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Hackathons A new way to solve issues

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Hackathon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Yahoo! Internal Hack Day Event at Yahoo! HQ (Sunnyvale, CA, USA), June 6, 2006

A hackathon (also known as a hack day, hackfest or codefest) is an event in which computer programmers and others involved in software development, including graphic designers, interface designers and project managers, collaborate intensively on software projects.[1] Occasionally, there is a hardware component as well. Hackathons typically last between a day and a week. Some hackathons are intended simply for educational or social purposes, although in many cases the goal is to create usable software. Hackathons tend to have a specific focus, which can include the programming language used, the operating system, an application, an API, or the subject and the demographic group of the programmers. In other cases, there is no restriction on the type of software being created.




Origin and history

The word "hackathon" is a portmanteau of the words "hack" and "marathon", where "hack" is used in the sense of playful, exploratory programming, not its alternate meaning as a reference to computer crime. The term seems to have been created independently by both the developers of OpenBSD and the marketing team of Sun; these usages both first happened in 1999.

OpenBSD's apparent first use of the term referred to a cryptographic development event held in Calgary on June 4, 1999, where 10 developers came together to avoid legal problems caused by export regulations of cryptographic software from the United States.

For Sun, the usage referred to an event at the JavaOne conference from June 15 to June 19, 1999; there John Gage challenged attendees to write a program in Java for the new Palm V using the infrared port to communicate with other Palm users and register it on the Internet. The event was dubbed "the Hackathon".
Wikimania 2011 Hackathon

Starting in the mid to late 2000s, hackathons became significantly more widespread, and began to be increasingly viewed by companies and venture capitalists as a way to quickly develop new software technologies, and to locate new areas for innovation and funding.[1] Some major companies were born from these hackathons, such as GroupMe, which began as a project at a hackathon at the TechCrunch Disrupt 2010 conference; in 2011 it was acquired by Skype for $85 million.[1] The software PhoneGap began as a project at the iPhoneDevCamp (later renamed iOSDevCamp) in 2008;[2] the company whose engineers developed PhoneGap, Nitobi, refocused itself around PhoneGap, and Nitobi was bought by Adobe in 2011 for an undisclosed amount.[3]

The term "hackathon" has also been used as a term for more general "focused innovation efforts" that includes non-coders and community members, such as in the Palo Alto civic hackathon event Hack Palo Alto.[4]
Structure

Hackathons typically start with one or more presentations about the event, as well as about the specific subject, if any. Then participants suggest ideas and form teams, based on individual interests and skills. Then the main work of the hackathon begins, which can last anywhere from several hours to several days. For hackathons that last 24 hours or longer, especially competitive ones, eating is often informal, with participants often subsisting on food like pizza and energy drinks. Sometimes sleeping is informal as well, with participants sleeping on-site with sleeping bags.[1]

At the end of hackathons, there is usually a series of demonstrations in which each group presents their results. There is sometimes a contest element as well, in which a panel of judges select the winning teams, and prizes are given. At many hackathons, the judges are made up of organizers and sponsors. At BarCamp-style hackathons, that are organized by the development community, such as iOSDevCamp, the judges are usually made up of peers and colleagues in the field. Such prizes are sometimes a substantial amount of money: a social gaming hackathon at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference offered $250,000 in funding to the winners,[1] while a controversial[5] 2013 hackathon run by Salesforce.com had a payout of $1 million to the winners, billed as the largest-ever prize yet.[6]
Types of hackathons
For an application type

Some hackathons focus on a particular platform such as mobile apps, a desktop operating system, web development or video game development.

Mobile app hackathons like Over the Air, held at Bletchley Park, England, can see a large amount of corporate sponsorship and interest.[7][8]

Music Hack Day, a hackathon for music-related software and hardware applications, is a popular event, having been held over 30 times around the world since 2009.[9]

Hackathons have been held to develop applications that run on various mobile device operating systems, such as Android,[10] iOS[11] and MeeGo.[12]

Hackathons have also been held to develop video-based applications and computer games.[13] Hackathons where video games are developed are sometimes called game jams.

