Showing results 41 to 50 out of 51
INTEL Edison and IBM BlueMix Training and Hackaton
13 Oct - 06:00 PM
City of London, United Kingdom
This is a five week course, starting on the 13th October, all about INTELs Edison platform run at Fab Lab London and repeated across the country. You will also use IBM BlueMix cloud service and integrate the two.  The purpose is to enable you to build a project and share it with the community.  There is a small deposit (£50) for the board and components which get refunded when you have finished the hackathon and shared your adventure.  Each week we will set homework and review it.  You don't need to come each week but it probably is most helpful if you can and the content level is set that anyone of any level can join in.  However novices will probably have more homework than experts.   Each week the timing will be from 17.00 to 19.00  13th October.  Session 1. We will give out the boards, overview of the technology, power it up, set up the output function to control lights, servos and motors: Set Homework 21st October.  Session 2. Review the homework and do more on outputs so you are an expert. Setup the input functions so you can take data from sensors and switches: Set homework 27th October. Session 3. Review homework, do more on inputs so you become an expert, set up closed loop input/ output control system. where you use an input sensors to control how an ouput device behaves:  Set homework 3rd November. Session 4. Review homework, Intro to networking and cloud services. Set up ability to control the board from the internet. Set homework 10th November. Session 5. Review homework and look at advanced setting, networking, cloud, fault finding and support. Think about project for hack day A couple of weeks break 26th November  The hack day from 10.00 to 17.00 - come to the lab and build the project using all the Fab Lab machines and your board. Last task do a write up.   There are two tickets - you can pay the deposit in advance or pay on the day.  You will get refunded the way you paid.  
    Zebra Enterprise Hackathon
    12 Oct - 10:00 AM
    London, United Kingdom
    Create whacky but plausible enterprise apps in under 12 hours! Apply specific technologies to win extra prizes! The AppForum 2015 Enterprise Hackathon is a standalone activity running the day before the Zebra Technologies AppForum developer's conference on 13th and 14th October. It is free-to-enter and runs all day on Monday 12th Oct for those who wish to spend some of their time in London in a creative way and gain a chance to win one of the great prizes including Amazon gift vouchers, Parrot drones, Pebble Time Smartwatches and Go Pro 4 Session. Challenge Theme and Criteria  The theme for the Hackathon will be revealed at the start on Monday 12th October. The theme will define a broad definition of the topic but will give participants the freedom to create and develop a wide range of apps within the theme. Development language is open, so use whatever you are comfortable with - NET, C/C++, Java or Web based...native or via a developer framework/tool. The type of app is also left open to participants, it can be B2C, B2B or B2E or a combination! The only guidance is that it should be designed with the enterprise in mind, ie not a purely consumer/games app. The judging panel will apply certain Challenge Criteria for which extra credit will be awarded, but the final decision of the judging panel will essentially be subjective. As well as overall winner and runner-up, there will be some addition Technology-Category Prizes awarded for participants who incorporate those specific technologies as part of their submission. The Technology Categories will be listed on Judging Criteria Area and more may be added nearer the time as new Technology Category sponsors come on board. Initial Technology Categories already defined include:  Best use of RhoMobile development suite Best use ALK CoPilot Mapping Tools (not Sat-Navigation) Best use of Digital Defence Encryption SDK  Entry is FREE and refreshments will be provided. Pre-registration is required however so that we know you are coming along.   $2,250 in prizes  Overall Winner   $500 in Amazon Vouchers, or similar.    Runner Up - Parrot AR 2.0 Elite Drone   AR.Drone Parrot 2.0 Elite Edition    RhoMobile Tech-Prize - Pebble Time smartwatch (3)   With a new color e-paper screen and a thin, comfortable ergonomic design, the Pebble Time smartwatch is the companion you’ll want with you every moment, every day.  https://pebble.com/shop/pebble_time    ALK Mapping Tech-Prize - Go Pro 4 Session   Go Pro 4 HERO4 Session    Digital Defence Tech-Prize - Parrot Spider Drone (3)   Parrot Mini Drone Rolling Spider
      Linked Music Hackathon
      09 Oct - 10:00 AM
      London, United Kingdom
      The SLICKMEM and SLoBR Semantic Media projects present: The Linked Music Hackathon brings together those with a shared passion for music and the data that describes it: students, coders, researchers from all disciplines, and members of the public; all with an interest in exploring, combining, playing, hacking, and creating with the vast wealth of musical information now available in digital form. We will provide access to a number of linked (and potentially linkable!) musical datasets drawn from sources including the British Library and the BBC, with a particular focus on historical music data including early European music of the 16th and 17th centuries; as well as a collection of tools and expertise to aid in the interlinking, analysis, creative use, and (re-)publication of this data. Come and bring your ideas, enthusiasm, your own datasets and software, arts and craft materials, friends and colleagues! Technical expertise is not a requirement (although certainly much valued!) -- friendly techy collaborators will be available on the day. The goal is, loosely stated, to create something amazing, from scratch, within a very short time. This event will take place at Goldsmiths, University of London, from 10am to 5pm on Fri October 9th 2015. Datasets taking part:      British Library - Early Music Online (Royal Holloway, University of London)      Electronic Corpus of Lute Music      BBC Radio 3 Early Music Show programme data       Concert programme data from the In Concert project       More to come!   Provisional schedule 09:30: Coffee 10:00: Introduction 10:30: Presentation of datasets 11:00: Hacking starts! 13:00: Lunch 16:00: Presentations 17:00: Close. Discussions continue at pub! Sponsorship Would you like to sponsor the Linked Music Hackathon? Please get in touch! Adapted from Portion of a ms. leaf by POP (CC BY 2.0) Funding This event is funded by the EPSRC Semantic Media Network. Support Contributing datasets generously provided by: You have data that you would like to contribute? Please send us an e-mail!
