Three Vietnamese teams
nominated for NASA hackathon competition
Members of the
Chaos of Liti’s team prepare for their presentation at the national round of
the Space Apps Challenge hackathon competition in Ho Chi Minh City on April 13, 2014. Thoai
Tran
Chaos of Liti’s, Fablab Saigon and
Newway will be the three Vietnamese teams to compete with over 200
international rivals in the Space Apps Challenge hackathon competition to be
organized by the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) later
this year.
They are entering a global judging process whose
results will be announced in May, said the organizing board of Space Apps
Challenge, an incubator innovation program under NASA.
At the international event whose date has not been
confirmed, the Vietnamese teams will compete with other opponents coming from
around the world to utilize publicly available space and data to design
innovative “solutions” to a pre-determined series of global “challenges.”
The hackathon competition is part of NASA’s initiative
to teach people about space and to encourage open-source solutions to
addressing global needs of the Earth.
As part of the event, NASA will open up its data and
application programming interfaces to the wider global community to create
useful apps and devices for the global populace.
A hackathon is an event in which computer programmers
and others involved in software development, including graphic designers,
interface designers and project managers, collaborate intensively on software
projects.
Space Apps Challenge will likely offer a big
opportunity to developers and engineers who are fond of interacting with rich
data from NASA, as well as people who are very interested in space and life
sciences, according to the organizing board.
The event has witnessed steady growth with over 20
national competition locations in 2012 and approximately 80 national
competition locations in 2013, the board said on the competition’s website.
For 2014, there were approximately 95 sites, 671
projects and 8,194 participants joining the national rounds worldwide, it
added.
National competition in Vietnam
The three Vietnamese teams entered the global
nomination list comprising 201 candidates after beating 15 other local teams
at a six-hour hackathon competition in Ho
Chi Minh City on April 13.
During the Vietnam contest, they defeated
their rivals before a board of judges, most of whom are working in the
Vietnamese and international high-tech sectors.
The judges were Bui Van Quyen - assistant to the
Minister of Science and Technology and chairman of Evolable Co., Dinh Anh
Minh Quan, chairman of Dinh Vi So Co., Vo Anh Khoa, of the Academy of Science
and Technology of Vietnam, and Peter Nguyen from WebM Co.
The 18 teams showed their best products and solutions
at the final showdown at Golden
Rose Hotel
in District 3 after nearly 50 hours of non-stop preparatory work.
The winning teams were picked as their
products/solutions fitting the criteria of the competition including impacts
(on the community), creativity, feasibility-sustainability, and how skillful
their presentations were.
After being chosen to represent Vietnam, the
three winning teams received support from many local sponsors to create video
interpretation projects in preparation for the international competition.
The sponsors include many local and international
start-up businesses like Habataku, WebM, Officience, Ticketbox, Twenty.vn,
Tech in Asia, Saigon Hub, MyProClub, HATC,
and Viet Youth Entrepreneurs.
Heavily focused on ‘Earth Watch’
Among five categories of the national contest, most of
the products and solutions of the 18 teams focused on solving issues in the
category of ‘Earth Watch’, while two on ‘Robotics’, and the remaining on
‘Asteroids’, ‘Technology in Space’ and ‘Human Space Light’.
The Chaos of Liti's team won the first prize worth
VND25 million (US$1,200) with their "Glass Earth" project which
created a 3D “mashup" to display information gathered from various
sources, including NASA, into images and stories about the Earth.
The Saigon Fablab team was awarded the second prize
worth VND20 million ($900).
The project that Saigon Falab brought to the contest,
“Play It Cool”, was a game designed to collect temperature and humidity data
using a smartphone and then send the information to a cloud computing
platform via Bluetooth.
The people’s choice award went to Newway with an
application to test the user’s knowledge about the Earth and human beings
through fun games, with support from NASA data.
Thoai Tran - Binh Minh, Tuoitrenews
|
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét