Free-food finder app wins 'Judge's Choice' at 2020 HackMT

Jan 27, 2020 at 10:00 am by Voice Wire

2020 HackMT

One of the winning MTSU HackMT teams created an online app that can provide free food for the needy and help feed the homeless. Another would work in tandem with Toys for Tots and The Salvation Army’s Angel Tree program at Christmastime. 

Joined by industry mentors and alumni, imaginative college students from across the region collaborated for 36 hours during the fifth annual HackMT, which wrapped up Sunday, Jan. 26, in the MTSU Science Building.

The hackathon gathers software developers, visual designers, programmers and computer science/computer information systems students from universities to form teams to invent new web platforms, games, mobile apps and electronic gadgets.

Students from Belmont, Vanderbilt, Motlow and elsewhere joined dozens from MTSU at the hackathon.

Aziza Mirsaidova, 21, an MTSU junior finance major from Tashkent Uzbekistan, said her 10-member Nom/Nom team’s app was essentially a free-food finder. "It actually is not only for giving away food, but helping people who need food," she said. 

MTSU computer science Chair Medha Sarkar, left, and graduate student Steven Sheffey enjoy competing in one of the Infinity team’s games they created during the 36-hour HackMT in the Science Building’s first-floor atrium. MTSU sophomore team member Myles Chisholm, right, assists. More than a dozen teams and 150 students competed at the fifth annual event Sunday, Jan. 26.(MTSU photo by Cat Curtis Murphy)
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One of the teams in the fifth annual HackMT at MTSU collaborates to apply the finishing touches to its project just before the judged science fair portion of the event Sunday, Jan. 26, in the Science Building’s second-floor atrium. (MTSU photo by Cat Curtis Murphy)
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MTSU computer science assistant professor Josh Phillips, left, listens as Jessica Wijaya, a junior computer science major, explains her team’s project during the science fair portion of the fifth annual HackMT at MTSU, which concluded Sunday, Jan. 26, in the Science Building’s Liz and Creighton Rhea Atrium. (MTSU photo by Cat Curtis Murphy)
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HackMT judges chose the Nom/Nom team recipient of the fifth annual Hacker’s Choice Award Sunday, Jan. 26, at the conclusion of the 36-hour hackathon event in the MTSU Science Building. The team creataed an online app for people to obtain free food and to help feed the homeless. The team also earned co-first place honors, overall, along with the L3Harris Technologies team. (MTSU photo by Cat Curtis Murphy)
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MTSU computer science Chair Medha Sarkar, left, and graduate student Steven Sheffey enjoy competing in one of the Infinity team’s games they created during the 36-hour HackMT in the Science Building’s first-floor atrium. MTSU sophomore team member Myles Chisholm, right, assists. More than a dozen teams and 150 students competed at the fifth annual event Sunday, Jan. 26.(MTSU photo by Cat Curtis Murphy)
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One of the teams in the fifth annual HackMT at MTSU collaborates to apply the finishing touches to its project just before the judged science fair portion of the event Sunday, Jan. 26, in the Science Building’s second-floor atrium. (MTSU photo by Cat Curtis Murphy)
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MTSU alumnus Kenny Pyatt (Class of 2001) with Technology Advice in Nashville, Tennessee, mentored an 18-member (mostly MTSU freshmen and sophomores) team named Charity Toy Tracker to help make children happier at Christmas. 

"I love the event (HackMT). It’s fun to mentor," said Pyatt, who added they worked on the project until 4 a.m. Sunday before returning later. "Selfishly, I recruit people from the event to be hired at our company." He said about 12 have landed jobs. 

Murfreesboro Discovery School third-grader Alex Otter, 9, son of MTSU biology professor and Data Science Institute co-director Ryan Otter, enjoyed the "Crazy Connect" team’s augmented reality mini games. He and Maxwell Wovchko, 12, a Brentwood, Tennessee, Middle School sixth-grader, also had a blast playing the popular Infinity team’s five games.

Infinity team member Daniel Cox, 31, an MTSU junior computer science major from Memphis, Tennessee, called it a "very positive and supportive experience. We pushed ourselves. I was motivated by (HackMT veteran) Steven Sheffey (MTSU graduate student). … It was a nice, diverse level of academia around the team."

MTSU graduate student Kevin Barrett, 23, became involved with the data science project led by professor Charlie Apigian because "they had what I was looking for. … I felt like I learned a lot more in this 36-hour event than you can in an entire class. It’s much more focused." Apigian is co-director of the MTSU Data Science Institute.

Nom/Nom and L3Harris Technologies tied for first place in a judges’ vote. Charity Toy Tracker finished second. Car-Hackers, with four Belmont University students and one from Motlow State who is planning to transfer to MTSU in the fall, placed third.

Nom/Nom also earned the Hacker’s Choice Award.

"All of the teams and students worked really hard," said MTSU computer science assistant professor Josh Phillips.

Asurion, a title sponsor along with L3Harris, presented a Raspberry Pi to Rafal Sobachi, 23, an MTSU senior information systems major from Jaddah, Saudia Arabia, in a door prize drawing.

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