        Code for the Kingdom Global Hackathon - London, UK
        02 Oct - 07:00 PM
        London, United Kingdom
        WHAT IS IT? Kingdom Code is pioneering the UK’s first faith-inspired hackathon this October - joining a global initiative run by the Leadership Network. We are bringing together creatives, technologists, visionaries, entrepreneurs, and anyone passionate about faith and technology, to use their gifts to advance the Gospel.   The Global Hackathon will run in 15 world cities simultaneously, including Addis Ababa, Bangalore, Houston, Jakarta, Los Angeles and London. Together our vision is to provide more opportunities for communities around the world to participate and showcase innovation and entrepreneurship in their communities. We expect over 1,000 people to participate across the world, and address a number of challenges aimed at helping release the oppressed, teaching God’s Word, healing the sick, feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, and supporting the church and the body of Christ. WHY ARE WE DOING THIS? We want to catalyse friendship, passion, purpose, and collaboration in technical and entrepreneurial communities. Like the first century Church who quickly used the technologies of the Roman Empire, we encourage contemporary Christians to use 21st century technologies to serve the Kingdom. To create a scalable community across the UK to accelerate and encourage Christian innovators.     A London judging panel will choose the award prizes to the best projects. The 2015 program will conclude in December 2015. Every participating city will give two of their local winners to a Global Judging Panel that will decide the best technologies created across the world during the Global Hackathon Weekend.   A final report will be published, summarising key highlights and results of the 2015 Code for the Kingdom Global initiative.   WHY THE COST? Ticket sales will cover less than half the cost. Kingdom Code is a not-for-profit group, with a passion to help Christians in technology find encouragement and collaborate. Over half the budget will be met by the generosity of sponsors.   THEMES FROM PREVIOUS CODE FOR THE KINGDOM HACKATHONS   HOW CAN TECHNOLOGY... • be leveraged to create, cultivate, and strengthen society's foundational relaIonships of marriage, family, friendships? • bring the word of God to the first generation of children who are growing up with mobile devices? • help cut and/or combat the effects of fatherlessness in a child’s life, in turn strengthening families, reducing poverty and crime? • become mobile games which disrupt the mindsets of atheism, postmodernism, violence, and secularism among youth today? • foster a culture of generosity towards each other? • identify, promote, test, collaborate, augment, and fill the gaps of ministry programs around the city? • disrupt human trafficking?   The London organising team is made up of 12 enthusiasts, from students to grandfathers - from coders to hardware makers to designers to finance types. All with a passion to see Christians in technology be encouraged and collaborate.   Join us in Picadilly on the first weekend of October - make new friends, get inspired and build something that matters.    Everyone is welcome - come as you are and join-up with a team on the Friday night, or bring a team with you. The Friday will start with food and then individuals / teams will pitch their idea, and invite people to join with them to hack for the weekend.    What can you do? Sign up now - get an early-bird discount. Get some friends together - bring a team - or just come as you are. Sponsor a place for someone less well-off? Think of a product you would like to build.   We can't wait to meet you.  love,  Rupert Edwards & James Doc On behalf of the London Organising Team       DRAFT TIMETABLE Friday, October 2 7:00 PM Doors Open   7:00 - 8:00 PM Dinner & Networking   8:00 - 8:25 PM Welcome & Review Format   8:25 - 8:35 PM API Presentations   8:35 - 8:50 PM Review - Official Challenges   8:50 - 9:20 PM Open Floor - pitch your own project   9:20 - 11:59 PM Team Formation/Create Away   Saturday, October 3   12:00 AM - 11:59 PM Creating   8:30 AM Breakfast   9:00 AM Schedule and logistics announcements, team rebalancing   12:00 PM Lunch   4:30 p.m.   Optional progress briefing, more developing   6:00 PM Dinner   9:00 AM - 5:00 PM Meet with Mentors and Subject Matter Experts   Sunday, October 4   12:00 - 2:15 PM Creating   8:30 AM Breakfast   10:30 - 12:00 AM Option to join with Sunday Service   12:00 PM Lunch   1:00 PM Presentation Walk-thru & Judges Make Rounds   2:30 PM Submission deadline; Team Presentations Begin   4:30 PM Judges adjourn   4:50 PM Call-back   5:00 PM Awards Ceremony 5:30 PM Closing                          
          Sport England Sports Technology Hackathon
          02 Oct - 03:00 PM
          London, United Kingdom
