia and Ukraine inherited space launcher and satellite capability from the Soviet Union as successor states.
5 Ukraine provides its own space launcher to Russia rather than used its own space launcher to launch satellite (first time - Sich-1 in August 31, 1995).

Other launches and projects

The above list includes confirmed satellite launches by rockets produced by the launching country. Lists with differing criteria might include the following launches.

Unconfirmed launches

  •  Iraq developed and tested the Tammouz space launch vehicle without a payload or upper stages on 5 December 1989. According to a press release by the Iraqi News Agency, the warhead completed six orbits, but this was never confirmed.[citation needed][1]
  •  North Korea announced on 31 August 1998 that they successfully launched the Kwangmyŏngsŏng from Musudan-ri, but this was never confirmed. Another launch on 5 April 2009, with the Kwangmyŏngsŏng-2 satellite, was also reported to have reached orbit,[2]; however, US and South Korean officials stated that the launch failed to reach orbit.[3]

Failed launches

  •  South Korea first attempted the launch of its STSAT-2 satellite to be delivered by the Russo-South Korean Naro (KSLV-1) launch vehicle from their own Naro spaceport on 25 August 2009. One of the payload fairings did not separate causing STSAT-2 to not reach earth orbit. The Second lauch also failed within 137 seconds when it lost contact with ground control on June 10,2010[4]


Launches of non-domestic launch vehicles


Abandoned projects

  •  South Africa developed the space launcher RSA-3 in the 1980s. This rocket was tested 3 times without a satellite payload in 1989 and 1990. The program was postponed and cancelled in 1994.
  •  Germany had a preliminary development of numerous rocket space launchers and re-usable launch systems (Sänger II, etc.) after WWII. These were never realized as national or European projects. Also, in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the private German company OTRAG tried to develop low-cost commercial space launchers. Only sub-orbital tests of the first prototypes of these rockets were carried out.
  •  Canada had developed the gun-based space launchers Martlet and GLO as the joint Canadian-American Project HARP in the 1960s. These rockets were never tested.
  •  Spain developed the space launcher Capricorno (Capricorn) in the 1990s. This rocket was never tested.
  •  Australia,  Argentina,  Egypt and  Romania tried to develop space launchers at various times.

Future projects

  •  Brazil announced that it plans to launch its VLS-1 rocket from the Alcântara Launch Center in 2011.[5][6]
  •  Romanian private company, ARCA, is developing a number of orbital launch systems (Haas, Stabilo, Orizont) that are expected to be launched from Black Sea military bases.[7]
  •  Indonesia intends to develop its space launcher RPS-420 (Pengorbitan) by 2012-2014.
  •  Ukraine is a manufacturer of space launchers Tsyklon (Cyclone), Zenit, Dnipro (Dnepr), Mayak. It already counts as a space power, performing a launches of own rockets using a Kazakh, Russian and Sea Launch spaceport facility. Ukraine has no indigenous vehicle-launch facility, but currently plans of a domestic launch facility by its conventional launchers and the launch system with airplane-base start (Svityaz) both indigenously and under cooperation with Brazil and other countries from spaceports outside the territory of Ukraine.
  •  Australia is now developing its space launcher Ausroc.
  •  Kazakhstan has plans to develop own airplane-based Ishym space launch system in cooperation with Russia (another project of ground Bayterek system from Baikonur spaceport will use the Russian launchers).
  •  Pakistan has developed two varieties of military ballistic rockets (Ghauri and Shaheen) in recent years that will form the basis for conversion into its own space launcher[8].
  •  Taiwan has been developing its own spacecraft for several years.
  •  Malaysia announced in 2006 that there is an intention to develop a domestic space launcher in the near future.
  •  Turkey announced in 2007 that there is an intention to develop the domestic space launcher in the far future.
  •  New Zealand has a commercial company developing a space launcher[9][10][11][12]

Satellite operators

Many other countries have launched their own satellites on one of the foreign launchers listed above.

See also

References

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