

College and high school students were among the winners in the fifth annual University of Âé¶¹´«Ã½–AT&T Mobile Tech Hackathon held March 9–10 at Sacred Hearts Academy.
The event drew a record 200 participants. Prizes totaling $8,000 were distributed in eight categories to teams who had just 24 hours to build an app.
Team Aloha won the best overall app grand prize of $2,500. The team built an app that brings old-fashioned postcards into the 21st century using an augmented reality app. Team Turretz, which included student Mirabela Medallon, won the $1,000 first-place prize for best entertainment/gaming app with a 3D battlefield in which players defend themselves using turrets to ward off hordes of enemies. Six other teams, including one from Waipahu High School, won prizes totaling $4,500.
Governor David Ige and UH President David Lassner served as Hackathon judges. They were joined by UH Information and Computer Sciences Professor and AT&T RAN (Radio Access Network) Director Bryan Ito.
“This is a great example of a collaboration that benefits our talented tech students and the state¡¯s growing tech industry,” said Lassner.
“It was a great night that once again showcased the many talented students who make Âé¶¹´«Ã½ proud,” said Ige, who earned an electrical engineering degree from UH in the late 70s.
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 theme this year was entertainment and gaming.
This is a great example of a collaboration that benefits our talented tech students and the state¡¯s growing tech industry.
—David Lassner
sponsors the Hackathon in partnership with the UH and the , a consortium of the . AT&T also sponsors the event and provides the prizes.
, professor and chair of information and computer sciences said participating in a hackathon is a valuable learning tool. “The students are outside their classroom comfort zone and find other people who compliment their skills. A hackathon reflects more of the real work environment and helps with their presentation skills.”
“Our partnership with the University of Âé¶¹´«Ã½ is part of the effort to encourage interest among our youth in technology,” said Carol Tagayun, AT&T director of external affairs.
UH student and past Hackathon winner Stephani Diep said it¡¯s a lot of fun and a smart career move. “Recruiters notice these things. They say wow, you did a Hackathon, tell me about it,” Diep said. Diep, who graduates in May, has landed a position at Google.
Other key Hackathon partners include , Âé¶¹´«Ã½¡¯s premiere software development boot camp, , and .