          Introducing The Sports Technology Hackathon, in Association with Sport England Creating an App to Inspire Social Change Through Sport   £10,000 Bursary on Offer to Winning App The Sports Technology Awards, in association with Sport England, is launching the first UK-based Hackathon for sports technology. Taking place over 25 hours on 2nd and 3rd October in central London, the Hackathon will see teams of up to six people develop an app that encourages a specific demographic to be more physically active. The event is free to enter and the winning team will receive a £10,000 bursary from Sport England. Each team, with the help of mentors, will create their app with the last hour of the Hackathon seeing them present their concept to a judging panel. Three finalists will be selected with the winning team announced at the Sports Technology Awards in April 2016. Anyone based in the UK over the age of 18 can create a team and enter but each team must include at least one woman.
            TechFugees Hackathon
            02 Oct - 09:00 AM
            London, United Kingdom
            The TechCrunch Techfugees Hackathon will take place at the Wayra academy on 2nd October from 9am. We invite tech engineers, entrepreneurs and startups together with NGOs and other agencies to work on tech solutions and products to aid both refugees and agencies.   For further updates, follow @Techfugees and sign up to the Facebook group - https://goo.gl/BzXw2S Dear  TechFugee Hackathon attendees       Apologies for the length of this, but this contains important information about what we’d like you to work on at the TechFugees Hackathon.       We are really excited to work with you on this, so please share this with any developers you know who can come and work on these important challenges.       At the end of this email, there is information on the conference on Thursday (the day before the hackathon), if you want to attend that as well.       *** TechFugees Hackathon ***        Date:   October 2nd, 9am - 9pm       Location:   Wayra London, 2-10 Shropshire House, Capper Street, WC1E 6JA       Tickets   http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/techfugees-hackathon-tickets-18653008651       We are looking forward to seeing you at the Hackathon on October 2nd at Wayra London -  thank you for giving up your time to work on this crisis. We will send you a couple of emails between now and then as we confirm details. Bear with us as this is all on a supremely tight deadline       Ed Saperia, Matthew Gardiner and Emma Mulqueeny (Rewired State) are handling the hack for the TechFugees project. Ed an Matthew will be there on the day.       We do have three main challenges for the Hackathon that have been set by Syrian refugees in Berlin as the things they most need help with. We also have three "further ideas" sent to us by aid workers in Calais, where there are now large Refugee encampments.        We’re collecting active projects, research and resources in a hackpad here:        https://hackpad.com/Techfugees-dAklzfJDamL       MAIN HACK CHALLENGES:       1. Refugees are being separated from friends and family as they flee Syria. Build a way for them to locate and reunite with each other.       2. There are currently countless incidents of war crimes and crimes against people that are going unrecorded and reported. Build a way to record and report the time and location of crime against refugees.       3. The displaced people of Syria are not represented by anyone and have no democratic collective voice. Build a way for them, and any they choose to represent them, to be heard so that their actual needs are met, and not those we suppose they have.           FURTHER CHALLENGES BASED ON INFORMATION PASSED US BY  REFUGEE WORKERS IN CALAIS:       1. Build an application that allows users to work out safe routes of passage, allowing refugees to share safe ways to reach their destination.       2. Build an App that allows refugees to report trouble spots. At present the police in Calais descend unannounced on refugee encampments. There needs to be a way for refugees to be able to warn others that trouble is coming. A large Syrian camp in Calais was closed down in the early hours of Tuesday morning - police went in with teargas and batons, tents were bulldozed and all belongings including personal photographs and passports were taken and binned as the refugees were herded into the main 'Jungle'. There needs to be a way of allowing people to warn each other of such events so that people can at least gather up their personal belongings before the police arrive.       3. Aggregate country-specific asylum and immigration information. Sweden has an excellent website with an asylum 'pre-application' which allows people to try and figure out how probable it is for them to be granted asylum by Sweden should they make it there. Look for ways to scrape this information and produce and API from other country data.  Aggregate information that allows people to access info on asylum requirements and procedures and country by country. Information on rights and benefits could help refugees figure out the best place to go. It will also allow those who are not in fear of their lives but are making the journey for economic reasons to get a more realistic idea of what life is like in respective European countries and perhaps make the decision that since their lives are not at risk, they may be better off staying where they are.       4.  While it’s true that many refugees have smartphones/internet connectivity and so can be reached directly, we should also consider help we can provide to NGOs or other organisations who are also working on the crisis. We will outline other ideas as we get them from those agencies.        