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  • everyone.

  • Welcome Top six.

  • I'm Quincy Larson with free code camp.

  • I am joined by Matt Dillman, CEO and co founder of Nettle.

  • If I cool from Port, the CEO and co founder of Forms Free, and Chris Anderson, the lead developer evangelist for, uh, for Fiona.

  • The database.

  • So today we're going to be talking with a lot, Actually, seven.

  • I said top six, but actually, we decided to extend it to 1/7 1 because we were so bowled over by the quality of the submissions.

  • We're gonna be talking with seven teams of hackathon participants, many of whom did not know one another 36 hours ago came together, and I felt so amazing stuff.

  • We're going to see that amazing stuff, and we're gonna get to the bottom of how they built it and who they are.

  • So first, we're gonna start with caption this and gentlemen, for us to start with you just a quick introduction.

  • Who you are, where you're from.

  • What you do my news.

  • If you jam from New Hampshire on dhe, I actually am a technician.

  • I work for a cheese aviation, so as a technician and I just graduated from off the Granite State College.

  • Yeah, that's what I do.

  • And I love cooking.

  • Great.

  • Thank you.

  • You're welcome.

  • And congratulations on recent.

  • Thank you.

  • I'm David Carter.

  • Um, I just moved to San Francisco in July, and I'm originally from the Antelope Valley, Palmdale, Lancaster.

  • And, um, right now, ever could've were press agency.

  • And so I'm looking to get more into reaction jam step.

  • Great.

  • Are you a raucous hand?

  • I guess.

  • Hi.

  • My name is Sam.

  • I'm a Cuban engineer on our live in Sunnyvale, California.

  • I actually started learning friend and development at Free Court Girl.

  • So this is for me?

  • Yeah.

  • I'm condemning alone.

  • More off front end, like the act.

  • Another Reeboks.

  • So, yeah, I'm really excited.

  • Thank you so much.

  • Well, perhaps you could go ahead and give us a very quick demonstration of how Captain was worse.

  • All right.

  • So, caption this is basically gonna present you with the random gift.

  • So every time you load the page, it's gonna get a random gift.

  • Um, so if you don't like it, you could always press this next button, and you can choose better gifts.

  • And so you get enter in any Captain you want.

  • Submit it and it's gonna add it to our list of Smitty gifts and every user could whether or not you submit a gift, you can vote.

  • We're going to rank all of these emissions by votes.

  • So the most popular always be at the top.

  • Um, and we've added authentication with Delphi right on.

  • You've got some pretty cool gifts here, too.

  • And very good captions for someone.

  • What's your favorite so far that you what What Captain are you most proud of?

  • Um, good leader, actually.

  • Way added our authentication.

  • Think Just see, Where did you get the gifts from a B ice cold?

  • Oh, maybe he's got a jiffy.

  • Suddenly, Yeah, that's where.

  • So where do you stand on, like Gift versus Jeff?

  • Everybody who pronounces a gift say woo ready set Woo Everybody who pronounces it, Jeff say woo great.

  • Well, judges, what do you all think so far?

  • It's great.

  • I really love this one.

  • I think it's fun.

  • I think it's kind of a cool.

  • I like that.

  • You cannot vote it, and then everyone can see that it's participatory.

  • It's kind of, uh, school.

  • Um is a good scope, a lot of times hack APS will over scope or under scope, and it's hard to be impressive like that.

  • But it's impressive.

  • Thio bring it mostly to completion because you picked the right school.

  • Yeah, I would certainly share that opinion.

  • I've seen so many HACKATHON projects that are extremely ambitious is when they have to pare back all there ambitions right before the demo time.

  • But it looks like this is something that was definitely doable within the time frame.

  • And yeah, and you're like, you did great.

  • Did you have any sort of top things she would have liked to do with the Western time?

  • From that, you had to scope back from war.

  • There is.

  • We wanted to tie voting to user authentication.

  • Right now, we're just storing that waste local storage time that into the user would have been nice.

  • You flew with stories of smarts, gradual way of getting there.

  • You imagine?

  • You'll keep packing on it.

  • Um maybe I right on.

  • And, uh, what kind of collaborative filtering method are you thinking about?

  • Are you thinking about like a like read it or hacker news or some of those other collaborative filtering algorithms and or How are you planning for things To gradually decay and fall off of the top?

  • Be on target.

  • Yeah, maybe something.

