Junction is a hackathon organizer with headquarters Espoo, Finland. Started in 2015, Junction grew to be one of the largest organizers in Europe. In 2018 it expanded globally with a Junction event at Tsinghua University in China and cooperation with Chinese and South Korean universities bringing high performing students to attend the event in Helsinki.[1]
Formation | 2015 |
---|---|
Type | Student-run non-profit organization |
Purpose | Bridging the gap between creators by making everyone fall in love with technology. |
Location | |
Key people | Iida Loukkaanhuhta (CEO) |
Website | http://www.hackjunction.com |
During the years Junction introduced various formats of events to its public, the biggest one being their yearly Junction Hackathon. This event brings together developers, designers, and entrepreneurs from around the world and helps them build solutions to real world challenges from local and multinational companies.[2]
History
editJunction 2015
editJunction was first launched in 2015. The event was held on November 6-8th in Kattilahalli, Helsinki and gathered more than 550 participants and resulted in 145 different projects. Notable partners included Uber, Finnair, Supercell, Reaktor, and others.[3][4]
The winner Junction 2015 was Slush Smackdown, from the Supercell Unlimited track. The team created a game where the players program their own boxer who then competes against other players' codes in real-time. It also won the whole Slush Hacks -hackathon competition main prize, worth 20 000 EUR.[5]
Junction 2016
editJunction 2016 was held on November 25–27 in Wanha Satama, in Katajanokka, Helsinki, Finland. About 1300 participants from over 77 nationalities attended the hackathon. Partners included Supercell, Zalando, the European Space Agency, General Electric, Sitra, Tieto, UPM and others.[6][7][8][9]
The teams had 48 hours to develop their ideas and afterwards demo them to other attendants and judges. The main prize for the winning idea of the 2016 event was 20 000 EUR, and many companies offered their own bounties for solving challenges in a specific way or using pre-specified technology.[10] Teams were provided a number of different API's and other emerging technologies to develop their concepts including Oculus Rifts, HTC Vives, Apple Watches, 3D-printers, Microsoft Hololens, and Estimote Beacons among others.
The winner team was suju.online, who created a tool for event organizers and public transportation decision makers that allows them to design dynamic routing for the self-driving bus. The team originated from the local Aalto University and the hack was part of the Future of Mobility track.[11]
Junction 2017
editJunction 2017 was held on November 24–26 in Dipoli, the main building of the Otaniemi campus of Aalto University. About 1500 participants from over 90 nationalities attended the hackathon.[12] Partners included Spotify, Daimler, Smartly.io, European Space Agency, Microsoft and others.[13]
As always, the teams had 48 hours to work on their projects, with the event ending on Sunday with a demo expo. This year, the winner of the 20 000 EUR main prize was appointed using a new judging process. An open source technology called Gavel was used first to determine the finalists from each track. Then, a panel of expert judges inspected each finalist in delicate detail, even going through the project's code repositories.
The main prize was won by team Glados. The team created Signvision, a tool for maintenance personnel to map out traffic signs that need to be repaired. The hack was part of the Big Data track.[14]
Junction 2018
editJunction 2018 was held on November 23–25 in Dipoli, Espoo, Finland. About 1300 participants from all over the world attended the hackathon.[15] Partners included Facebook, Daimler, Supercell, McKinsey, Epic Games, Vkontakte, Ericsson and others.[16]
The teams had 48 hours to work on their projects, with the event ending on Sunday with a demo expo. For 2018, the reviewing process for the main-prize winner was improved further to make it more transparent for the participants. Instead of a multi-level process that was unclear to participants, Junction 2018 used a peer reviewing system, where the participants themselves chose the main winner.[17]
The winner project was Oneiro, created by the previous winning team Glados.[15] Oneiro is an application that lets electric vehicle owners rent their EV chargers for others in need.[18]
Junction 2019
editJunction 2019 was held on November 15–17 in the Väre building, where the Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture and The Aalto University School of Business are located. About 1500 participants from all over the world attended the event.[19] Partners included CGI, Ericsson, Rovio, Microsoft, Valmet, Sitra, Business Finland and many more.[20]
Junction 2020 - Connected
editJunction 2020 - Connected was held on November 6–8. The Covid-19 pandemic opened the doors for a hybrid event, gathering people all over the world to simultaneously hack in both physical locations and online. Partners included Genelec, HKScan, Paulig, OP, Supercell, Aito and Brella.[21]
The winner project was Saavi - healthy finance. The team presented a mobile solution for banks that helps their customers to understand the level of financial health by analyzing spendings and subscriptions with a help of machine learning — and got an entertaining experience of interaction with personal finance in AR.[22]
Junction 2021
editJunction 2021 was held on November 19–21. The hackathon was once again organized in a hybrid form, participants could attend live from one of the 8 hubs scattered around the world or join the challenge online on Gather. Partners included Huawei, Kone, CGI, Miro, Oras and others.
