LA Hacks
LA Hacks Logo | |
Type | Hackathon |
---|---|
Founded | 2012 |
Place | UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA |
Slogan | The Hackathon of the West Coast |
Website |
www |
LA Hacks is an annual student-led hackathon hosted at University of California, Los Angeles's Pauley Pavilion founded by a Hadar Dor.
History
In April 2013, the inaugural LA Hacks event took place in CrossCampus in Santa Monica. 250 students from across Southern California showed up to hack for 24 hours. This event was the largest hackathon to take place in Los Angeles at the time.[1][2]
In April 2014, 1,500 hackers came to participate, establishing LA Hacks as the second largest hackathon in history. This was held at UCLA's Pauley Pavilion for 36 hours. Special guests came to speak at LA Hacks, including Evan Spiegel, founder and CEO of Snapchat, Alexis Ohanian, co-founder of Reddit, Baiju Bhatt, co-founder of Robinhood. Their hacks were judged by top tech industry professionals (i.e. Sam Altman – President of Y Combinator, Chris De Wolfe – CEO of SGN and Founder of Myspace, Tomer Kagan – Co-Founder and CEO of Quixey).[3][4][5][6]
In April 2016 the Los Angeles bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics signed on as a sponsor and presented two of the many challenges. Students were asked to create apps that would promote fitness and enhance the fan experience at live sporting events.[7]
References
- ↑ before
- ↑ after
- ↑ LA Times
- ↑ LA Weekly
- ↑ TechZulu
- ↑ The Daily Bruin.
- ↑ "L.A. Olympic bid group seeks input from young computer programmers". Los Angeles Times. April 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
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