  • Well, I mean, there are plenty of models.

  • I just wanted to see if you're over thinking about it because you don't want the top part of thing to always be on the top.

  • Because if you want to take salt should be fresh.

  • Stuff way should have some tabs on their every same porn czar pump most popular's taps that How did you split up the work between you?

  • So he rejected all the styling stuff.

  • Get all this Jesus on Dhe.

  • He did all the Oscar party.

  • I was there for, like, adding feature sometimes on also for, like, running around like the problems of a swan on TV or forms every which way.

  • Those two guys about how we go forward, what should we do and all those things We had great help.

  • So we'd like to thank all the judges for and Upper stair during the hackathon process.

  • It was really great without them.

  • We couldn't even complete this for sure, right?

  • What have you learned from this Hackathon that you didn't know at the beginning about yourself for me like I was.

  • You know, as I said, I was recording in the free court camp online thing.

  • So I had.

  • I never work as a team.

  • I never called it as team, so it's really a different experience.

  • I believe that I really learned a lot off stuffs on how team you know owned goes up.

  • So I really I learned a lot about the teeming playing 1st 1st most think and about reading documentations that those things were very important because the AP eyes we used here and the databases we used, they were completely new for us.

  • Bar No, you know, the the judges.

  • They showed us where to go for the technical documentation.

  • So you just wait that.

  • And I think because of that so way learned probably that he has to collaboration skills, working with people in different skill sets and learning to divide the work so everyone works to their advantage is we didn't know each other before these hackathon until yesterday.

  • We didn't know each other.

  • I'm from New Hampshire all the way from New Hampshire, and if so, we just made a team and move.

  • Are there other acts.

  • You almost boot.

  • Uh, no.

  • We don't even have an idea for this is gonna spur of the moment.

  • At what point did you start shift from, like, idea and conceptualization and building your team?

  • Like At what hour of yesterday?

  • Would you say you actually, Tony, Probably after lunch.

  • Yeah, just just right.

  • Any other questions?

  • Why was the hottest thing you had to solve while building this log in?

  • Um, because we just have limited time the last hour ending yet incriminating the votes, learning out of like, we had to read and write doctor for no TV.

  • Like, how would you get it yet?

  • Great.

  • Thank you so much for coming up here and for demo ing.

  • Pleasure meeting you three gentlemen, and I'm very impressed what you've done here.

  • Great.

  • Thank you.

  • Thank you.

  • Thank you.

  • Just let me know when the audio's back.

  • Okay.

  • Great.

  • Yeah.

  • So?

  • Well, actually is coming up here.

  • Go ahead, situated.

  • Just take a moment to recognize.

  • Careful that.

  • What is that, like a skate park?

  • All right, so I just want to take a moment to acknowledge, uh, one of the biggest sponsors of the event.

  • I guess maybe the fiscal picture.

  • But nullify is such amazing supporter of the developer community, and they're really pushing forward with a lot of technology that's going to make the Internet faster and safer and make it easier for organizations to scale the website.

  • So Matt Dillman from nullify, is a visionary.

  • And I'm very excited personally to see where, uh, where he goes and where nullify goes in the coming years.

  • So thanks again for your support.

  • Thanks.

  • Thanks for having me here.

  • And thanks for helping bring all of this on and driving it forward and for building free code camp.

  • I think everything we do is about helping developers build things.

  • So being at a place in seeing hundreds of developers building things with olive thing, it's really exciting.

  • And on the note of people building things, using metal if I Let's talkto Haxby, are you okay?

  • Great.

  • Well, we started starting with this gentleman.

  • We'll just go, Uh, wait.

  • Got two dimensions here.

  • Yeah, uh, just tell us your name where you're from and what what you doing with your time these days?

  • All right.

  • Well, my name is Robert Wolf from originally from Europe, but I'm taking my extensive Mr here studying us design.

  • But I also like the code.

  • And when I discovered Champs take about a year ago, I saw one of the first he knows I was so excited was like telling all my friends Stop doing what you're doing to start doing going your way.

  • And I'm so happy to be here today where it actually kind of have grown.

  • And I feel like there's a lot of people around doing the same thing.

  • Great that I am until I looking a software developer here in Bay Area.

  • Andi, have I'm real exactly about that reacts different oil.

  • Then I got to know about the cats be stopped, and I have built some kind of local brothers with me on.

  • Then I got to know more about the jam stack on Brazil.