"TV Hackfest" events have been held in both London[14] and San Francisco,[15] focusing mainly on social television and second screen technologies. In TV Hackfests, challenge briefs are typically submitted by content producers and brands, in the form of broadcast industry metadata or video content, while sponsors supply APIs, SDKs and pre-existing open source software code.[16]

Hackathons have also been used in the life sciences to advance the informatics infrastructure that supports research. The Open Bioinformatics Foundation ran two hackathons for its member projects in 2002 and 2003, and since 2010 has held 2-day "codefests" preceding its annual conference.[17] The National Evolutionary Synthesis Center has co-organized and sponsored hackathons for evolutionary bioinformatics since 2006.[18][19] BioHackathon[20] is an annual event that started in 2008 targeted at advancing standards to enable interoperable bioinformatics tools and Web services. Neuroscientists have also used hackathons to bring developers and scientists together to address issues that range from focusing on a specific information system (e.g., Neurosynth Hackathon[21] and the Allen Brain Atlas Hackathon[22]) and providing reserved time for broad scientific inquiry (e.g., Brainhack),[23] to using specific challenges that focus hacking activity (e.g., HBM Hackathon).[24]
For a specific programming language, API, or framework

There have been hackathons devoted to creating applications that use a specific language or framework, like HTML5[25] and Ruby on Rails.[26]

Some hackathons focus on applications that make use of the application programming interface, or API, from a single company or data source. Open Hack, an event run publicly by Yahoo! since 2006 (originally known as "Hack Day", then "Open Hack Day"), has focused on usage of the Yahoo! API, in addition to APIs of websites owned by Yahoo!, like Flickr.[27] The company's Open Hack India event in 2012 had over 700 attendees.[28] Google has run similar events for their APIs,[29] as has the travel guide company Lonely Planet.[30]

The website Foursquare notably held a large, global hackathon in 2011, in which over 500 developers at over 30 sites around the world competed to create applications using the Foursquare API.[31] A second Foursquare hackathon, in 2013, had around 200 developers.[32]
For a cause or purpose
Developers at the 2011 Rewired State "National Hack the Government Day"

There have been a number of hackathons devoted to improving government, and specifically to the cause of open government.[33] One such event, in 2011, was hosted by the United States Congress.[34]

Various hackathons have been held to improve city transit systems.[35] There have also been a number of hackathons devoted to improving education, including Education Hack Day[36] and on a smaller scale, looking specifically at the challenges of field work based geography education, the Field Studies Council[37] hosted FSCHackday.[38] Random Hacks of Kindness is another popular hackathon, devoted to disaster management and crisis response.[39]
As a tribute or a memorial

A number of hackathons around the world have been planned in memory of computer programmer and internet activist Aaron Swartz, who died in 2013.
For a demographic group

Some hackathons are intended only for programmers within a certain demographic group, like teenagers, college students,[1] or women.[44]

Several hackathons are organized by collegiate computer-related student groups, such as HackTX at The University of Texas at Austin, StudentHack at Manchester Metropolitan University, PennApps at The University of Pennsylvania, MHacks at The University of Michigan, Y-Hack at Yale University, and HackMIT at The Massachusetts Institute of Technology. These hackathons are often competitive, with awards provided by the University or programming-related sponsors. They are usually open to college students at all universities.[45][46]
Internal company hackathons

Some companies, such as Facebook and Google, hold internal hackathons to promote new product innovation by the engineering staff. For example, Facebook's Like button was conceived as part of a hackathon.
Developing a single application


In some hackathons, all work is based around improving a single application, such as an operating system, programming language, or content management system. Such events are often known as "sprints" or "code sprints", and they are especially popular for open source software projects, where sprints or hackathons are sometimes the only opportunity for developers to meet face-to-face. Unlike other hackathons, these events rarely include a competitive element.

The annual hackathon to work on the operating system OpenBSD, held since 1999, is one such event; it was a pioneering hackathon that may have originated the word "hackathon".

Programming languages that have had such hackathons include Perl,[47] Haskell,[48] Scala[49] and the PyPy interpreter for Python.

Drupal[50] and MediaWiki[51] are other applications that hold development hackathons.


Some hackathons have no restrictions on content or attendees, and are simply a contest to generate interesting software applications quickly. SAPO Codebits, sponsored by the Portuguese internet service provider SAPO, is one example
.



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