homehome Home chatchat Notifications


NASA and IBM prepare global hackathon

What happens when NASA and IBM sponsor a hackathon and offer their infrastructure to 10,000 researchers, coders, entrepreneurs end educators? Well, I'm not really sure... but it's definitely gonna be something awesome.

Henry Conrad
April 7, 2015 @ 2:14 pm

share Share

What happens when NASA and IBM sponsor a hackathon and offer their infrastructure to 10,000 researchers, coders, entrepreneurs end educators? Well, I’m not really sure… but it’s definitely gonna be something awesome.

In case you’re not familiar with the concept, a hackathon is an event in which computer programmers and people involved in software development join team up with people working in a specific area to develop solutions to existing problems – usually an application, a piece of software or a website. This particular hackathon will bring together ten thousand people working together on 35 challenges across outer space, Earth, humans or robotics. The ambitious event, called The Space App Challenge, is taking place this weekend simultaneously in 162 countries involving 136 cities, focusing on challenges such as ‘Print your own space food’, ‘Robots’ or ‘Clean water mapping’.

Initially, the event was sponsored by NASA, but this year, IBM is also chipping in offering challenge participants free access to Bluemix, as well as Watson Analytics and the Internet of Things, in order to create, develop and implement apps more quickly.

But either way, the partnership between NASA, IBM and ten thousand bright minds promises to deliver spectacular results.

“The NASA International Space Apps Challenge is at the forefront of innovation, providing real-world examples of how technology can be used to by the best and brightest developers in the world to solve some of the most daunting challenges facing our civilization,” said Sandy Carter, GM of IBM’s Cloud Ecosystem and Developers.

IBM will also provide $120,000 in prizes for the best and most creative apps. But while IBM’s support is laudable, they’re not entirely doing charity work – they also hope to raise interest on their services. This comes in addition to the prizes that NASA is already is offering. Organizers hope that participants will be able to find creative solutions to some of NASA’s more pressing issues, while also creating a solid relationship between developers and the two organizations.

You too can sign up (hurry though!) for the hackathon on this website.

 

share Share

Being Left-Handed Might Not Make You More Creative After All

It's less about how you use your hands than how you use your brain.

Interstellar comet: Everything We Know About 3I/ATLAS

The visitor is simply passing through our solar system.

People Across Cultures Agree This Body Fat Percentage Is the Most Attractive in Men

Across cultures and genders the male body fat level we consider ideal is less extreme than you think.

Japan’s Wooden Satellite Survived Orbit for 116 Days. Now Scientists Want a Better Version

With lessons learned from their first attempt, Kyoto University scientists hope a second CubeSat made of magnolia will spark an age of wooden spacecraft.

The US Military Emits More CO2 Than Sweden. But A Slight Budget Cut Could Have an Oversized Positive Effect

New study finds reducing defense budgets has a larger impact than increasing them.

This Ancient Grain Could Power the Future of 3D-Printed Food

Sorghum bioink could be the next step towards printed food.

This study suggests zapping people's brains could make them better at math

You're not bad at math. You've just not been zapped enough.

Tennis May Add Nearly 10 Years to Your Life and Most People Are Ignoring It

Could a weekly match on the court be the secret to a longer, healthier life?

Humans Have Been Reshaping Earth with Fire for at Least 50,000 Years

Fossil charcoal reveals early humans’ growing impact on the carbon cycle before the Ice Age.

The Strangest Microbe Ever Found Straddles The Line Between Life and Non-Life

A newly discovered archaeon blurs the boundary between cells and viruses.