FURTHER NOTES        Many of these challenges represent significant risk to life, and therefore rely on anonymity. Your solutions to this challenge should bear that in mind.       Whilst there is access to computers in many refugee centres, mobile appa, whether on the mobile web or nat maps, are going to be the most effective way to help. For obvious reasons Android tends to be the most prevelent mobile OS.        We are also building a platform that we hope will be live by October 2nd for you to submit your prototypes to. We hope to also make it open for submissions until the end of October.       Obviously There is no amazing cash reward for “winning”. However, we will work throughout November to determine the best hacks from those selected at the end of October by actual refugees and displaced people across Europe. Developers of the best applications will be connected directly with refugee groups to iterate through to product by the end of November.       Obviously any IP you develop is yours, the we should make clear that the platform for submissions will be open and we hope you opensource the code on projects to enable them to scale and be iterated.       WHY IS THIS URGENT?       We need to do this before Winter hits. There are families who need to be together come December and the tech community can make that happen. As the days become shorter and night sets ip earlier, the risk to women and children from crimes against their person rises exponentially.       The situation on the ground is very complex. The refugees themselves are very diverse, and they’re distributed across territories with very different capacities for aid, as well as varying political sympathy towards refugees and migrants.       The TechFugees community will come back together in December to see how we can use this platform for further useful things.       So, stand-by for some logistics from Ed and Rewired State for the hack day and platform access.       Thanks you again for participating in this collective effort.           INFORMATION ON TECHFUGEES CONFERENCE       Conference Date:   October 1st, 9am - 5.30pm       Location:   Skillsmatter at CodeNode, 10 South Place, London, EC2M 7EB       Free Tickets   https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/techfugees-tickets-18649944486       Lunch and coffee/tea will be served.       Speakers so far:   UNHCR   Adam Rodriques, GlobalInitiative.net   Paula Schwarz, StartupBoat   Katharina Dermühl, Migration Hub   Josephine Goube, migreat   Rohan Silva, Second Home   Cliodhnagh Conlon, Ammado.com>   Richard Sergeant, Engineers Without Borders   Anna Kondakhchyan, Oxfam   Anne Kjær Riechert, Refugees On Rails   Gi Fernando, Founders for Good   Dan Sutch, Wearecast   Paul Miller, BethnalGreenventures   Debu Purkayastha, Mercy Corps   Gary Stewart, Wayra   Marianne Bouchart, Hei-da.org   Edward Saperia, Redwired State   Sonia Ben Ali, Urban-refugees.org   Franziska Becker, Hashtagcharity.org   Frank Khan Sullivan, Projecttemphome.com   Christopher T. Mikkelsen, Refunite.org   Pranay Manocha, RefugeeMaps.org   Raphael Mazet, Cliqstart.co   Josephine Goube, Migreat.com   Måns Gårdfeldt, OrphanGift   Murtada Alsaif, Writtenmedicine.com   Bernhard Niesner, Busuu.com           TECHFUGEES INFORMATION       This project is being supported by the following sponsors and partners:       Facebook       Skillsmatter   https://skillsmatter.com/   Skillsmatter, the community where you can learn and share skills with thousands of developers passionate about software craftsmanship and progressive technologies.       Wayra   http://wayra.co.uk/   Wayra UK are Telefónica’s startup accelerator and we help the best entrepreneurs to grow and build successful businesses.       Braintree_PayPal   http://www.braintreepayments.com/   At the forefront of the digital payments revolution, PayPal helps millions to send money without sharing financial information and flexibility. Working alongside PayPal is Braintree, acquired by PayPal in 2013. Braintree’s v.zero SDK powers PayPal, including One Touch, Apple Pay, Bitcoin, across any device.       Datashaka   http://www.datashaka.com/   DataShaka is on a mission to make data easy to work with.       Fieldhouse Associates   http://www.fieldhouseassociates.com/   FieldHouse Associates is a communications consultancy working with high growth tech businesses, and their investors and advisors, to help them achieve their next stage of growth.       Gordon & Eden   http://www.gordoneden.co.uk/   Gordon & Eden - From high-growth firms to established businesses, we hire executive talent in technology & digital.       Malwarebytes   https://www.malwarebytes.org/   Malwarebytes protects people and businesses against malicious online threats that consistently escape detection by traditional anti-virus       Nesta   http://www.nesta.org.uk/   Nesta is the UK's innovation foundation, with a mission to help people and organisations bring great ideas to life. We do this by providing investments and grants and mobilising research, networks and skills.       