Kuma hé is the eighth studio album by the Belgian girlgroup K3. The album was released on 3 October 2005 through label Studio 100. Two singles were released from the album: "Kuma hé" and "Borst vooruit". Kuma hé reached the peak position in both the Flemish and Dutch album charts. In 2009, a reissue of the album was released, which contains the original songs as well as karaoke versions.
"Kuma Hé" is the first single to be released from Flemish/Dutch girl group K3's seventh studio album Kuma Hé. It was written by Miquel Wiels, A. Putte, P. Gillis, and produced by Studio 100. The song premiered in July 2005, it premiered on the kids TV channel Ketnet. The song became a huge summer hit in the Netherlands and Belgium. The song reached nr. 1 in the Netherlands and in Belgium nr. 2.
The video shows the girls dance in very colorfull outfits in a kind of Africa vibe.
Kuma or KUMA may refer to:
The Kuma (Russian: Кума́) is an 802-kilometre (498 mi) long river on the Black Sea-Caspian Steppe of southern Russia. It flows northeast into the Caspian Sea. Its drainage basin covers 33,500 square kilometres (12,900 sq mi). Its source is in the Greater Caucasus, in the republic Karachay-Cherkessia, west of Kislovodsk. It flows in northeastern direction, through Stavropol Krai (towns Mineralnye Vody, Zelenokumsk, Budyonnovsk, Neftekumsk) and further east through the Caspian Depression as the natural border between Kalmykia and Dagestan. That part of the Kuma's valley forms the eastern part of the Kuma–Manych Depression, separating the East European Plain from the Caucasus region. The Kuma flows into the Kizlyar Gulf of the Caspian Sea near the border between Dagestan and Kalmykia.
Most of the rivers that flow north from the Caucasus Mountains are caught by the Kuban River and Terek River. It rises between the basins of those two rivers so the Kuma is mainly a steppe river. It is much used for irrigation.
Kuma is the Django-based platform that powers Mozilla Developer Network hosted on GitHub. It is open source software licensed under Mozilla Public License 2.0. Main function of the platform is to gather people around MDN, who can contribute to all the documentation stored and maintained as part of the project, including JavaScript API available in modern web browsers. It has advanced translation tools available as well.
Current design assumes installation on Vagrant controlled virtual machines (configuration includes Ansible).