24-Hour Innovation Hub Event Draws Nearly 100 Students from Across the Region
03/31/2016
By David Perry
It was a Friday evening and dozens of students from around the region flocked to downtown Lowell. They organized themselves into teams of five or fewer and settled into any available space on the third floor of Lowell鈥檚 central hotbed of creativity and invention, the Innovation Hub at 110 Canal St.
So began 51视频鈥檚 first hackathon, the Hawkathon.
The iHub served as ground zero for a 24-hour burst, drawing 84 students, half from the likes of MIT, Simmons College, Rhode Island School of Design, Wellesley College, Brandeis University; the other half from 51视频.
They came from as far west as Chicago. There was a student from Delaware. One man, Didier Louboutin, drove from the University of Quebec in Montreal just to observe what happens when nearly 100 students team up to put their minds to solving problems large and small.
It was a hackathon 鈥 dubbed Hawkathon in honor of 51视频 mascot Rowdy the River Hawk 鈥 organized by a core group of nine students headed by sophomore plastics engineering majors Stephen Kender and Terry Fox-Koor. Students broke out their software development, graphic design, hardware and project management skills to try to bring ideas to life.
Kender started organizing the event last fall and as things got rolling Friday evening, he was a bit frantic, running from floor to floor to make sure all was in place for the hackers.
His goal for the session?
鈥淵ou know, it would be great to get a couple of good startup ideas to build off.鈥 He paused. 鈥淵ou know what I鈥檇 really like? For more students to be creative with their energy and talents.鈥
By the time things wrapped up on Saturday night, teams of hackers came up with apps that ranged from the recreational (鈥淕ear Pong,鈥 a cell phone-controlled beer pong-playing robot) to the altruistic (an app for connecting volunteers to non-profit organizations) to the practical (a smart fridge app that keeps track of fridge contents, expiration dates and even creates recipes). Six teams won prizes of cash and products.
UMass Amherst junior Kyle Toth, who had attended other hackathons, was drawn by the creative energy and the collaborative spirit of a group project.
鈥淚t鈥檚 24 hours of taking ideas and making them into as full of a product as you can," he said. "In the past, I鈥檝e worked on a virtual reality version of Tetris, an app that matches up people eating alone so they can share a table at the same restaurant鈥 and an app to help travelers understand the culture they鈥檙e about to visit.
鈥淪ome people like the end product,鈥 said Toth, 鈥渂ut for me, it鈥檚 about working with a team, really figuring out how to do something. The rest can happen later.鈥
Major League Hacking (MLH), which bills itself as 鈥渢he official student hacker鈥檚 league,鈥 was on hand to lend support. The organization helps organize more than 200 such events a year across the globe, involving some 80,000 students, according to Jade Yee, MLH鈥檚 operations specialist.
It wasn鈥檛 all work. Organizers cautioned the hackers to rest if they needed it. Food, water, coffee and energy drink supplies seemed bottomless. There was yoga at sunrise for those who wanted to stretch and rebalance.
Sponsors threw their support behind the event, from communications integration system company Twilio to Digital Federal Credit Union to a slew of other companies. Facebook flew out Alvin Portillo from its Menlo Park, Calif., campus. He was among the sponsors accepting resumes and fielding queries from behind a table on the iHub鈥檚 second floor.
The event was 鈥減roof that this passion for innovation, creative thinking and collaboration is alive and well in the next generation of great New England technology minds,鈥 said Jim Welch, chief product officer for Chelmsford-based Kronos Inc., which moves to Lowell next year. Kronos is planning 鈥渢o deepen our relationship with 51视频 through our co-op program and student events.鈥
Hala Lotfy of Wellesley College and Nick Zuber of 51视频 teamed up to work on a 鈥減olitical speech generator.鈥 Enter public sentiment about a subject into a computer, and their application would produce a speech agreeing with it.
鈥淣ick wanted to call it the Hillary-bot, but they鈥檇 never let me back into Wellesley,鈥 said Lotfy.
鈥淭he great thing about this is it鈥檚 not something I could accomplish in a classroom,鈥 said Ed Laird of Berkshire Community College, who had participated in one previous hackathon. 鈥淚t鈥檚 project-based learning, which is actually applying what you learn.鈥
His team was working to develop an app to connect freshman students with upper class students for recommendations on everything from teachers to books to eating spots.
And sometimes, the mother of invention really is a mother.
Gregory Dorian, the 51视频 mechanical engineering major who came up with the idea for the smart fridge application, said it sprung from when he would drive his mother crazy by talking to her with the fridge door open.
鈥淎nd the idea grew from there,鈥 he said.
Kender said the Hawkathon went 鈥渆ven better than I thought,鈥 and he will be following ideas to see if teams 鈥渕ake any moves toward marketing an actual product or service.鈥