Jaga:
Autor: foundME • 13. aprill 2020
Jaga:

The World Hacked Over The Weekend

Headquarters of the Global Hack in Estonia.
12,000+ participants from 98 countries came together over a 48hr period to develop practical solutions to tackle COVID-19 head-on.

The Global Hack event partnered with tech enthusiasts, business leaders, project managers, marketing experts, designers, and innovators from around the world to exchange ideas and practices to develop creative and practical prototypes. But it’s also about far more than tech, the organizers of the event sum it up.

The founders of the global movement believe the event couldn’t have succeeded without the support of the UN and the European Commission, an army of world-class thought leaders, the support of worldwide media, and the dedication of a team of ‘locked down’ volunteers worldwide who donated hundreds of hours of their time to bring the event to life.

The overall winner of The Global Hack is SunCrafter - Solar Powered Light-Disinfection. “I’m super super happy, thank you, means a lot to our team and we really think our solution is kind of a missing puzzle to having exclusive hygiene to everyone,” said Florian Heep team leader for SunCrafter, the overall winner of The Global Hack.

Interviewed from his home in Berlin, Florian already opened up on what they are planning next “I’m totally overwhelmed at the moment, but we are getting serious. A good thing is that we already went into many conversations with our partners and also generated a lot of interests with possible collaboration partners, we wanna try it out in Ghana and work with refugee camps, also bring the technology into public spaces.”

Seotud lood
European Commission To Put Up Five Figure Prize Fund For The Global Hack
Global Tech Community To Mobilise In The Largest Online Hackathon
Largest Online Hackathon Paves Way To Counter Impact

The idea behind SunCrafter is toachieve complete protection for every human in this crisis, a hygiene solution has to be inclusive for everyone and accessible wherever needed. Current disinfection methods are location-dependent, unsustainable, require maintenance or technical know-how. Therefore, they are not suitable for many use-cases. The idea of a light-disinfection application was developed from scratch during this hackathon. Far-UVC-Light is proven to be a safe and efficient disinfection method, which can be used barrier-free solely by bathing your hands.

Another important factor: This solution doesn't need maintenance, produces no waste and is fully sustainable since it's powered by renewables from circular resources. The light-disinfection application was successfully developed and is now running with two of our systems. The disinfection station will provide a holistic solution for a hygiene method as a global standard. By providing easy, affordable and barrier-free access to hand disinfection, we can help reduce the spread of viruses like corona, both within Europe and abroad. Check out their video pitch.

Second place went to Act On Crisis - secure emotional support that fits your cultural background

According to the Lithuanian government before this crisis approx 12% of the population was in need of psychological support. There’re currently 3bln people in lockdown which means that at least 360mln are experiencing strong emotional imbalance. Due to crisis when the number of unemployment is rising, increased anxiety is inevitable. Act on Crisis hopes to cover at least 1000 hr/week by 1on1 video calls or community rooms guarded by professionals we could help at least 4500 people per week. Bring those in need together fostering dialogue instead of suffering in loneliness. Check out their video pitch.

Third runner up for the best idea at The Global Hack isMaterial Mapper.

Their main idea is to keep construction waste out of the landfills and inside the buildings. 40 % of global waste is from construction, new EU regulations/quota for 2020 say 70 % of materials in new buildings must be reused. Real-estate developers and construction companies have no idea where to get access to the reusables, municipalities hold this information without knowing it in many different databases and data-structures.

The construction industry is required to follow new regulations - the municipalities need to provide tools for their residents to comply with regulations and prevent perfectly reusable materials from ending up in their landfills, but a viable solution is lacking. Check out their video pitch.

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