(part 1 of [1,2,3,4])
This post is third in a series of articles on HackMIT’s 2015 Puzzle! If you haven’t already, be sure to check out part 1 and part 2.
Every year, HackMIT releases a puzzle as a fun thing for hackers to do over the summer…
(part 2 of [1,2,3,4])
Puzzles three and four focused on encoding information in different, non-traditional ways. We hoped that hackers would get creative and try out many different things before finally arriving at the…
Congratulations to all of the teams that competed in this year’s HackMIT! Teams had 24 hours to use their ingenuity and…
(part 4 of [1,2,3,4])
What MIT Blueprint means to me.
This year marks the third ever official HackMIT. Even though it seems like there’s at least three or four hackathons…
This year for HackMIT, our organizing team sought to create a unique, memorable experience for hackers. We’ve…
I’ve written about good competition judging methods before. It’s hard to do well, but it can be done.
It turns out that it’s hard to scale.
How often do people actually read FAQs? I was curious about this while working on the splash page for the HackMIT 2015 website, so I decided to perform a simple experiment to try to figure out how many people read our FAQ. I added this item somewhere in the middle of the FAQ:
These were the top 10 stories published by HackMIT Stories in 2015. You can also dive into monthly archives for 2015 by using the calendar at the top of this page.