The main prize was won by team Nice-ify. The team created a solution that replaces hateful language with a nice-ified version in voice-chat environments.
Junction Main Prize Winners
editYear | Project Name | Team Members |
---|---|---|
2015 | Slush Smackdown | Tuomas Husu, Kimmo Koivisto, Jaakko Nygren, Timo Lehto |
2016 | Suju.online | Matti Parkkila, Aleksi Jokela, Jere Vaara, Aleksi Tella, Henri Nurmi |
2017 | Signvision | Ville Toiviainen, Andreas Urbanski, Teemu Taskula |
2018 | Oneiro | Ville Toiviainen, Andreas Urbanski, Teemu Taskula |
2019 | Tassu Passu | Tulika Ganoo, Yevhenii Kalashnyk, Reinis Skorovs, Ronalds Sovas |
2020 [23] | Saavi – Healthy Finance | Alexander Zimin, Andrey Krylov, Andrey Volodin, Anton Lebedev, Egor Petrov |
2021 | Nice-ify | Bryce Cronin |
2022 | Bitter Sweet | Donghoon Jang, Sunghun Kim, Junseong Kim, Chansu Park |
2023 | Driving Change - In the Blink for Safety | Markus Andersson, David Enberg, Alex Granlund, Johannes Peltola |
2024 | BREAKDANCE | Frank Sandqvist |
Other events and concepts
editHel Tech
editHel Tech is a non-profit tech meetup organized monthly in Helsinki, Finland. The meetups consist of keynote speeches, demos, research showcases and discussions, all focusing on a current tech topic. Past speakers have included Risto Siilasmaa (Chairman, Nokia & F-Secure), Ilkka Paananen (Founder & CEO, Supercell), Lidia Perovskaya (Project Manager, VKontakte), Kimmo Kanto (Head of Space, Business Finland), Anne Oikarinen (Senior Security Consultant, Nixu) and many more.[24][25]
JunctionX
editJunctionX is a global hackathon program launched in 2018 through which local teams across the world can organize a hackathon event in their own home city. JunctionX has been organized in various cities around the world including Tokyo (Japan), Hanoi (Vietnam), Budapest (Hungary), Seoul (South Korea), Thuwal (Saudi Arabia) and many more.[26][27][28] In 2020 JunctionX will expand to Exeter (United Kingdom), Algiers (Algeria) and Barcelona (Spain).[28]
Other events
editTech Race
editTech Race is a series of smaller hackathons where cities across Finland and Europe compete against each other.[29]
Terminal
editTerminal is the official pre-event of Junction. During Terminal participants take part in different activities in the Helsinki area and attend events hosted by partner companies.[30]
Stupid Hack
editA smaller hackathon event where instead of solving companies' real challenges the participants compete on who comes up with the stupidest idea and execution.
Organization
editJunction is a volunteer-based, non-profit organization composed mainly of students from different Finnish universities.[31] It is owned by the non-profit foundation Startup Säätiö, but gathers all of its funding from the partnership contracts between its partner companies.
