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TDRA announces ‘UAE Hackathon 2022’ winners

The UAE Telecommunications and Digital Government Regulatory Authority (TDRA) announced the winners of the UAE Hackathon 2022, held for the fifth consecutive year under the theme “Data for Happiness and Wellbeing”.

The winners were announced during the closing ceremony at the University City Hall of Sharjah, in the presence of Hessa Bint Essa Buhumaid, Minister of Community Development, Majed Sultan Al Mesmar, TDRA Director-General, and the participating teams.

The hackathon, held this year with the support of the Ministry of Community Development (MoCD) represented by the National Programme for Happiness and Wellbeing, motivates university and school students, government employees, entrepreneurs, thinkers and creators to participate in designing the future, by providing innovative solutions to the challenges faced by various government and public entities and institutions, using open data available through the UAE official open data portal (Bayanat.ae), and by relying on emerging technologies.

The hackathon competition included three categories this year. In the school students’ category, the Meta edu team won first place, the Change Makers team won second place, and the third place went to metaHumans.

In the university students’ category, the UAEPixel team won first place, the second place went to the Pause team, and the third place went to the Surgical Technology team.

In the Entrepreneurs category, the HCMS.ai team won first place, while the second place went to the Unitors team, and the Dakher team won third place.

In her opening speech, Hessa Buhumaid highlighted the importance of cooperation and integration between the MoCD through the National Programme for Happiness and Wellbeing, and the TDRA within the framework of data for happiness and wellbeing.

She said, “We are all aware of the great role the UAE Hackathon plays in encouraging and promoting a culture of creativity and innovation among all groups of society and its active and positive role in supporting the innovation system at the state level. It is increasing every year at all levels, starting with government and federal entities, through universities, academic institutions, private sector institutions, and ending with individuals.”

Majed Al Mesmar said, “The hackathon purpose has never been to start a competition and conclude it with speeches, prizes and celebrations, which, despite their importance, do not match the value of the fruitful ideas that participants develop, and turn into projects that serve people and meet their needs in various aspect of life. I tell you, this is only the beginning. Consider the hackathon experience as an incentive to continue the journey because your real reward is the experience. Let it fuel your tireless pursuit to achieve your dreams. Do not look at the world through the lens of success and failure. Failure is not necessarily the opposite of success, as failure may be the inevitable path to success. You have many examples of global success stories that have been achieved through a path full of failed experiences.”

During the hackathon, Abu Dhabi received the highest percentage of participants with 27 percent of the overall participants, followed by Dubai at 23 percent, Sharjah at 15.50 percent, and then Ajman, Fujairah, Ras Al Khaimah and Umm Al Quwain. The total number of participants reached 2,162, including entrepreneurs, experts, university students and school students from all over the country. The female participation rate reached 57 percent compared to the males. The university students’ category ranked first in terms of participants’ number, followed by the start-up’s category and then the school students’ category.

In a related context, the TDRA clarified that innovative solutions based on blockchain technologies ranked first among the list of participating ideas, followed by artificial intelligence, then applications of big data and data analysis. In terms of the number of ideas, the use of the Internet of Things, Metaverse, Virtual and Augmented Reality technologies was equal.

In its fifth edition, the hackathon included 41 challenges that were presented by federal and local authorities under a set of main themes in the development system, the most important of which are Agile and Proactive Digital Government, Better Financial Services using FinTech, Resilience of Digital Economy and Investment, Shaping Smart Sustainable Cities, Innovative World-Class Knowledge and Skills, Happy and Cohesive Society, and Communication in the Digital Age.

The TDRA indicated that the 12-day training and orientation period was characterised by around-the-clock interaction on the platform or the Slack application of the hackathon community. The training activities varied between technical workshops, mentoring sessions, and training sessions in innovation and entrepreneurship. The number of sessions and workshops reached more than 42 presented by 22 experts from major tech companies such as Google, Ericsson, Hair Technologies, du, and SAS, as well as international institutions such as the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).

The creative ideas included in the evaluation phase reached 190 ideas over four days by 23 judges. The largest share went to the universities category with 116 ideas, followed by the start-ups and entrepreneurs’ category with 39 and the schools’ category with 35 ideas. The top 30 ideas were selected from all the ideas presented.

The hackathon has unveiled agile innovative solutions that adapt to the successive changes of the digital revolution and modern technology tools, to enhance the business sector’s role in achieving national development goals.

Source: Emirates News Agency