  • Exciting.

  • So I don't know what there is working on electronic organizer for the second time.

  • It's pretty good environment are here.

  • Yeah.

  • So my name is Carl Smith, and I'm a student at CSC Stanislas computer science student, and, uh, yeah, just started learning about Web technologies.

  • When I was in high school, I found out about jam static about, like, a few months ago.

  • And it was just so easy to grass and just been interested ever since.

  • Great.

  • My name is Muslim on.

  • I'm a computer science student in Embryo based in San Increase on Dhe.

  • Honestly, I don't remember how I came across free code camp, but I came across it.

  • Thankfully on.

  • I've been programming ever since.

  • I'm Brian Wimmer.

  • I live here in Oakland in the Bay area.

  • Actually worked as a project slash account manager.

  • So I like these kind of opportunities because I've never known a hack with them before.

  • But be awesome to get my hands dirty in the code.

  • And I really like the jam stack.

  • I built the number of personal websites with it, and it's such a contrast from, like, the monolithic things that I'm used Thio in the enterprise world, You know, doing it for a big client.

  • It's really refreshing to do something like that.

  • The gem state.

  • Yeah, Well, uh right.

  • Looks like you're at the helm.

  • Yeah.

  • Let me know if we can, uh, displaying.

  • You lose.

  • Isaac, pregnant is employed.

  • Unemployed again.

  • Okay.

  • Wait.

  • Just pick us.

  • We said good bye, Theo.

  • So, as you already know, our name is Haxby.

  • Where?

  • On the packet.

  • Felonies and Gatsby.

  • Um, this is the problem.

  • We're slowing.

  • If you're ever learned the language with a language up, you know, it's a terribly boring and kind of weird process.

  • Usual.

  • It's staring at pictures of people you've never seen before and try to attach your basic vocabulary to the pictures.

  • It doesn't really where I've tried to learn a language of many different abs.

  • I've never succeeded.

  • So when we came here to get her on the hackathon with how we're gonna make something that we're gonna approach learning a language differently and will be realized is that it's all about you.

  • Okay, what makes the learning language easier if this if you can relate if your bank and associate things with it.

  • So we wanted to make something relatable and also fun.

  • And that's why we created Youling Will.

  • Now what you rolling with us is it takes your instagram images and, uh, teaches the new vocab based on them.

  • No, this is how the app works.

  • So at first we authorize instagram.

  • Then we take the pictures from the instagram and in a real time.

  • We pass them through to clarify data to get image recognitions and get an idea about what is it in there?

  • Now clarify FBI returns.

  • This words the tax off the images in different languages.

  • So we pull it out in a different language off the user that he selected and we Blake West with them.

  • That's how we teach them the West.

  • Now, this is how the quiz looks like.

  • So you have the word photo that's, for example, for it and Italian.

  • And you have four pictures from your instagram feed.

  • This is my own.

  • And you have to say, I like the one that that this and thanks to clarify FBI being available in 23 different languages offer disbarred in 23 languages very easily.

  • So that's exciting.

  • Now we're gonna show you a quick demo about how it actually works.

  • All right?

  • It's bigger.

  • All right, so this is the demo that we had showed before.

  • So this is a little bit more limited in terms that we wanted to show Spanish specifically and again with Robert, but just to kind of give the idea some of these words, you know, there's obviously room for improvement Mess.

  • Corvino masking.

  • It could be a lot of these, right?

  • Okay.

  • Time ran out, for example.

  • Time look.

  • Great.

  • One.

  • We have a response for a good job, Beach if I select the wrong 10 sorry.

  • Incorrect.

  • And we're also totaling your scores and kind of have some logic involved with that fruit to an example on dhe.

  • Then basically, we give you a score that we total, and we give you an ability to tweet out your results.

  • You know, I did great on, you know, my test in Spanish with my own selfie way.

  • Kind of leave it up to the user and how they want to promote it.

  • But that's kind of our way of cross promoting.

  • Cool idea.

  • We thought it was like, This is such a new thing.

  • And they're probably all sorts of bugs and ways to improve it.

  • We want to given ability to add some feedback, right?

  • So using forms spree were able to simply, you know, add a way to give your name email.

  • What's your feedback?

  • How can make are better handed and actually send it.

  • That's what some dumb idiot, obviously.

  • But you get the idea right?

  • And forestry makes it really easy on something that we're really excited about is that's what we're showing before.