Other notable hackathon events
editReferences
edit- ^ Lappalainen, Elina. "Opiskelijahackathon Junction houkuttelee Suomeen huippuosaajia jopa Kiinan kovimmasta yliopistosta". Tivi (in Finnish). Retrieved 2019-10-22.
- ^ Swallow, Erica (2015-11-16). "In Finland, Big Businesses Get Scrappy with Startups". Huffington Post. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
- ^ "In Finland, Big Businesses Get Scrappy with Startups". www.huffingtonpost.com. 16 November 2015. Retrieved 2017-03-06.
- ^ "Junction Brings Together Best Talent In The Nordics". www.arcticstartup.com/. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
- ^ Tuomas, Jaakko, Kimmo, Timo &. "Slush Smackdown – Code school on steroids". Slush Smackdown – Code school on steroids. Retrieved 2017-08-28.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Junction Hackathon Riihi and Isaacus". www.sitra.fi/. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
- ^ "Tieto doubles its hackathon efforts before Slush – enters Junction with two challenges". www.tieto.com/. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
- ^ "Reframe the Supply Chain". www.upm.com. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
- ^ "Finland has hackathons for everything – from cultural heritage to state-run railway operators". www.nordic.businessinsider.com. Retrieved 2017-03-06.
- ^ gbs (2016-12-09). "Junction, November 25-27th, 2016 in Helsinki, Finland: 48 Hours to Build the Future". www.global-business-school.org. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
- ^ "Suomalaiset koodarit veivät voiton suuressa hackathonissa – itseohjautuvien bussien palvelu toi 20 000 euroa". www.tekniikkatalous.fi. 28 November 2016. Retrieved 2017-03-06.
- ^ "Junction 2017". Junction. Retrieved 2018-12-24.
- ^ "Junction 2017 Devpost". Junction 2017. Retrieved 2018-12-24.
- ^ Lappalainen, Milla (2017-11-27). "Junction 2017 Winner: A Mix of Machine Learning and Cool UX". Junction. Retrieved 2018-12-24.
- ^ a b Lappalainen, Milla (2018-11-27). "This trio has hacked the hackathon: Ville, Andreas and Teemu won Junction for the 2nd time". Junction. Retrieved 2018-12-24.
- ^ "Junction". Junction. Retrieved 2018-12-24.
- ^ Lappalainen, Milla (2018-11-19). "Forget the judges! Participants to choose the winner at Junction". Medium. Retrieved 2019-12-19.
- ^ Junction 2018 hackathon entry | 1st prize (main competition) @ Junction 2018 | 1st prize Ensto mobility challenge @ Junction 2018: teamglados/oneiro, Team Glados, 2019-11-18, retrieved 2019-12-19
- ^ Luoto, Esa (2019-11-20). "Junction 2019: CGI:n haasteet Keskon ja Sitran kanssa ennätyssuosioon Euroopan suurimmassa hackathonissa". CGI.
- ^ Junction (2019-12-17). "The winners of Junction 2019". Medium. Retrieved 2019-12-19.
- ^ "Junction | Hack the future". connected.hackjunction.com. Retrieved 2022-03-07.
- ^ Junction (2020-11-10). "The Winners of Junction 2020 Connected". Medium. Retrieved 2021-02-08.
- ^ "The Winners of Junction 2020 Connected". 10 November 2020.
- ^ "Heltech | Tech Worth Exploring". www.heltech.org. Retrieved 2019-12-19.
- ^ "Junction | Hel Tech". www.hackjunction.com. Retrieved 2019-12-19.
- ^ "Junction | JunctionX For Organizers". Junction.
- ^ Junction (2019-09-18). "The first JunctionX year was a breakthrough — four new countries, and we're just starting out". Medium. Retrieved 2019-12-19.
- ^ a b "Junction | JunctionX". Junction.
- ^ "Tech Race". Junction | Tech Race.
- ^ "Junction | Terminal". www.hackjunction.com. Retrieved 2019-12-19.
- ^ "Junction Facebook Page info". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2017-06-05.