In Review

They say good things come to those who wait鈥攂ut for competitors in DandyHack鈥檚 Spring 鈥15, Rochester鈥檚 second annual 鈥渉ackathon,鈥 there was a lot of pressure for ideas to come together quickly. Sponsored by RocHack, a student group of 鈥渃omputer enthusiasts,鈥 the event was open to any college student and drew about 94 participants. Teams of up to five people were invited to take advantage of the tools in Ronald Rettner Hall for Media Arts and Innovation to build anything鈥攕oftware projects are traditional in hackathons, but hardware and other projects were welcome. Thomas Pinella 鈥18, a computer science major from Winchester, Massachusetts, and Dylan Wadler 鈥18, a mechanical engineering major from Huntington, New York, took first place with Message in a Bottle (mibNote.com), a social media site designed to allow users to leave notes for others to find based on a global positioning system.
What is a hackathon, and what鈥檚 it like to compete in one?
Pinella: People either get together in small teams or work individually to create a unique project within a small period of time鈥36 hours, in our case. It can be very intense, and extreme lack of sleep is to be expected, but at the same time, it鈥檚 a lot of fun, and the end product makes it worth it.
How did you develop the idea for Message in a Bottle?
Pinella: Originally we wanted to do something with hardware. Our first great idea was to build a motorized skateboard you could sit on that uses your phone as a steering wheel鈥攅ssentially, a small car. But we soon realized we had neither the time nor the resources to complete this. After scratching a dozen other ideas鈥攊ncluding Morse code encoded text messages, and an Etch-a-Sketch app鈥攚e finally decided to make mibNote.com. It was one o鈥檆lock in the morning, we were tired of thinking of ideas, and Dylan really wanted to do something with GPS coordinates.
How does it work?
Pinella: When you go to mibNote.com, the site begins tracking your GPS coordinates to within six decimal places鈥攁pproximately an 11-centimeter accuracy鈥攁nd it will display notes that have been written near your location. You can leave your own notes by specifying a category, which we call tides (personal, business, travel, and so on), and attaching your signature鈥攂asically a pseudonym鈥攖o it. All notes are anonymous.
Wadler: There are also no users, so anyone could just go on and post a note. It encapsulates the idea of not really knowing who the sender is and just receiving a note in a bottle. That鈥檚 where the name comes from.
How would you like to develop it further?
Pinella: First, we want the site to look prettier. Eventually, we also want to add a revenue-making part so that we can pay for more hosting and make some profit. We were thinking that businesses could pay a monthly subscription that would allow them to leave notes advertising their businesses, and it would give them added features, such as being able to add images to their notes.
Wadler: I am going to work on an app for the Pebble smartwatch, possibly alongside an app for Android phones. That way more people could use mibNote without having to access a web browser.
How did being in the hackathon influence the app you developed?
Wadler: Coming up with ideas is always difficult, but with constraints I find that something awesome can come out of it. Having almost no time to complete our project, let alone think of an idea, couldn鈥檛 have been replicated outside the hackathon.
Pinella: Without the hackathon, there鈥檚 no way I would have spent close to eight hours trying to think of a cool idea to pursue. It acted as a catalyst and helped keep us focused. How can you procrastinate when you know that you have less than 36 hours total to create something from scratch?
What advice do you have for people interested in competing?
Wadler: You don鈥檛 have to reinvent the wheel. I know it鈥檚 by far the most interesting to do, and probably rewarding, to go and write all your code from scratch, or build something out of raw materials鈥攂ut you just can鈥檛 in such a narrow time frame. Hacking is the idea of taking things around you and making something new out of them, so don鈥檛 be afraid to break things. Take baby steps. You鈥檒l get to your end-goal if you get there in increments.
Pinella: I can now see the advantage of having an idea of what you want to do before the hackathon begins. That way, you can get started immediately. But don鈥檛 let not having an idea stop you from competing in a hackathon. It鈥檚 still a lot of fun, and you will probably think of something that you otherwise never would have thought of doing. But whatever your idea is, pursue it and finish it. The last 10 percent of a project can be the most difficult to complete, but also the most rewarding and the most important. A finished project is almost always more impressive than a half-finished project, even if it was a great idea. And get at least a few hours of sleep鈥攊t helps.