Table of Contents

ImpactXchange 2024 / Student projects web page

The ImpactXchange hackathon is an event where the students co-design a green coding hackathon for Malaysian students in one week and test it themselves in the second week.

Participation in the course

Phase 1: Defining the hackathon challenge

While defining the hackathon challenge, one should consider how to start the Green Coding Hack in Malaysia and instruct the students to start thinking of the challenge they want to solve using software solutions (Remember Elina's words in KTH that not all challenges are solvable by software).

Requirements for the hackathon setup

You should consider the following when giving instructions

The outcome of this phase:

ImpactXchange material

Phase 2: Designing the solution for the given challenge

For the ImpactXchange hackathon in Finland, we use “Waste management” as an application domain to help identify the necessary technologies.

In designing the solution, the technologies are divided into three parts (one per team)

Teams are supposed to

Outcome:

Phase 3: Tools for developing the challenge

The work on this phase is divided in two parts

What do we need to measure in green solution

Tools and frameworks for green code development

Phase 4: Measuring the footprint of the solution

Phase 4 aims to answer the questions of how to evaluate (in hackathon) that your part (backend, mobile, web) is efficient (green) and how to follow these aspects on the development project (both the team itself and the hackathon evaluators). Focus on approaches that help the team to follow their progress.

In order to answer the questions, you need to know

The outcome of this phase is guidelines for teams to follow their green progress in the development process. Remember Patricia Lago's words “unless we plan and design for sustainability, we won't get it. It just do not happen without proper planning”

Phase 5: Assessing the impact of the solution

Assessing the impact of the proposed solution aims to evaluate how the proposed solution changes/impacts the given challenge, i.e. we are thinking of the handprints of the software solution.

SUSAF - Sustainability Awareness Framework is one possible approach to find possible impacts, but there are also others that can be used.

Guidelines for assessing the impacts of the solution

Phase 6: Running the ImpactXchange hackathon in Malaysia

In this phase, the teams propose a model for running the ImpactXchange hackathon in Malaysia. In Malaysia, we have two weeks to run the hackathon, from innovation to solutions and their assessment.

Phase 7: Finalizing the ImpactXchange hack

Presenting our hack results (to be evaluated) through the following template

For those who are selected to run the hackathon in Malaysia in August the following documents need to be filled and accepted BEFORE our trip:

You need to arrange your travel, and we propose doing it as soon as possible so that the prices won't go up. The travel grant for flights is limited by the funder (around 1000e).The accommodation and food in Malaysia is covered by the project.

After the trip you need to make a travel bill with the following document

Visa requirements to Malaysia https://www.imi.gov.my/index.php/en/main-services/visa/visa-requirement-by-country/

Groups and their TEAM WikiPages

Group Application Name 1 Name 2 Name 3 Name 4 Name 5 Name 6
The Winners Aleksa Stanivuk Salsabeel Tantoush Ruben Huygens
The Mentors Arshia Saleem Kiran Singh Saud Muhammad Sharjeel Maqsood
The Real Winners Jacob White Hiba Bouhlal Mbanyick B Joof


Add more table lines if those are needed for additional teams!