We’re super excited to kick-off the announcement of Science Hack Day SF!

Who is Science Hack Day for?
Imagine a Venn diagram showing the intersection of web geeks and science geeks …that’s a pretty big intersection. Science Hack Day is for anyone with an interest in bringing science and technology together (from dabbling with APIs/datasets/interface design to biotech experiments and prototyping near-space payloads). If you’re a coder, designer, scientist, citizen scientist, hacker or just an enthusiastic person with good ideas, Science Hack Day is for you.

What’s a Hack Day?
A Hack Day is an event that brings together various types of geeks in the same physical space for a brief but intense period of collaboration, hacking, and creating awesome things. A hack is a quick solution to a problem – maybe not the most elegant solution, but often the cleverest (e.g. mashing up APIs, datasets and web interfaces from different sources in new and interesting ways).  A Hack Day is usually 48 hours long and involves a sleepover …although not much sleeping happens when everyone is either hacking or playing Werewolf. Some Hack Days have a specific focus. There have already been very successful Music Hack Days and Government Hack Days. It’s time for a Hack Day focused on Science! The mission of Science Hack Day is to get excited and make things with science*!

Give me the data already!
• When: November 13-14, 2010
• Where: Institute For The Future (124 University Ave, Palo Alto, CA, 94301 – 2 min. walk from Caltrain)
Schedule
Hack Ideas, APIs + Datasets (feel free to start adding to these pages whether or not you can attend!)
• Updates: follow @sciencehackday and/or subscribe to the wiki
• URLs: http://sf.sciencehackday.com + http://sciencehackday.pbworks.com/SF

How do I register to attend?
This week, we’re collaborating with scientists, technologists and designers that will help seed the event with example ideas and raw stuff to hack on. On October 1st September 29, we’ll open up the first wave of tickets (it’s free to attend, but since we have a capacity of 100, we’ll want to ask about your interest in the event). Sign up using your email address here to receive an email once we open up the registration process.

There are of course a lot more details to be announced (sponsors, competition categories and prizes for best hacks, etc.), so stay tuned! Any questions, interested in sponsoring or want to get in touch with us about Science Hack Day? Send emails to [email protected].

Lastly, I assembled an amazingly super awesome team (16 strong!) of science and technology people who are helping co-organize the event: Arfon Smith (Galaxy Zoo), myself – Ariel Waldman (Spacehack.org), Amber Case (CyborgCamp), Ben Ward (Yahoo! Developer Network), David Harris (Symmetry Magazine), Ed Gutman (Twitter), Eri Gentry (BioCurious), Ian Fung (UserVoice), Jeremy Keith (Clearleft), Jessy Cowan-Sharp (UMD), Kirsten “Dr. Kiki” Sanford (This Week In Science), Kishore Hari (UCSF), Mathias Crawford (Institute For The Future), Matt Hancher (Google), Matt Wood (Amazon Web Services), Tantek Çelik (Microformats.org + Mozilla). You can follow all of us on Twitter here!

Get brainstorming!

Ariel Waldman

(* just to be clear: you don’t need to have experience with hacking on science-related things to attend – just an excitement for experimenting with it!)

Categories: 2010

3 Comments

Sign up for Science Hack Day SF! | Science Hack Day San Francisco · September 29, 2010 at 11:25 am

[…] Science Hack Day San Francisco Get excited and make things …with science! Skip to content HomeAbout ← Announcing Science Hack Day SF! […]

Bookmark: Science Hack Day in November « Into Oblivion · October 6, 2010 at 6:38 am

[…] : le octobre 6, 2010 par ihatewasabi dans Science Mots-clefs :Hacking, Science 0 The Science Hack Day will take place in San Francisco (USA) on November 13 and 14, 2010. You can already sign up given […]

Science Hack Day SF! - MakerBot Industries · November 23, 2010 at 12:01 pm

[…] Science Hack Day SF is a weekend long gathering “that brings together various types of geeks in the same physical space for a brief but intense period of collaboration, hacking, and creating awesome things.”  The winning team of Stephanie and Eden won the “Best Physical Hack” competition which took place on November 13-14, 2010 with their Grassroots Aerial Mapping hack and will share the prize of a CupCake CNC Ultimate Kit!  Congratulations Stephanie and Eden! […]

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