In an effort to
cast the bankrupt city in a new light for the nation's future tech
talent, University of Michigan students are holding their record-setting
collegiate hackathon in Detroit this weekend.
More than 1,200 students from 70 universities and high schools across
the nation are expected to attend the race to make the coolest new
device or application in just 36 hours.
MHacks III, hosted by student groups MPowered Entrepreneurship and
Michigan Hackers, will be at The Qube in downtown Detroit. It begins at 7
p.m. Friday, Jan. 17 and ends noon Sunday, Jan. 19, followed by an
awards ceremony.
The last MHacks, which took place at the Michigan Stadium in
September, set a record for the largest such event, with 1,214 students
attending. The students believed that moving the event to Detroit would
catapult the momentum building in the city's technology sector, said
Lucy Zhao, chief development officer at MPowered and a junior studying
English and business.
"A lot of people in Detroit and Michigan know about the startup scene
in the area, but people across the country don't," Zhao said. "Our goal
is to bring talented computer science students to Detroit and expose
them to the fact that it's becoming an entrepreneurial hub."
Students will coalesce into teams of up four to create, or "hack,"
new technological prototypes from scratch. The only rule is they cannot
begin hacking until the start of the event. They are allowed to arrive
with ideas, though.
Though most of the participants will spend their time developing
applications, mentors from sponsors will host tech talks and workshops.
For instance, Bloomberg Inc. will host a talk on the importance of open
source development and Apple Inc. will be discussing its iOS mobile
platform. Some of the talks are designed to help students understand
what they can do with the company's platforms.
The student-led team behind the hackathon has already done some
hacking of its own. The members created an app for attendees to use
during the event. The app will provide a newsfeed of updates from
participants, a map of where to find mentors and sponsors and a schedule
of events. Attendees can even use it to ask for more pizza and energy
drinks to stay focused on their hacking.
Up to $20,000 in cash prizes will be doled out at the end of the
hackathon. The first place winner will receive a $5,000 grand prize and
other hackers can receive branded awards from sponsors looking for
specific computer applications.
"We couldn't have picked a better time to show off the city of
Detroit with everyone in town for the (North American International)
Auto Show," Zhao said. "The city will be lit up with excitement. We
can't wait for it to be here."
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