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TaskTracker wins at W&M's First Ever Hackathon

Mike Pozulp (holder) and Nathan Scaff (holdee), winners of the Hackathon.After 24 furious hours of coding, freshman Mike Pozulp and team member Nathan Schaaf’s productivity tracking app TaskTracker was voted as the best overall app at the Hackathon, netting the team the $240 prize money.  The second prize of $120, given to the team with the most technologically interesting feature, was awarded to graduate students Yue Wang, Xin Qi, and Zhang Xu  for their infinite-recursion detection app.  

Given only 24 hours from when they learned the theme of the Hackathon; six teams raced to design, develop, and test their apps before they had to demo their final products.  Based on the theme of building something to make programming more efficient, teams implemented ideas ranging from a git workflow monitor to a source code extraction email program.  To build these apps, teams used many technological solutions, from Java web frameworks for user management systems to custom source control and some clever PHP.  Everyone in attendance was thoroughly impressed by what their fellow classmates built given such a short period of time.  Even for those who didn’t take home some extra cash, the amount of knowledge gained was well worth the time they invested.

(Left to right) Xin Qi, Yue Wang, and Zhang Xu, winners of the most interesting feature award.The Hackathon took place the weekend of April 7-8, and was the first such event hosted by the Department of Computer Science.  Due to the success and interest generated, plans are already being made to host another Hackathon this upcoming Fall.  Students can expect a similar event, with more opportunities to showcase their talents, as well as a revamped timeline to encourage even more participation.  We hope to see you at the next Hackathon in the Fall!