

The held the fourth annual , March 10–11 at Sacred Hearts Academy. The event drew 148 participants. Cash prizes totaling $7,000 were distributed in eight categories.
The 24-hour hackathon is designed for those interested in coding mobile apps, web apps, or hacking hardware solutions. Members of Âé¶¹´«Ã½’s tech community joined to network with students and others interested in technology to see what they could build overnight.
The teams had a mixture of creative talent and development skills. They created their web, Android or iOS apps from conception to implementation. Each team had three minutes to present their finished mobile app to the panel of judges.
The goal of a hackathon is to create a sustainable environment for aspiring and seasoned developers to deploy a mobile app with a website backend that is fully hosted in the cloud. The event also aims to spur innovative ideas and help entrepreneurs and startups build new prototypes and some early market validation.
, UH Mānoa professor and chair of , said a hackathon could produce the next titan in the tech industry. “Imagine what that will do to Âé¶¹´«Ã½’s image and standing, not to mention boosting the salaries in local tech jobs and stemming the brain drain to the mainland and foreign countries,” Chin said.
Hackathon winners

UH Mānoa student Clay Nakamura won the best app grand prize of $2,500 for developing an app that takes recommendations from r/listentothis subreddit, downloads the songs and plays them using a Rasberry Pi. He also won $1,000 for the best entertainment and gaming app. The other winning teams split the additional cash prizes totaling $3,500.
DJ Reddit awarded Grand Prize—Overall and Entertainment/Gaming 1st?Place
- Tyler (Clay) C Nakamura, UH Mānoa student
Gapcha awarded Entertainment/Gaming 2nd?Place
- Brandon Bards
- Joelle Torneros
- Tony Gaskell, UH Mānoa graduate
- Sean Nakamura, UH Mānoa?graduate
- Joseph Carlson
Demeter won Best Use of M2X and Best IoT 1st?Place
- Terry Palomares, UH Mānoa student
- Jonathan Robello, UH Mānoa?student
- Torsten Vaivai-Soderberg, Kapiʻolani CC graduate
- Austin Haruki, UH Mānoa graduate
- Brian Mayeshiro
Makaʻala won Best IoT 2nd?Place
- Davis McKay
Multipass awarded Most Technical
- Aisis Chen
- Bradford Baris, UH Mānoa graduate
- Andrew Yamamoto, UH Mānoa student
Village won UI/UX
- Gina Watanabe, UH Mānoa student
- Il Ung Jeong, UH Mānoa student
AT&T sponsors the hackathon in partnership with the UH Information and Computer Sciences Department and the Pacific Center for Advanced Technology Training. Other key partners include DevLeague, Âé¶¹´«Ã½ʻs premiere software development boot camp, the High Technology Development Corporation, and Sacred Hearts Academy.
For more information, read the .
