Blog

Hacks/Hackers inaugural Brussels gathering launches open data effort

Journalists and developers at the first Hacks/Hackers event in Belgium launched an effort Thursday to gather information on open databases in the country and on the European Parliament and Commission. Almost 50 people attended the event in Brussels, mostly hackers but with a strong representation from national media (like Le Soir, RTL-TVi, RTBF *) . The group is looking to hold their first hackaton in January. As an initial effort, the group decided to create a Google doc to collect URLs of open databases in Belgium and Brussels (European Parlement/Commission), which are quite lacking at the moment.

Nov 19, 2010

MIT project looking for WordPress users to beta test data visualization tools

An MIT research project is looking for beta testers for its Knight News Challenge proposal for a WordPress data visualization plugin. Sign up on their blog. As Professor David Karger writes, his team has created a WordPress plugin called Datapress that lets folks WYSIWYG author interactive visualizations of any data without any programming. Using the tool, users can drop maps, timelines, tables, charts, lists, thumbnail grids, and graphs into your article the same way images drop in an image.

Nov 19, 2010

Hacks/Hackers Brussels Inaugural Meetup: Thursday, Nov. 18

Brussels (and Belgium) is joining the Hacks/Hackers community. The first Hacks/Hackers Brussels meetup will be 7:30 to 10:00 p.m. Nov. 18 at The Pixel Wine Bar, in Brussels (map). RSVP here (cool place, but only 40 seats available). Stay tuned via Twitter (@hackshackersbru) and our Facebook page

Nov 13, 2010

Inaugural Meetup for Atlanta Chapter: Knight News Challenge Info Session

Hacks/Hackers Atlanta Twitter Logo

For Hacks/Hackers Atlanta‘s inaugural event and ONA Atlanta‘s second event, come learn about the Knight News Challenge, a grant competition for open-source news and information projects in geographic communities that gives away up to $5 million a year and has helped launch startups like Adrian Holovaty’s Everyblock and David Cohn’sSpot.us. In last year’s awards, the News Challenge received over 2,300 applications and gave out 12 grants totaling $2.74 million. Anyone can apply — domestic, international, individuals, companies, for-profit, non-profit. This also doubles as a social/networking event, with doors opening at 6:00 p.m. and casual presentation/info session starting at 6:45ish p.m.

Where: RíRa Midtown (1080 Peachtree St NE, Atlanta, GA 30309)

When: Monday November 22, 6:00 p.m.

Panel: Jennifer 8. Lee, Ian Bogost and Patton Hughes

Register here: http://www.meetup.com/Hacks-Hackers-Atlanta/calendar/15378590/

Nov 12, 2010

Seattle Hacks/Hackers kicks off with Korean tacos

News and tech nerds gathered at Havana Social Club Thursday night to kickoff the Seattle chapter of Hacks/Hackers and nosh on Hawaiian-Korean eats from Marination Mobile (thanks to Patch.com). The coming out party brought a nice mix of hacks (The Seattle Times, Seattle magazine, MSNBC, InvestigateWest, Capitol Hill Seattle blog and more) and hackers (including Adobe, Microsoft, Intersect, BigDoor and other local start ups) from around the Puget Sound area. Guests sipped on signature cocktails (The Hack, a shot of whiskey and a beer; the Hacker, a cocktail of Maker’s Mark, fresh lemon and honey), and shared ideas for future events.

Nov 12, 2010

NYC Data Visualization Extravaganza

The New York City chapter of Hacks / Hackers met on Nov. 9th for a jam packed information session on information and data visualization. The four presenters covered the gamut of information visualization, from online data-viz products, to just launched prototypes, to critical analyses of how graphics are being used in the media. The four speakers for the evening included Marc Rueter from Tableau Software, Matthew Ericson from the New York Times, Alex Lundry from TargetPoint Consulting, and Santiago Ortiz from Bestiario.

Nov 10, 2010

St. Louis Hacks/Hackers sets ‘awesome’ goal

The first St. Louis chapter meet-up was a great success. Fifteen hacks and hackers met for happy hour last Thursday, and expectations are high. When asked “Hacks/Hackers should ___,” the overwhelming answer was “be awesome.” (There was also a vote for “be pretty.” We’re going to try for both.) Participants are already talking about ways to work with data. In December, we hope to join several St. Louis tech groups for a bowling outing.

Nov 10, 2010

Seattle Hacks/Hackers Kicks off Thursday, Nov. 11 at Havana

The Seattle Hacks/Hackers chapter is kicking off on Thursday night at Havana on Pike Street. Reporters from The Seattle Times, Seattle Magazine, KING 5, Reuters, the Associated Press, MSNBC.com are all going to be there. Thanks to sponsorship from Patch, the event is free, but tickets are required. There are only twenty left. So hurry. Details are below. Date: Thursday, Nov. 11 Time: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Where: Havana, 1010 E.

Nov 9, 2010

Open All Night: The Great Urban Hack NYC

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Who is my landlord?

What are the politics of that restaurant?

When is the best time to catch a cab?

Where are the roaches?

Why do you call part of Chinatown the Lower East Side?

How can I be Pac-Man?!

These questions are answered by the apps cranked out overnight this past weekend at The Great Urban Hack NYC. The mission for the 80 or so journalists and developers there was to design, report on, code and create projects to help New Yorkers get the information they need while strengthening a sense of community. It was open to themes around news, politics, government information, arts, culture or education — pretty much any journalism or technology project (going as far buying views on YouTube related topics) that might help residents connect to each other or the city.

Great Urban Hack NYC, November 2010

It was a cumulation of months of discussion between Hacks/Hackers NYC and the Eyebeam Art + Technology Center. The sponsorship came from AolWNYC Radio, the Knight News Challenge, and Google, all of which helped pay for the fantastic food (Don Giovanni pizzaKati rolls and Rickshaw Dumplings) and gallons of coffee that kept everyone running. Or at least sitting. Extra power provided via Function Drinks and Wifi by Meraki. Plus we had speakers from StreetEasy, SeeClickFix, Bit.ly, Chartbeat, government agencies and NYC’s Big Apps contest talk about their APIs and other offerings. (Full disclosure: I work at WNYC.)

Nov 8, 2010