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On March 10, 2021, a live event for PAX Australia was announced and was originally going to be held at the Melbourne Convention & Exhibition Centre in Melbourne, Australia from October 8–10, [108] but was eventually cancelled on August 10, 2021, and ran as an online event instead, held on the same dates under the name PAX Aus Online.
[a] [2] The convention was inaugurated in 2016 and held in Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre as a two-day event from the 3–4 September 2016 in Melbourne. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The convention was later expanded to Perth and Brisbane in 2017 after a successful inaugural event, with each event held a few months apart, [ 5 ] and to Sydney in 2019.
In 2020 Saunders assembled an international team of sceptics to help him complete a project he had been working on since at least 2018, dubbed the "Great Australian Psychic Prediction Project". As of 2021, the project found psychic predictions to have an 11% success rate, out of 3224 predictions, with approximately 650 yet to be evaluated.
PAX (originally known as Penny Arcade Expo) is a series of gaming culture festivals involving tabletop, arcade, and video gaming. PAX is held annually in Seattle , Boston , Philadelphia , and Melbourne .
Supanova is an Australian-made, independent event not affiliated with foreign exposition producers. It is managed by a team of permanent staff, and was founded by Daniel Zachariou, who also served as Event Director until 2021. [2]
Arcanacon – Melbourne in January; Australian XR Festival – Various cities across Australia - December; AVCon – Adelaide typically in July at various locations; Melbourne International Games Week – Melbourne, October–November, various locations; PAX (event) – Melbourne in November; Supanova Pop Culture Expo – various dates and ...
Melbourne decided to start their exhibition shortly after the one in Sydney, so the participants could transport their exhibits during the winter of 1880. [2] The Works at the Melbourne International Exhibition. 1878. In May 1878, the designs of Joseph Reed and Frederick Barnes were chosen for the Main Building of the Exhibition.
The first issue of The Skeptic came out of Melbourne in January 1981, edited by Mark Plummer and produced by James Gerrand. [215] The first issue was a black and white broadsheet tabloid. [ 5 ] For many years the logo was the same logo as the American publication the Skeptical Inquirer only photocopied with the end chopped off.