  • And already we're already kind of hacking away.

  • Even in the short time we have.

  • Let's add some war languages, right?

  • So they're already doing that.

  • Let's add German.

  • Um, so we're already working on making that improved, So it's just cool that we do so much one within.

  • So that's an example of German instead of with my instagram.

  • So you were ableto get instagram integrated or did you see the data?

  • So that was the biggest way FBI experts could talk about.

  • Initially when we thought about the incident thing right, we thought the privacy for just will be there and all, and we couldn't get a date and all.

  • So then we figured out that that is an FBI death.

  • That but the only constantly faced is that the sandbox FBI, which allows only 10 users initially and each is already have only 20 pictures from their feet.

  • So that's how you're doing right now.

  • But we have a full flex tap.

  • We can send for the instagram access so that it can be explained it to you and in never refuses.

  • So that's what we're looking at.

  • So that's one kind of problem with ears to hear the product looks great.

  • You've done a good job of just keeping the number of elements to an absolute minimum and its colorful big elements.

  • So I definitely commend your design sensibilities.

  • Which way?

  • Collaborate is great.

  • Kind of like a pair of programming group friend credit.

  • Great.

  • Actually, the FBI group I'm the friendly groups can be very busy.

  • And in addition, I have something.

  • Yeah.

  • Okay.

  • What was the planning like, Did you sit down and think about how did you How did you choose the problem of the solemn?

  • And then how did you set about choosing Instagram on machine learning to solve it?

  • Well, so we actually get our own Friday on a disco chest way Didn't have any idea and we start deciding on Saturday morning.

  • We were very fascinated to clarify idea.

  • We thought, Well, this is such a powerful thing.

  • We can do so many things with.

  • At first we thought about helping visually impaired people.

  • And then we have this idea of languages, and it just seemed like a fun concept and a lot of things to do with by noon.

  • We know this is what we've done with it.

  • How did you select sort of the scope for the and where there's some things You felt like we really went those things.

  • But we got our first thought about that, right?

  • We thought, like many of the kids, abs, like this life.

  • I suppose when you go to school, you learn about the fruit or something by seeing that on you learn the language like that.

  • But, uh, when we thought about Instagram, it came out out of the blue and then recording for adults as well and new language as well.

  • And that's how we thought this would be more personal to the user, then using some random images.

  • Exactly using instagram was kind of the key idea.

  • Make excited because everyone loves themselves.

  • Thing is gonna be addicted to this game.

  • A spear.

  • We stop developing it started way definitely ran into items with scope, right?

  • I mean, think about it.

  • Like project management, right?

  • You know, we ran into lots of cool features that we wanted to, so we actually had a white war broke out.

  • It looks like these air problems, these air, some kind of features.

  • We tried to address the problems before the future.

  • Teachers wanted at sound really cool, but that's probably lower priority than something.

  • So let's get to work on in that way.

  • Are you all concerned that at some point after playing the game a little bit that you're gonna kind of be seeing the same images?

  • I mean, I have, ah, somewhat active instagram feed, but probably not more than wait 50 images in there.

  • And I can imagine that I won't be able to learn all German with just hey, you're actually Frank.

  • Unfortunately, that Saddam is not a loving the public users may just be seen, so that's one kind of privacy policy help.

  • But other thing is that it can.

  • I think it has an important where we can get the data from a specific location making like you're wrong address.

  • So that my book So that's kind of fun of enhancement we talked about so you can't like get images from friends or anything.

  • Unfortunately, privacy would've been much easier three years ago, I know, but it's a little bit more difficult on the other hand, clarify.

  • It gives us a list of 20 words for image.

  • So we could basically, if you have three images, you still in 60 words.

  • That's a good point.

  • Is that extensible?

  • Can you add, like, can you teach?

  • Clarify more, more terms.

  • So right now we're just using their general model we haven't really explored in there.

  • I hope we could maybe develop our own model based on Instagram pictures.

  • A lot of food Let us sell for years, right?

  • Yeah, that's a good point.

  • Have you considered maybe expanding the functionality of by encouraging people that hey, maybe you should take a picture of fruit you could have like a little wizard.

  • Oh, I noticed your way.

  • It could also teach you to be a good photographer that way.

  • Photography projects in language arts application.

  • One more thing that's important, say, for us, it's important.

  • It's a website another night because this is something people will go and try out really quickly.