Tech London Advocates   http://www.techlondonadvocates.org.uk/   Tech London Advocates is a private sector led coalition of over 1,800 expert individuals from the tech sector and broader community who have committed to championing London’s potential as a world-class hub for tech and digital businesses.       The Exponential Network   http://www.exponential.network/   The Exponential Network works with social projects and start-ups, supporting them in developing their mission and vision as well as measuring impact and social profit.       Paddle   https://www.paddle.com/   Paddle: Giving app developers access to all their favorite tools from a single SDK.           The TechFugees project has been put together by:       Mike Butcher - @mikebutcher   Petra Johansson - @PetraJohansson   Frank Meehan - @frank_meehan    Monique Lunt - @MoniqueMLunt   Josh Russell - @joshr   Robbie Howshall - @robbiehowshall   Edward Woodcock - @IAmFledge   Emma Mulqueeny - @hubmum   Edward Saperia - @edsaperia       Facebook   https://www.facebook.com/groups/Techfugees/       Twitter   https://twitter.com/hashtag/techfugees       Website   http://www.techfugees.com/       Crowdfunding   https://www.gofundme.com/techfugees       ABOUT TECHFUGEES   Moved by the plight of refugees in Europe, a number of technology industry people have formed a small voluntary team to create the free, non-profit, "Techfugees" conference and hackathon. In the last 48 hours our Facebook Group and Twitter account has exploded, with over 1,000 people from the tech community signing up. There is clearly a huge desire amongst the tech community to get involved. This will be an entirely non-profit event to bring together tech engineers, entrepreneurs and startups together with NGOs and other agencies in order to address the crisis in ways where the technology world can bring its considerable firepower.    
              Techfugees
              01 Oct - 09:00 AM
              London, United Kingdom
              Techfugees Conference & Hackathon   Moved by the plight of refugees in Europe, we have formed a small voluntary team to create the free, non-profit, "Techfugees" conference on October 1st in Central London.    We'd like you to come.   The background:    In the last 48 hours our Facebook Group and Twitter account has exploded, with over 700 people from the tech community signing up. There is clearly a huge desire amongst the tech community to get involved.    See: https://www.facebook.com/groups/Techfugees and www.techfugees.com   This will be an entirely non-profit event to bring together tech engineers, entrepreneurs and startups together with NGOs and other agencies in order to address the crisis in ways where the technology world can bring its considerable firepower.     SPEAKER SO FAR FROM: UNHCR Rewired State Paula Schwarz, StartupBoat Anne Kjær Riechert, Refugees On Rails Marieme Jamme, Africa Gathering Bernhard Niesner, Busuu language-learning startup Marianne Bouchart, HEI-DA Data journalism institute     On October 2nd we will be running a "Hackathon" with the Telefonica-backed accelerator, WAYRA, to work on tech solutions and products to aid both refugees and agencies.   The aims of the Hackathon are to start working on products and solutions that can be fed into the I Am Here Hackathon in Berlin, run by Rewired State, on October 3rd. This will increase the chances of tech products being deployed by Winter.      We would like you to come and engage with the tech community so that we can help discuss and build solutions.          We are also looking for sponsors to cover the costs of the event.    Please email mike@techfugees.com about the event content and petra@twistedtree.co.uk to sponsor the costs of the event.      SPONSORS AND PARTNERS:    
                #peacehackLDN
                26 Sep - 09:00 AM
                Shoreditch, United Kingdom
                #peacehack is an initiative of International Alert that brings technologists, designers, developers and peace practitioners together to create and realise ideas and solutions that can be used to stop violent conflict and help build peace. The first #peacehack took place in September 2014 in London as part of International Alert’s Talking Peace Festival. Following on from the success of #peacehack 2014, International Alert is partnering with several organizations to organise simultaneous hacks in six cities around the globe over the weekend of 26th/27th September 2015 as part of Alert’s Talking Peace Festival. We're looking for participants who have strong technology skills (programming and design) and an interest in making a difference in the not-for-profit community – though they may lack the field expertise in peacebuilding. Peacebuilding practitioners and NGOs in each city will then talk about big problems they have in their programming and / or ideas they have for technology that could be helpful in peacebuilding. Challenges emerging from these consultations will be grouped into emerging themes, which will be presented at the start of the 30-hour hack. Hackers then chose a challenge and work (individually or in teams) to build a prototype technology solution. Prototypes are presented at the end of the hack, with prizes for the best solutions. The theme selected for the London hack is to develop digital