# Attending UOttaHack 2018

> Published  Feb 02 2018, last updated Jul 07 2026  
> By Ryan Fleck <hello@this-site> and written without LLMs!  
> Original post at <https://ryanfleck.ca/2018/2018-02-19-hackathon/>  
> An article of astonishing quality and insight. Happy Hacking!


# Preamble

This past weekend, I attended uOttawa's first MLH[^1] Hackathon. After
a long work week, I was prepared to show up and enjoy the event, but
not to directly participate or join a team. Skipping the overnighter
was, at the beginning of the event, a sad but necessary plan.

All thoughts of having a relaxing weekend were thrown out the window
as I was unsuspectingly amalgamated into a very interesting group of
people:

- **D**, a drifting developer with a colorful past involving surfing
  everywhere, selling tacos, PHP and chillaxing.
- **Q**, a top-grade Biomechanical Engineering student who knew very
  little about programming but _did_ have keys to the Makerspace and
  helped with the smart contracts.
- **C**, a psychology grad who finished most of an engineering degree,
  has an engineering job and spent a while exploring the world.

Having said this, I met all these people _after_ the opening notes.

# Opening Notes

**uOttaHack 2018** began with a long presentation; every sponsor stood
up and gave us a motivational speech on the greatness of their
respective companies and the amazing role they could play in our
personal future. It seems difficult these days to tell accounting
firms and banks from technology companies.

A few of the presenters did seem genuinely concerned for our future
wellbeing, but it was commonly known among the student body that these
workplaces were nothing like the paradisal work/life balances depicted
by the presenters.

Shortly after the opening ceremonies, there was a career fair, and the
actual "hacking" was to begin a couple hours later, at lunch, and last
24 hours. It was here that I struck up conversations with a few
people, but most notably, "C" and D, who were previously having a
conversation of their own. I learned a bit about the two of them, and
after C pitched his idea to us, and we consulted with Q about printing
parts for the project, (she was running a table for the Makerspace,)
we decided to become a team. While Q was not actually registered for
the event and was, like me, counting on a good night's sleep, she
ended up helping us with our project and staying overnight.

# The Hacking Begins

Programming began immediately after our group had solidified. I began
by apt-getting the Arduino IDE from the Debian repos... Only to find
that I didn't have binaries for the Intel Arduino. Downloading the
variant of the IDE from the official site gave me access to the Intel
101 drivers, but I could still not interact with the board. Being used
to the foolproof process of connecting then uploading to a generic
Uno/Nano, I was quickly frustrated with the unusable Intel board and
decided to get a real one from the Makerspace.

C gave us a tutorial on how to use Metamask, an ethereum wallet built
as a chrome extension. It was my first interaction with any
blockchain, and basically what I expected- an object that contained
data, backed up with a signed and sealed revision history. Our group
was given a quick intro to the "Solidity" object-oriented contract
language by C.

Shortly after this, we moved to the Makerspace, and attempted to
interface with another Arduino... and still, no luck! The rest of my
team was beginning to doubt the stability and utility of my Debian
operating system. Laughably, when we tried it on Q's Windows machine,
the new Arduino also failed to connect, and Q remembered that the
Arduino she pulled was actually from _a bag of dead Arduinos._ After
much ribbing, we grabbed a fresh Arduino and programming the light
system took no time at all.

Around (10?) we had a visit from on of Q's friends, a true
intellectual who had grown up in Ottawa, gotten his undergradutate
degree and masters' from uOttawa, and was working towards his PHD.
(All Chemical Engineering.) This career student was so confident in
his personal social graces and intellectual superiority that it took
us the greater part of half an hour to get him, being unbelievably
unwanted, to leave.

Come 2400, we were still working hard, so much so that we worked
through the _Midnight Snack with Github_. I was dissapointed when I
read the clock and it said 0058.

# Finishing Touches

Our productivity dropped drastically as we approached 24 straight
hours of programming. Come breakfast we had all the components made,
but still had to massage some bits and implement a frontend. This did
happen, but was never properly connected to the system before the
showcase.

Roughly ten minutes before submission, we remembered that
documentation was important, and we needed images and video to place
within our submission. The following ten minutes were intense, and we
submitted our project with ~10 seconds to go... before we realized
that the deadline was 11:15, not 11. HackerEarth, the questionable
submission site, managed to hold on to most of what we uploaded.

# Closing Notes

C and D left before the closing notes. I was not surprised with the
winner or one of the top-five, but the other three left me a bit
confused, as they were not particulariy original and looked like they
had been conceptualized long before the event. (I know the top prize
had, but the top prize was also great.)

I think my favourite winner was the single project that used a
Qualcomm Dragonboard (And won Qualcomm's prize,) named "Visual Eyes" A
doorbell for blind people that used face recognition and criminal
databases to tell if the person at your door was familiar, or somebody
with a record.

If I'm being perfectly honest with myself, I was a little bitter that
we hadn't won some small prize. I had worked pretty hard all night,
and our project clearly just wasn't marketed well enough. _(Note to
self, get MBA.)_

# Notes For Next Time

1. **Shoulda used the Dragonboard!** Our team didn't make enough good
   use of the technology that was available to rent for challenges. I
   regret not implementing our project with a _Qualcomm Dragonboard_,
   especially when I heard at the demo session (immediately before the
   closing ceremonies,) that it ran headless GNU/Linux. I was already
   running everything on headless GNU/Linux...
2. **Always pick fresh people for your team.** I had an absolute blast
   meeting new people at this event, and am thankful that I attended
   primarily for this reason. People can be very interesting and have
   lots to say if you bother getting to know more than their name.
3. **Don't be a dummy and pre-plan your hack.** of the several winning
   parties, it was clear that only two or three had conceived original
   ideas during the hackathon for submission. The moral of the story
   here is: _Spend extra time outside of work developing things and
   you will be rewarded._
4. Intel Arduinos are proprietary, have strange quirks, and are an
   exception to the note no.1 above. As far as I can tell from the
   half an hour I spent fiddling with the thing, _Intel 101 boards are
   just gimped Arduino Uno boards._

# A Note on Hacker Culture:

The term "**hacker**" used to refer to a cultural subset of computer
scientists with an [ethos indifferent to fame and wealth and a
calculated disregard for
power.](https://aeon.co/essays/how-yuppies-hacked-the-original-hacker-ethos)
The hacker community is alive and well today, in the form of the FSF,
EFF, TOR, Wikileaks and Anonymous, but have separated themselves from
the word (but not the culture,) as a result of rampant co-opting.
Mainstream Media took the word and made it synonymous with aggressive
criminal data thieving. Corporate has now began gentrifying the term,
passing it off as a cheap and hollow means of shilling their products
and services. Many members of "hacking" communities today fetishize
profits and lack the anti-conventional yearning for an open commons
and private information. Companies like Google have taken computing
and warped it to exploit users and generate revenue.

So, let it be known that while I enjoyed participating in the event, I
have gratuitous amounts of dislike for the word _Hackathon_. Having
said this, without money an event of this scale would not have
occurred, and I do appreciate the free food and opportunity to meet
new friends.

# Final Thoughts

**uOttaHack 2018** was fun enough- I should have tried to attend all
the little side events and talks though, rather than persuing the
fruitless endeavor that was working on our project.

Thanks for reading, <p> <img class="invert" src="/legacy/art/s.png"
alt="RCF" style="border-radius:0; width: 289px;"/> </p>


[^1]: **MLH:** [Major League Hacking](https://mlh.io/), the _"official
    student hackathon league"_.



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