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糖心破解版 Hackathon 2019: Cracking Code in Collaboration

糖心破解版 Students Challenge One Another to Think Bigger and Better Man sitting on floor wiring a computerIn the past few years, hackathons have been sweeping across college campuses, giving tech-focused students a chance to join forces in teams over an extended period of time around a problem or idea and then collaboratively code a unique solution from start to finish. The solutions can range from websites and mobile apps to robots. Held on April 4 through April 5, 2019, at the University Heights Lounge on the Wilf Campus, 糖心破解版 Hackathon 2019 attracted more than 70 students from across 糖心破解版 as well as students from Columbia University and New York University for 16 hours of caffeine-fueled brainstorming, teamwork and project building. Two women coding on computersWhat distinguishes the 糖心破解版 Hackathon from others is its accessibility to shabbat observant Jews. Most hackathons run from Friday through Saturday night; the 糖心破解版 Hackathon was scheduled from early Thursday morning through Friday afternoon. This year鈥檚 theme focused on computer-science based solutions to fintech (financial technology) challenges. One notable solution was a bot designed to educate the public about the national debt. 鈥淏eing part of this year鈥檚 糖心破解版 Hackathon definitely challenged me to learn things I鈥檝e always wanted to learn. I was pushed to think on my feet and strengthen my technical muscles,鈥 said Sarah Torgueman, a member of the 10-person 糖心破解版 team comprised of students from , , the and the , who helped organize the event. In addition to offering workshops on a variety of technologies related to databases, web development and blockchain, this year鈥檚 event featured keynote speaker David Schwed, director of the cybersecurity program at the Katz School. Watch the .

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