solutions to help prevent violent extremism Objective The objective of #peacehack events is to bring the technology and peacebuilding communities closer to each other, and encourage collaboration. Some of the prototype solutions emerging from the hack may be taken forward; others may not be developed. Nonetheless, the hack offers an opportunity for technologists to experience how they might contribute to peacebuilding and for peacebuilders to realise the potential of technology-enabled support to their programs and processes. We believe it can be the seed for future collaborations, the beginning of a movement where practitioners and technologists work together for peace. Event schedule The hackathon takes place over two days, Saturday 26 and Sunday 27 September 2015. Saturday 26 September 2015 09.00-10.00: Registration and breakfast 10.00-11.10: Briefings (see below) 11.10-12.30: Group networking and coding 12.30–1.30: Lunch 1.30–2.00: Ninety second shout-out: say what you hope to build; say what resource you need to build it; invite others to join you 2.00 onwards: Coding Sunday 27 September 2015 09.00-10.00 Breakfast 10.00-3.00: Coding 3.00-3.45: Prototype pitches 3.45-4.30: Adjudication 4.30-5.00: Prize-giving Amazing food, including selections from our Conflict Café will be provided free for all participants. Plentiful snacks and non-alcoholic drinks will be available too. And cake. Format Network with others to form teams. Use the shout-out to recruit team members. The maximum number in a team is six. Software resources Devs may build their prototypes via native code, APIs or templates. You may use any data analysis, processing or visualization tool you need to build your app. Ownership of code/app development It is our intention to share all code on the International Alert GitHub repo, to enable solutions to be developed outside the hackathon event itself, to maximise the benefit to the NGO sector and to form the basis of a community of tech peacebuilders. Judging criteria The prototypes produced by developers will be judged according to the following criteria: Impact: Does the app/project have a measureable impact? User Experience and Presentation: Is the project simple, well-designed, and easy to use by non technical users? Sustainability: How likely is the projct to survive beyond the hackathon? Is this a viable project? Is the idea promising enough to warrant sustained development and attention? The judging panel will be made up of peacebuilders and technologists. The venue Campus London, a Google Space has successfully hosted hackathons for many years. It's one of the more robust hackathon venues in the UK. Prizes Prizes will be provided from our sponsors and will include free tickets to the Build Peace conference and hackathon in Zurich in 2016, service credits from GitHub and firebase amongst others as well as spot prizes, t-shirts and other tech goodies. FAQs What are my transport/parking options getting to the event? We recommend you use public transport to get here as there is very little (and expensive) street parking near the venue. What can/can't I bring to the event? Bring your ideas, skills and talents. Probably best pets stay at home Where can I contact the organiser with any questions? Drop us an email (Dan and Andy) at dmarsh@international-alert.org or akyriakides@international-alert.org Is my registration/ticket transferrable? Yes, but please email us before you do Do I have to bring my printed ticket to the event? No, but it would make life easier if you could! What is the refund policy? If you have paid nothing, we will refund you the same amount (although if you can't make day, please again let us know so we can offer the space to someone else) The name on the registration/ticket doesn't match the attendee. Is that okay? We'd rather they did. Drop us an email if you want to make any amendments. Can I spend the entire night at the venue or will I have to burn the midnight oil elsewhere? The venue will be open for the entire duration of the hackathon. You are welcome to come and go as you please. If you intend to stay overnight, you may wish to bring a sleeping bag. Can I start before the hackathon? You can prepare wireframes, outlines, or notes but you cannot start any of your design or development until 10.00hrs on the Saturday of the hackathon. What resources am I allowed to bring/use during the hackathon? Anything you need to complete your prototype. What if I don’t finish the project in the allotted time period? You will be judged based on the completed features. It will be up to the judges’ discretion to determine how your project ranks against other teams’ projects. Do I need to bring my own computer? Yes. We encourage devs to bring their own devices. I'm hungry! Hopefully you won't be - we'll provide you with food and drink for breakfast, lunch and dinner and perhaps the occasional snack inbetween. You are also welcome to bring your own food. If you have any specific requirements, drop us a line and we will try and suit your needs. Finally we'd like to thank our partners and sponsors, without whose support #peacehack wouldn't be possible:  
                  Startupbootcamp's "Hack Insurance" Hackathon
                  25 Sep - 05:00 PM