  • And that's where the power of gem sex coming so because opens up instantly and with one click you can start in play way also will save data into local stories.

  • So when the user wizards again.

  • They will have their I have already.

  • Is it mobile friendly?

  • Yeah.

  • I mean, because the design is pretty van sitting.

  • We didn't have to do too much going at sea on the quiz itself.

  • Let's go back to this.

  • You did make it somewhat friendly as much as we can.

  • You know, physical design.

  • No, that's good.

  • Have you considered talking to language teachers to get feedback on how this could be used?

  • How this could be improved.

  • So none of us is actually way you have personal experience because Robert learn what other experts would be helpful.

  • Is this something you are considering pursuing beyond the law?

  • Yeah.

  • Way to be very accepted.

  • Needs push notifications to remind me of a time to study.

  • Oh, and to remind you to take instagram photos of beings talk about Did you about love waiting?

  • Go to your next country.

  • You can talk to your friends and different language about hole.

  • Yeah, well, I would encourage you to continue pursuing you.

  • I'm not like on expert, and he was psychology or anything but the van of the angle on the way the brain works and stuff, It may actually be more compelling and form stronger relations if it's something personally related to you that you're associating that word with.

  • So, um, thank you, gentlemen, for coming in.

  • Thanks for building this excellent application in such a short time is very impressive.

  • And yeah, well, we'll look forward to, um here, Maura, about what you do in the coming months.

  • And if if you do continue working on this, let us know, because we'd like to see how it comes along and maybe the boat catch up.

  • Do a retrospective on.

  • All right.

  • Thank you for your support.

  • Thank you.

  • Thank you.

  • Yeah.

  • Nice meeting you.

  • Great work.

  • All right.

  • And next team he's gonna come in is going to be makes what, uh, I'm very excited about makes what I'm also very excited about.

  • Thank you so much.

  • Schools, uh, Cole again, CEO cofounder for free.

  • And thanks for all the guidance you perv ey provided to the many participants here.

  • You have truly created a A great developer experiences faras installing forms, and, uh, forms are a big deal, and pretty much every developer has to deal with forms, and I'm really excited to hear that you're probably expecting.

  • I like development is coming along with a team, huh?

  • Who couldn't make it here?

  • They were working really hard up until, like, pretty much the last minute.

  • It was great.

  • We got a lot of good stuff down at the end, including an entire redesigned site which, Yeah, it was a great forcing function for us to get a lot of stuff done.

  • I think now we're gonna probably do some clean up.

  • Okay.

  • All right.

  • Well, good luck paying down technical that here we are with our next very exciting team.

  • Uh, first of all, before we get started, I just want to say that this was incredibly well presented.

  • E think all of us agreed that your delivery was phenomenal.

  • So we're looking forward to hearing a little bit of that delivery here, but make squad.

  • Let's start.

  • Let's start with your faith.

  • And perhaps you can introduce yourself, and then we can go around and clockwise and everybody else.

  • Yeah, definitely.

  • So I'm Faith.

  • Um, and, um, I'm a student at make school.

  • So hence the name makes squad.

  • Um and yeah, so way have some other people here on the team.

  • This Well, yeah, Well, for forward, if you could just tell us where you're from and aside from being a student, make school like just a little bit about your background.

  • Sure s o.

  • I'm from Atlanta.

  • I moved out to San Francisco to 10 mics school.

  • Um, right now I'm working on back and Web development as my primary concentration.

  • But I was interested in this hackathon because the opportunity the words kind of more in the front end and exercise that skill a little bit and as excited by all of the AP eyes, Um, and I also have an interest in things that have to do with machine learning thing.

  • We did employ a little bit of the clarify FBI in here, so that was really fun to work with them, to see how that works.

  • Awesome.

  • Yes, I'm too.

  • Shara Boucher.

  • And from seven California.

  • I've been in San Francisco for about two years, and I came here to do to be a chaplain in the hospital.

  • But after my residency year, I guess, um I wanted to do you like a combination of both, but tech and the social service is clear.

  • My ultimate goal is to try to have a nonprofit for young adults have been mentally or physically abused in childhood.

  • And to help them with the trade like so coding and to be able to, like, put so they can have a better lifestyle after having a smoke, I guess, for the years.

  • And so this hackathon is a great experience for me to get experience to network with different people.

  • And to me, these wonderful people who make school and, um, graciously welcomed me into the thio.

  • Excited, Awesome on that.

