Doha - BNA
Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar (CMU-Q) will host the fifth annual 24-hour hackathon on January 27 to 28, 2017.
The CarnegieApps Hackathon is an annual programming competition in which university students work in teams in a 24-hour race to build mobile applications, web applications or games.
This year’s event is open to undergraduate students from all majors from universities throughout the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, according to Qatar News Agency (QNA).
"We’re excited to continue the great tradition of Hackathon here at CMU-Q, and we’re excited to host students from Qatar and across the region. Hackathon is a great opportunity for students to put the skills they are learning to the test, and to meet and share ideas with like-minded ‘hackers,’" said Vishan Popat, a business administration student at CMU-Q and the president of CarnegieApps.
The competition features five categories, including a new one sponsored by the 'Education Above All' programme, Protect Education in Insecurity and Conflict (PEIC). In the new category, young developers are challenged to think creatively about how technology can be used to protect children in schools in conflict zones around the world.
Hackathon is organized by CarnegieApps, a student-led club at Carnegie Mellon Qatar, QNA reported.
Source: BNA