                  London, United Kingdom
                  Do you want to disrupt one of the most non-digital industries in the world? Are you a hard-core coder, a designer or just a hackathon obsessor? If so, join Startupbootcamp Insurance for an innovative weekend of exclusive insurance challenges and API access from elite insurance partners, as well as top of the range hardware from Intel for you to work with. We strongly advise you to sign up and save the following dates now: 25th, 26th and 27th September. You don't want to miss this event - take the challenge! Follow us on Twitter @sbcInsurance Join us Register now to secure one of the limited places available for the insurance hackathon. The event is being held at our offices in the Rainmaking Loft in central London.   Startupbootcamp Insurance is the leading accelerator focused on insurance innovation, we are based in London with a global community. We have some incredible partners on board, including: Admiral, Allianz, Ergo, Momentum, Lloyds Banking, PwC, Route66, and Unipol. For the first time these partners are going to provide exclusive challenges and API access for attendees to work with during the hackathon. The Task You will be able to form a team at the start of the event, and then work on one of the exclusive challenges or APIs our partners have provided. You will have 48 hours to complete the task. Challenges The challenges will be about general insurance. That includes travel, home, car and health insurance. All of our partners are interested in different aspects of these fields and we can help you develop new solutions by providing you APIs related to blockchain, IoT, wearables and more from our event partners (more information about API to be announced soon!). What will be provided? Wifi is available throughout the building. Sockets, ethernet cables and other sorts of cables are also available.  We do NOT provide laptops and computers so please bring your own and any associated chargers. (Don't forget phone chargers too). Winning Categories Best Technical Solution Best Overall Concept Best Design & Usability Best answer to a challenge Prizes will be be provided from Intel and alike. In addition, there is a £5,000 cash prize to be won.  Refreshments & food Don't worry you won't be hungry, we will make sure you are fed well to ensure you have sufficient fuel to build a pioneering product. Please let us know of any dietary requirements when you register. Provisional agenda Friday, 25th September, 5:30pm-7:30pm - The Introduction 5:30pm Registration 5:45pm Welcome & agenda 6:00pm Partners speak about their challenges and introduce their APIs 6:30pm Ice breaking exercise 6:45pm Participants pitch their idea for 60 seconds 7:45pm Form Teams 8:15pm Intel IoT workshop 6:00pm  9:15pm Start hacking or go home and sleep Saturday, 26th September, 9:00am-midnight - All Day Hacking 9:00am Breakfast served 12:00pm Lunch 4:00pm Ping pong tournament  6:00pm Dinner  Sunday, 27th September, 9:00am-5:00pm - Hacking Towards A Deadline 9:00am Breakfast served 10:00am Pitch Training 12:00pm Lunch 2:00pm Coders self-assessment session 3:00pm Final Presentations     We are proud to announce that we got 8 challenges from our corporate partners: Prizes and technology provided by: #sbcInsurance
                    MODHack - Mining the Deep Web
                    25 Sep - 01:30 PM
                    London, United Kingdom
                    Event Details #MODHack - Mining the Deep Web MODHack is a unique opportunity to collaborate with software developers, data scientists and innovators to develop ideas and solutions for mining of the Deep Web. The Deep Web is the part of the internet which is not indexed (searchable) from standard search engines such as Google. It is estimated that up to 95% of the web is currently un-indexed, which is fine for a general internet user, but un-acceptable for domain specific search and retrieval. Participants will use a range of open source tools and services and build something that has the potential to support the national security of the UK. This event forms one aspect of the wider of the Catalysing Defence Innovation Science & Technology (CDIST) project, under which MOD is looking at new approaches for innovation, and mechanisms for engaging with non-traditional Defence suppliers. Objective The objective of the event will be to help invent better methods for interacting with and sharing information, so users can quickly and thoroughly organize and search subsets of information relevant to their individual interests. Creation of a new domain-specific indexing and search paradigm will provide mechanisms for improved content discovery, information extraction, information retrieval, user collaboration, and extension of current search capabilities to the deep web, and non-traditional (e.g. multimedia) content. Specifically Dstl is interested in innovative concepts and solutions which are useable by non-specialists and have the flexibility to be applied to new domains as operational requirements change and international threats develop. We're looking for ideas with potential, which could enhance MOD's capabilities in the long term. The MOD OSINT programme Innovation service will be used as the exploitation route for delivering