  • Went in from Georgia also, it makes school and moved here about four months ago.

  • Um and, well, I worked with coding often offer, like the last 10 years, but nothing really serious until I moved here.

  • But it's always been a passion of mine.

  • And I had a lot of fun in this hacking learning these new technologies.

  • Great.

  • Oh, I'm Jonathan, And I'm a full stack develop brand make school.

  • And I'm from Houston, Texas.

  • Okay.

  • Hi.

  • I'm Stephanie.

  • I'm a junior make school.

  • So I just started a couple months ago in August, and I'm from Miami.

  • Radium.

  • I've done also frequently camp like a couple of people here as well, and it was great.

  • I've also done one, huh?

  • Compound before.

  • And it was It was great.

  • It was stressful too.

  • But there are the end.

  • Product was great, was lovely.

  • I love building products.

  • Yeah, And since you're from Mexico, or perhaps just a quick word about make school because it is a new educational Well, yeah.

  • So it's a new education model on dhe.

  • It is product based learning.

  • So, basically, instead of attending a lot of long, boring lectures and writing stuff on the white board for hours and kind of getting and entrenched in the theory of it, we build products throughout the term.

  • You build a product at the end of every term.

  • We have, like our own mini hackathon.

  • It's an intensive where you build a product in a week.

  • We work on teams, we work individually.

  • So throughout the time that you attend the program, you're building up a portfolio.

  • And so that's why a lot of us were interested in doing this hack of on because we wanted to have another opportunity to build something.

  • Thio had to ship it, get her idea out there.

  • Yeah, and how long is the program.

  • Mexico's two years, and it is a bachelor's program.

  • So it's an accelerated bachelors.

  • We have some people who attend for about a year, and then they get hired out of the program.

  • But it's a two year long great.

  • So at the end of the program, you all have a master's degree.

  • Yeah, for your remarkable.

  • If you're looking for a novel higher education models, sounds like this might be worth investigating.

  • So not further ado.

  • Let's let's jump to the demo.

  • Ready?

  • Yeah.

  • So, um, our APP is called network.

  • You can leave your business card at home because your face is your business card.

  • Um, and so we thought a lot about you know what it feels like sometimes when you're at these networking events, especially because the world is full of a lot of emerging technologies, Sometimes you forget those business cards or it's clunky to kind of like, you know, waffle with those.

  • And so our idea was to build an app where you can simply take a photo of somebody or you can take a video of them.

  • Um, and you can use that video of that photo to retrieve their virtual business card to get back their information.

  • So we built kind of a minimum viable product here that demonstrates that idea, and we're hoping to have a chance to develop it further in the future.

  • But for now, we do.

  • I want to start with the APP.

  • And so this is the, uh, the business card in vote.

  • You would go ahead and fill in your email, address your phone number, your state, city and state, and then you can fill in your LinkedIn.

  • We would also have twitter, which would be an optional field, and then another field where you could fill in additional information and then you could submit that.

  • But before we go to the submission page, we also connected a contact form here.

  • So the people who people have questions for people who have I, you know, ideas for new features or people have problems using the app they can paying us.

  • We used form spree Thio connect the contact form, and this form actually does work.

  • It does submit and we get the email from that so we could get updated information there if you want to, of course, have todo a room full of robots a little bit that went through a couple of submissions from this I p address.

  • Um, and then for, um, you guys.

  • Yeah.

  • There you go.

  • So we got two sides or two ways Thio to go ahead and check.

  • Check out the database.

  • You can go to camera, uh, first.

  • And you wanna go to video first tomorrow.

  • Okay.

  • On dso.

  • Then you just select the image.

  • So for now, we're using the celebrity model of the A p I.

  • Because it was already hooked up to you like a little, But ideally, we would be able to use user photos in the future, and it goes to the database.

  • We used fun.

  • It'd be for the database.

  • Um, and we used to clarify for the A p I.

  • That's the celebrity model that we're using here.

  • And then it would bring back the person's information.

  • We have Leonardo DiCaprio and got Kanye, um, as our tests.

  • Great.

  • And earlier, you you were able to use the phone.

  • Didn't you do that just to show the image recognition?

  • We're working from another device and Arthur celebrity.

  • All right.

  • One more time.

  • All right.

  • Work.

  • The devil worked Yeah, and yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • Great demo.

  • Thanks for going through it.

  • Questions.

  • How did you know that this was the happy one to make?

