this post was submitted on 02 Jul 2023
4 points (100.0% liked)

Programming

13405 readers
1 users here now

All things programming and coding related. Subcommunity of Technology.


This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

As the title said. I have participated in several hackathons over the last decade (10 hackathons).

And a thing I have noticed is that, in the last hackathons I went, winners were selected based on the inclusivity of their idea and not on their ability to build such idea.

To clarify, this were blockchain hackathons (I don't know if this can be relevant)

Examples

So I don't just sound like someone complaining, let me give examples.

In one big blockchain hackathon organized by Eth Global (a very big group) one of the 10 winners was a project for helping women and people of color. They presented only a presentation.

In another smaller hackathon, one of the winners was a great idea on how to fight censorship to help LGBTQ+ access the information they need in current times (and this idea was very well thought, I really like it). Again, they only presented slides, but didn't have any code at all.

My problem with it

It may be something new, or maybe I'm outdated but when I go to a hackathon, I expect people to actually build a proof of concept and present it.

I always thought that was the idea, get together and see what you can build in 24/48 hours. And at the end, the winners are selected by a mix of how original their idea was + their ability to actually build it.

When I see a team winning by presenting a project without having actually built enough to show it, I feel cheated. It feels like I'm watching Shark Tank or any show where participants try to sell the idea to VCs, instead of a programming tournament.

The fact that hundreds of people spend one or two all nighters planning a project that they can actually do in that time, fighting bugs, designing the site, testing their functionality and struggling with all the process of software engineering just to see that the winner didn't actually do anything of that and proposed an idea that maybe it can not even be done in a hackathon, is frustrating.

I want to clarify, my problem is not that I didn't win, my problem is that I always look up to the winners, I want to see their project, how it works, how amazing it is, how they were able to build it in such a short notice, and when I see that they didn't actually build anything, I have the problem.

When I participated in GameJams, having a submission was always a requirement, and I could play hundreds of amazing games, original or not. And the winner usually was someone that make a game from which I can learn a lot.

So, coming again to my question:

Have hackathons became too political? Is it only a blockchain hackathon thing?

I really enjoy going to hackathons, but this have been a bit frustrating between the last ones.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] [email protected] 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

What does that have to do with politics?

The question seems to come from the mindset where, to put it jokingly, "there's two genders: male and political. Two sexualities: straight and political. Two races: white and political". Because while yes, having a no code solution win a hackathon isn't usually the default, this has absolutely nothing to do with "politics" and based on the examples given it's not even clear if the hackathons were the kind where you can just submit a well thought out idea instead of working code.