In a city of immense technological entrepreneurship, “hackathon” is a common word in San Francisco. Ranging from a few hours to over a weekend, hackathons are events, hosted by a company or organization, comprised of solving a challenge, creating a prototype, and presenting your results. Many hackathons participants are, unsurprisingly, students, eager to add their ideas, and code, into the professional world.
One active hackathon participant and leader within the Minerva community of hackathoners is Bani Singh. Unofficially dubbed a hackathon “rockstar” by her classmates, Bani’s experience with hackathons is actually somewhat limited. “I could probably count the number of hackathons I’ve participated in on my two hands,” she jokes. Before coming to Minerva she entered her first hackathon, the Siemens Women’s Hackathon, unsure what a hackathon actually entailed. Joining a team of women, with experience in the hackathon circuit, she quickly realized that it was essentially an idea competition. After a full day of intense prototyping, iterating, and problem-solving around the challenge of how they could creatively utilize Siemens’ cloud platform, her team won the grand prize, proposing a product ideation for Siemens IoT platform that would improve product and customer service.
That win, the intense work it required, and the thrill of generating ideas with others in a confined time frame bolstered her passion for hackathons. And when she arrived in San Francisco for her fall semester where hackathons are hosted on almost any given weekend, she continued to participate with her Minerva cohort. Bani and other students from the Class of 2021 began self-organizing around hackathon opportunities and in September, a group of eight students won second place and the social media category at the AT&T IoT hackathon. In October, four Minervans won the regional Singapore Airlines hackathon in Palo Alto and the first place prize in the final international round in Singapore with their mobile application which improved a smart travel mobile app to make customer journeys more personalised. By November, Minerva teams swept first, second, and third place in the Hodo Soy hackathon, winning a unique prize in the form of bounty of tofu products. Then, in December students placed first, third, and fourth at the NCSV Innovate hackathon.
Quick Facts
Computational Sciences
Computational Sciences
Social Sciences & Business
Business
Natural Sciences
Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Social Sciences & Business
Business & Computational Sciences
Business and Social Sciences
Social Sciences and Business
Computational Sciences & Social Sciences
Computer Science & Arts and Humanities
Business and Computational Sciences
Business and Social Sciences
Natural Sciences
Arts and Humanities
Business, Social Sciences
Business & Arts and Humanities
Computational Sciences
Natural Sciences, Computer Science
Computational Sciences
Arts & Humanities
Computational Sciences, Social Sciences
Computational Sciences
Computational Sciences
Natural Sciences, Social Sciences
Social Sciences, Natural Sciences
Data Science, Statistics
Computational Sciences
Business
Computational Sciences, Data Science
Social Sciences
Natural Sciences
Business, Natural Sciences
Business, Social Sciences
Computational Sciences
Arts & Humanities, Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Computational Sciences, Natural Sciences
Natural Sciences
Computational Sciences, Social Sciences
Business, Social Sciences
Computational Sciences
Natural Sciences, Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Arts & Humanities, Social Sciences
Arts & Humanities, Social Science
Social Sciences, Business
Arts & Humanities
Computational Sciences, Social Science
Natural Sciences, Computer Science
Computational Science, Statistic Natural Sciences
Business & Social Sciences
Computational Science, Social Sciences
Social Sciences and Business
Business
Arts and Humanities
Computational Sciences
Social Sciences
Social Sciences and Computational Sciences
Social Sciences & Computational Sciences
Social Sciences & Arts and Humanities
Computational Science
Natural Sciences
Sustainability
Computational Sciences
Computational Sciences
Computational Science & Business
Economics
Social Sciences
Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence
Economics and Society & Strategic Finance
Enterprise Management
Economics and Society
Cells and Organisms & Brain, Cognition, and Behavior
Cognitive Science and Economics & Political Science
Applied Problem Solving & Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence
Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence & Cognition, Brain, and Behavior
Designing Societies & New Ventures
Strategic Finance & Data Science and Statistics
Brand Management and Designing Societies
Data Science & Economics
Machine Learning
Cells, Organisms, Data Science, Statistics
Arts & Literature and Historical Forces
Artificial Intelligence & Computer Science
Cells and Organisms, Mind and Emotion
Economics, Physics
Managing Operational Complexity and Strategic Finance
Global Development Studies and Brain, Cognition, and Behavior
Scalable Growth, Designing Societies
Business
Drug Discovery Research, Designing and Implementing Policies
Historical Forces, Cognition, Brain, and Behavior
Artificial Intelligence, Psychology
Designing Solutions, Data Science and Statistics
Data Science and Statistic, Theoretical Foundations of Natural Science
Strategic Finance, Politics, Government, and Society
Data Analysis, Cognition
Brand Management
Data Science and Statistics & Economics
Cognitive Science & Economics
Data Science and Statistics and Contemporary Knowledge Discovery
Conversation
In a city of immense technological entrepreneurship, “hackathon” is a common word in San Francisco. Ranging from a few hours to over a weekend, hackathons are events, hosted by a company or organization, comprised of solving a challenge, creating a prototype, and presenting your results. Many hackathons participants are, unsurprisingly, students, eager to add their ideas, and code, into the professional world.
One active hackathon participant and leader within the Minerva community of hackathoners is Bani Singh. Unofficially dubbed a hackathon “rockstar” by her classmates, Bani’s experience with hackathons is actually somewhat limited. “I could probably count the number of hackathons I’ve participated in on my two hands,” she jokes. Before coming to Minerva she entered her first hackathon, the Siemens Women’s Hackathon, unsure what a hackathon actually entailed. Joining a team of women, with experience in the hackathon circuit, she quickly realized that it was essentially an idea competition. After a full day of intense prototyping, iterating, and problem-solving around the challenge of how they could creatively utilize Siemens’ cloud platform, her team won the grand prize, proposing a product ideation for Siemens IoT platform that would improve product and customer service.
That win, the intense work it required, and the thrill of generating ideas with others in a confined time frame bolstered her passion for hackathons. And when she arrived in San Francisco for her fall semester where hackathons are hosted on almost any given weekend, she continued to participate with her Minerva cohort. Bani and other students from the Class of 2021 began self-organizing around hackathon opportunities and in September, a group of eight students won second place and the social media category at the AT&T IoT hackathon. In October, four Minervans won the regional Singapore Airlines hackathon in Palo Alto and the first place prize in the final international round in Singapore with their mobile application which improved a smart travel mobile app to make customer journeys more personalised. By November, Minerva teams swept first, second, and third place in the Hodo Soy hackathon, winning a unique prize in the form of bounty of tofu products. Then, in December students placed first, third, and fourth at the NCSV Innovate hackathon.