Saturday, July 25, 2020

HackMIT Coding over Cookies

HackMIT Coding over Cookies One week ago, an eclectic group of ambitious young men and women flocked to HackMIT to crowd themselves into a gym for 30 hours and makesomething. The hacking arena. The ingredients: ideas, sleeplessness, Red Bull, and a steady flow of snacks that ranged from burritos to late-night insomnia cookies to breakfast bagels with half-and-half milk. Toss in a hallway lined with air mattresses for catnappers, and throw in a bunch of toys: Oculus Rifts, Pebble watches, Google Glasses, Arduinos, breadboardsall sandboxes for building castles. Put them all together, slap on a deadline, and youve got yourself a hackathon. Insomnia Cookies: honestly some of the best cookies Ive ever had. Rocking the Oculus Rift. Hacking, as defined by Wikipedia: the act of engaging in activities (such as programming or other media) in a spirit of playfulness and exploration. Dont confuse it with chopping down trees, or serious coughing, or the illegal entry of computer systems. Hacking is no less than the building of the future. For one team, that future was one with a smart refrigerator mounted with an internal webcam that would detect, identify, and tag with an expiration date any food placed inside it. Another team was hard at work making a Grand Theft Auto-inspired game set in, well, any setting on Earth the player wanted, as long as it was on Google Maps. Yet another team was going to reinvent the breathalyzer. Are you going to need testers for that? joked another hacker on break from coding his Chrome extension that would allow users to copy-paste text directly from in-browser image files. That hacker, Kevin K. 17, ended up winning second place (and $2000) in the hackathon, beat out only by a hack that lets users draw on a 3-D digital whiteboard by moving a flashlight in front of a webcam. The second-place-winning project of HackMIT 2013, in the making. Iam not a hacker (yet). I went into the hackathon with a mild curiosity for this new phenomenon, armed with Rastaban (my camera) because the HackMIT organizers gave lucky me the opportunity to help photograph the event. I wandered out of the hackathon slightly dazed, very tired, and incredibly motivated to build the skills to become a hacker by next years HackMIT. New goal for myself: finish the current  Codecademy curriculum (and become fluent enough in those languages to build my own castles) by the end of summer 2014. More sights from the hackathon below. Enjoy! Yours, Allan Plexiglass windows function fairly well as whiteboards. Or should I say, clearboards? Even hackers need backrubs sometimes. Cookie distribution. Hacking under the HackMIT logo. HackMIT in a nutshell.

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