Hackathon Season Stream Preempts Sunday Sports

At 2 p.m. Eastern on Sunday, January 18, you could settle down to watch American women's college basketball, catch part of the Southeastern Conference (Kentucky vs. Alabama) or cheer as Tobago and Trinidad take on Jamaica in the Super50 cricket tournament. Or you could tune into a livestream and watch thousands of college students pecking their way through Major League Hacking (MLH).

MLH is a student hackathon league that provides a structure for 70 student programming competitions based in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom. Participants build Web sites, applications and hardware code; try out new kinds of hardware; and show off their results to each other and vie for prizes.

The 2015 spring season kicks off in Philadelphia this weekend at Drexel University, where Dragon Hacks focuses on hardware hacking.

That will be followed by MHacks, hosted in the home town of the University of Michigan. On January 16 1,100 students culled from 7,500 applicants from around the world will arrive with sleeping bags, laptops and smartphones and get a chance to try out gear including Oculus Rift, Google Glass and Meta Spaceglasses, as well as more traditional computer and server hardware from MLH sponsor Dell.

That same weekend PennApps takes place in its 11th iteration. A thousand students will converge on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania for a 36-hour round of coding and learning. Although the university's engineering department carries most of the weight for the program, for the second time, the hackathon will allow students from engineering and medicine to team up as part of a health track.

Participants in both events pay nothing for their weekend; and in some cases the league organizers will cover the expenses related to students' hackathon-related travel.

The finals from Michigan and Pennsylvania will be shared in real time through the MLH site on Sunday. That livestream "will showcase the results of the largest gathering of student hackers ever, and all the amazing projects they are sure to be presenting," said MLH Commissioner Nick Quinlan. "We can't wait to show the world what our events are all about."

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • an online form with checkboxes, a shield icon for security, and a lock symbol for privacy, set against a clean, monochromatic background

    Educause HECVAT Vendor Assessment Tool Gets an Upgrade

    Educause has announced HECVAT 4, the latest update to its Higher Education Community Vendor Assessment Toolkit.

  • illustration of a football stadium with helmet on the left and laptop with ed tech icons on the right

    The 2025 NFL Draft and Ed Tech Selection: A Strategic Parallel

    In the fast-evolving landscape of collegiate football, the NFL, and higher education, one might not immediately draw connections between the 2025 NFL Draft and the selection of proper educational technology for a college campus. However, upon closer examination, both processes share striking similarities: a rigorous assessment of needs, long-term strategic impact, talent or tool evaluation, financial considerations, and adaptability to a dynamic future.

  • university building surrounded by icons for AI, checklists, and data governance

    Improving AI Governance for Stronger University Compliance and Innovation

    AI can generate valuable insights for higher education institutions and it can be used to enhance the teaching process itself. The caveat is that this can only be achieved when universities adopt a strategic and proactive set of data and process management policies for their use of AI.

  • DeepSeek on AWS

    AWS Offers DeepSeek-R1 as Fully Managed Serverless Model, Recommends Guardrails

    Amazon Web Services (AWS) has announced the availability of DeepSeek-R1 as a fully managed serverless AI model, enabling developers to build and deploy it without having to manage the underlying infrastructure.