Update: After a frenzied weekend, the team of SungHo Hong, Kaiwen Zheng, Yilong Chen, Yaohan Ding and Jiacho Chen took home the EmergenTech: Hack ASU competition's first prize, thanks to their submission, Project Giraffe. Project Giraffe allows users to create a remote-control car that is capable of changing the way people tour houses.
The second- and third-place finishers created a companion for elderly people and a way to find empty parking spots on campus, respectively. Click the links to read more about Wilson Monitoring and FindParking.
See scenes from the weekend hackathon below, and read the full preview story below the gallery.
Judges Ken Mulligan (left) and Eric Lopez fill out their score sheets after listening to the MedNet team's pitch. Mulligan is an ASU professor of tech entrepreneurship, and Lopez works as a developer at Tuft & Needle. The winning team received $1,000 and a new mattress from Tuft & Needle for each team member.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Each team receives eight minutes to explain their project and demonstrate their technology for judges in the Sunday-morning round. After the explanation, the teams have roughly six minutes to answer judges' questions.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Junior Jacob Temple demonstrates his team's model of a DTH11, which measures temperature and humidity in a house. Their project, IntelliVent, aims to save homeowners and businesses money and increase comfort by allowing more flexibility in their ventilation systems.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
The IntelliVent team listens to a question from judge Ken Mulligan about the marketability of their product.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Junior Rachel Wynia (left) and freshman Vina Son, both computer information systems majors, discuss their team's project about sustainability in agriculture. Their team was one of the ones that spent the night at the hackathon at College Avenue Commons in Tempe and slept on these stairs on Friday night.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
A hackathon team working on creating "ProfessorAlexa" discusses the type of school they plan to market their service to. ProfessorAlexa is a service that runs on Amazon's Alexa program and allows students to talk to Alexa while working on homework.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Alex Arena, a junior double-majoring in political science and computer science, guards the snacks in the staff room on the second day of the EmergenTech Hackathon. Arena works in the ASU Luminosity Lab as software developer and gave a talk to hackathon participants about building APIs on Saturday morning.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Alan Salazar, a junior criminal justice major, grabs a Red Bull from the communal fridge on the fourth floor of the College Avenue Commons building in Tempe. Hackathon participants had access to free Red Bull throughout the weekend.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Junior Abhik Chowdhury, an Internet of Things specialist who works in ASU's Luminosity Lab, runs the EmergenTech Hackathon's hardware checkout room. He was also part of the mentor-matching program, which allowed hackathon participants to have their questions answered live throughout the weekend.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Teams work in one of several hacking rooms on the fourth floor of the College Avenue Commons.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Michael Pechacek, a sophomore computer science major, works on an Android user interface for an app his team is developing.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Elyse Zhang, a Chinese graduate student studying business analytics, talks to team member Varun Sankuri. Their team was trying to create an equation that describes the features that an ideal hospital design would include.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Mark Naufel, ASU director of strategic projects, takes a nap on the second day of the 36-hour EmergenTech Hackathon.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Business analytics graduate students Win Son Tan (left) and Sahil Mohanani explain their team's project to judges Sunday morning. The judges chose the five best projects from this round to present their pitches to the entire group.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Judges Ken Mulligan (left) and Eric Lopez fill out their score sheets after listening to the MedNet team's pitch. Mulligan is an ASU professor of tech entrepreneurship, and Lopez works as a developer at Tuft & Needle. The winning team received $1,000 and a new mattress from Tuft & Needle for each team member.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Each team receives eight minutes to explain their project and demonstrate their technology for judges in the Sunday-morning round. After the explanation, the teams have roughly six minutes to answer judges' questions.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Junior Jacob Temple demonstrates his team's model of a DTH11, which measures temperature and humidity in a house. Their project, IntelliVent, aims to save homeowners and businesses money and increase comfort by allowing more flexibility in their ventilation systems.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
The IntelliVent team listens to a question from judge Ken Mulligan about the marketability of their product.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Junior Rachel Wynia (left) and freshman Vina Son, both computer information systems majors, discuss their team's project about sustainability in agriculture. Their team was one of the ones that spent the night at the hackathon at College Avenue Commons in Tempe and slept on these stairs on Friday night.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
A hackathon team working on creating "ProfessorAlexa" discusses the type of school they plan to market their service to. ProfessorAlexa is a service that runs on Amazon's Alexa program and allows students to talk to Alexa while working on homework.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Alex Arena, a junior double-majoring in political science and computer science, guards the snacks in the staff room on the second day of the EmergenTech Hackathon. Arena works in the ASU Luminosity Lab as software developer and gave a talk to hackathon participants about building APIs on Saturday morning.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Alan Salazar, a junior criminal justice major, grabs a Red Bull from the communal fridge on the fourth floor of the College Avenue Commons building in Tempe. Hackathon participants had access to free Red Bull throughout the weekend.
Some of that creativity and ingenuity will be on display this weekend, when ASU students of all majors will take part in EmergenTech: Hack ASU. Taking place at the College Avenue Commons, the hackathon event and pitch competition will span 36 hours from March 24 to 26.
“This will be the first year of the event, with the goal of scaling up each year until we become the largest university hackathon in the Southwest and entire country,” said Mark Naufel, the director of Strategic Projects for ASU’s Knowledge Enterprise Development office. “I am excited to see a group of talented, energetic students come together for 36 hours straight to ideate and develop innovative solutions that may have a chance of impacting society.”
Throughout those 36 hours, participants will form teams and choose an emerging technology to develop both a prototype and business concept. The event will then finish with a pitch competition in which the competitors are judged by a panel in front of a live audience.
Sethuraman Panchanathan, executive vice president of Knowledge Enterprise Development, will be providing welcoming remarks at the event. He said that the team competitions are one of the things he’s looking forward to most this weekend.
“What could be better than bringing together students from various disciplines to apply their creativity and critical thinking skills?” Panchanathan said. “They will build solutions that may revolutionize public and private industries.”
There have been other similar events held on campus through school clubs, specific departments and outside groups, but this is ASU’s first-ever, university-wide edition.
The winning team at Hack ASU will receive $1,000 and a new mattress from Tuft & Needle for each team member. The other teams that finish in the top three will also be awarded monetary prizes.
With such a large-scale event taking place, the hackathon will rely on a number of student organizers to help make sure everything runs smoothly. One of those students is junior Chelsea Border, who will be working to expand the entrepreneurial side of the participants.
“By encouraging business, design and engineering majors to participate, we are aiming to approach the hackathon with a sense of innovation and creativity,” Border said. “One of the ways we establish this is by developing the hybrid hackathon/pitch competition framework, which requires business and design elements to be addressed in final projects. Our hope is that by the end of the event, each student will have learned something new outside of their usual disciplines.”
Whether it's the opportunity to learn at the event, gain new knowledge from their peers or take home one of the top prizes, there are plenty of reasons for students to participate in this inaugual hackathon.
"Seeing how our participants can learn from one another is what excites me most," Border said. "Our university has such a bright, talented pool of students, and the fact some of them are willing to sacrifice their time and energy to join us for a whole weekend shows our community’s dedication to innovation."
Top photo: The hackathon team HackSunDevils works on their project in a student club room of the College Avenue Commons building on the second day of the EmergenTech Hackathon. The team, composed of Chinese international students, worked on developing a method to predict cultural popularity.
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