emerging technology, tools and services to the User. Current domains of interest include Global Stability - MOD needs to understand the potential threat to UK nationals based overseas. Help us develop capabilities to track global and regional stability including the detection of deteriorating security situations. Support to National Evacuation Orders (NEOs) - During the evacuation of civilians and non-combatants from overseas countries (Libya (2011); Lebanon (2006); Sierra Leone (2000)) MOD needs to gain situational awareness of where UK nationals are based; where the main threats are; and what evacuation routes are suitable to support military planning  Support to Disaster Relief Operations - MOD plays a key role in providing support to a wider UK government response to disaster relief (e.g  the Ebola Crisis in West Africa). During such operations MOD needs to understand where forces are needed, and what threats exist. Help us develop capabilities for remote situational awareness during Disaster Relief Operations in the future.  Event schedule The hackathon takes place over three days, Friday 25th - Sunday 27th September 2015. Friday 25th September 13:30 - 14:30                      Registration  14:30 - 18:00                      Welcome and introduction to challenge and toolset 18:00 - 19:00                       Dinner 19:00 - 21:00                      Project selection and Team formation 21:00                                  Close first day Saturday 26th September Hack runs throughout the day 08:30                                     Breakfast 13:00                                     Lunch 19:00                                     Dinner 21:00                                     Close second day Sunday 27th September  08:30                                     Breakfast 10:00 - 12:00                        Project presentations 12:00 - 13:00                        Lunch 13:00 - 14:00                        Prize Giving 14:00                                    Close MODHack Format Come as a team - or join one on the day. Software resources Defence Science and Technology Laboratories (Dstl) are collaborating with the US Department of Defence’s Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Participants can use any technology they wish, however you may want to consider building on the Open Source tools developed by DARPA under the Memex Programme. The full set of Memex tools will be available on registration. Defence Science & Technology Laboratory (Dstl) experts will be on hand to assist with Memex and provide a Cloud development environment. All you need do is bring your laptop and be up for it! Ownership of code/app development Dstl/MOD will not have a claim on any Intellectual Property you create. You build it, you keep it. As the Memex tools are open source we would encourage participants to share any enhancements to enable solutions to be developed outside the hackathon event. Support will be given to the most promising proofs of concept to get a market ready MVP. Judging criteria The prototypes produced by developers will be judged according to the following criteria: -          Operational Impact: Does the innovation have a measureable impact? -          Exploitability: How easy will it be for MOD to exploit the project/concept? -          Usability: Is the project/concept simple, and easy to use by non-technical users? -          Innovation: How innovative is the idea? The judging panel will be made up of experts from MOD, Dstl, and Knowledge Transfer Network. The venue Wallacespace, 18 Clerkenwell Green, London EC1R 0DP. Prizes The Proofs of Concept developed will be judged and there will be awards in various categories for coding and concept skills. A rather exclusive prize is up for grabs to the team that develops the overall winning project. The dip in the Dunker has had to be withdrawn but will be replaced with an equally memorable experience. We are delighted to also offer winners Golden Tickets to ride the HackTrain kindly provided by HackPartners.  Photography Please also note, by confirming your attendance to this event, you have agreed to the filming, video, photography and vox pops that will be taken throughout the weekend and the use of these images after the event. If you do not wish to be photographed/filmed please make us aware upon arrival at the event. FAQs Who do I contact with any questions? Drop us an email Is my registration/ticket transferrable to another person? Yes, but please email us to amend our guestlist Do I have to print my ticket for the event? No you may bring it electronically, but you MUST bring ID e.g. driving licence or passport What transport should I use to get to the event? We recommend you use public transport to get here otherwise there is also opportunity to store your bicycles safely. Can I spend the entire night at the venue? The venue will be open until 9pm on both evenings, but if you wish to work later there are a number of local pubs and coffee shops with Wifi. Do I need to bring my own computer/laptop? Yes, it is recommended that that individuals bring their own devices Is there food? Yes unlimited snacks and your breakfast, lunch and dinner will be provided, please let us know if you have any dietary requirements.