Students Tackle Road Trips, Online Distraction, And More At HackPrinceton
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It feels like college Hackathon season is in full swing, and that’s why I’ve been making it a point to drive around the Northeast and check out what all these undergrad hackers are capable of cobbling together in just 24 hours. Last Saturday I pulled over at Princeton University just in time to see 30-some sleep-deprived teams demo their projects at HackPrinceton — here’s a quick peek at some of the clever hacks that caught my eye:
Tamagetitdone
And how does it do that? In case the name didn’t tip you off, a Tamagotchi lookalike follows your mouse cursor around and eats elements off the page to keep you from getting too side-tracked — you can fiddle with its hunger tolerance too so it doesn’t devour the contents of your Facebook news feed when you’re browsing during your downtime.
As it happens, the team behind Tamagetitdone is no stranger to the Hackathon scene — Lehigh University’s Greyson Parrelli, Ben Chen, and Michael Toth also developed the SparkTab project that John was so fond of at the PennApps Hackathon. The trio had to settle for second back at PennApps, but this time around they picked up first prize in the software division — a cool $1,000.
InstantKarma
Created by Kyle Dhillon (Princeton) and Ned Williamson (Carnegie Mellon), InstantKarma is a program that monitors Reddit’s new submissions and analyzes them to determine which are most likely to become popular (and by extension, which ones you should comment on). Can’t come up with a witty riposte of your own? The program can also tell if a particular submission is a repost, and displays comments that did well the last time for easy recycling.
SeeMail
Once you’ve signed up for SeeMail, you punch in the names of your intended recipients on the SeeMail page, and it generates a snippet that you text into your email client of choice. After that you compose and send the email as usual — when the recipient opens said email, the SeeMail status page automatically updates to reflect the status change. According to Frank Wu the service is geared more toward curious individual users than for those who managed massive mailing lists, but SeeMail seems to work like a charm despite its humble origins.
Rd Trpr
To top it all off, Rd Trpr also collects and displays information about landmarks and local attractions near your current location, just to make sure that your trip is as eventful as possible. It’s still early days for the service, but it certainly seems to work — you can see the route the Rd Trpr took to get back to CMU here. With enough polish I could definitely see it picking up some steam down the road (sorry, couldn’t resist).
Drawing Robot
The kicker? The “navigator” would create that course by tracing one out in mid-air, which a Microsoft Kinect would interpret. The team took a photo of the demo area from above that acted as a canvas of sorts — from there, the user could position a wireframe avatar of himself on top of the image and sketch out a path that the orange robot (mostly) stuck to.