  • Had settled into the idea.

  • Well, we're kind of talking about it.

  • Oh, while we're coming into the building on the first day and, like, bounce ideas around and we talk more about the ideas once we got in and decided that this would be a good idea to do at this.

  • At what point did you start working in this city?

  • So when we first started out way had been taught that you actually have a plan for us before you started even going.

  • So we don't start quoting until, like, the middle of the day.

  • And so we started with user stories to try to make sure we we had to do what is supposed to do.

  • And we had We even used parts of get hub like the projects phase where you have a condom on board and you can move the the car's over once you've been it's been completed.

  • So I think that's about a good way to plan.

  • So that way you can know whether what you want to do is actually, yeah, I couldn't testify that we use projects all the time.

  • It's very probable that satisfying when you can move the cars over.

  • It's like crossing it off your list.

  • Yeah, I like that.

  • I don't know.

  • Organize your work.

  • How did you decided?

  • Like Team, which teams are front and back in?

  • I think we all played on assurance.

  • I know that's like one of the first things that we acted like order you get at and we divided it up that way and we had some very strong and beckons Like she said, the make school focuses on back in.

  • But they also put, I guess, focus on full sack.

  • So really wonderful friend and specialists right here until and really everybody just chipping in where you know, for their slept given or if someone was struggling, they moved about and any other areas You all did a great job with the design, you know, it's like, you know, pink and blue.

  • I think they're complementary colors, like looking like a color wheel and very minimalist design.

  • You can see like a little element that kind of flourish up there with the grounded raindrop shapes who did the design.

  • Well, we owe e had helped me with a lot of things, just making sure it worked.

  • It was cohesive on every single page as well.

  • So yeah, we had we had some some ideas about what we wanted in the way what we wanted it to look.

  • We did want it to be minimalist.

  • So I'm glad you said that I also wanted I was really a fan of a lot of color in the background, like so we could market to people who are are networking and starting off in the careers.

  • Yeah, for the modern kind of professional.

  • Yeah, definitely.

  • Like, looks like something that would get acquired by, like, i e a card after you just took a photo card.

  • And on that note, are you Are you all planning a ticket To be working on this after the weekend's over way have a great kind of I said minimum buyable product before, and I think it would be good for us to continue development on it so that we can get it hooked up on get users actually in there to make sure that this is something bad people would use that people would enjoy using.

  • Yeah, actually, we haven't done in the user testing, so we don't even know if this is This could be good for them.

  • You know, you could just be a product, and it doesn't go anywhere.

  • So we have check our markets sage observation.

  • And I could tell you I don't carry business cards.

  • People often ask for them and just say people beat up.

  • Now you'll be able to see my face is my way.

  • Okay.

  • All right.

  • Well, thank you again.

  • So much for coming in and telling this and building it.

  • And it sounds like you're from all over the US.

  • Congratulations on converging and former team and, you know, driving cohesively.

  • Amazing.

  • So, yeah, thanks again.

  • And, uh, we're looking forward to hearing about how things go future AC Alonzo's.

  • Well, thank you.

  • Thanks.

  • Thanks for having us.

  • Thank you.

  • Yeah.

  • All right.

  • Well, we're three dominoes in into our six or seven games that we're gonna talk to former lift.

  • And this time I want to talk about Chris Andersen.

  • E.

  • A is the director of developer of vandalism at fauna.

  • And I interviewed this guy yesterday, and I don't know that I've ever talked to somebody who's worked with so many different types of databases so young.

  • He's definitely got encyclopedia acknowledge of sequel databases and also knows a lot about real world implementation issues and the trade offs that sensitive with Chris.

  • Thank you so much for coming here and inspiring everybody and sharing your knowledge.

  • And also thanks to you and Fiona for sponsoring this man, I really enjoy it like the little pits of ways to help people get unstuck when they're hacking to me.

  • That's the fun part.

  • Yeah, well, um, our next team is Phoebe in jail.

  • All right, So you have a mascot.

  • I think it's nice.

  • It's got a little, uh, character to it.

  • Yeah.

  • You think it's aka Cat here?

  • It's up there.

  • You have, like, you know, like e think like game.

  • If Vicky's has liked the character face off on last year, like Tetris l block one hero saves the day way should have something like that with mascots pit.

  • So, uh, starting with you, why don't you tell us a little bit of yourself?

  • We're gonna move in a clockwise since we got two rows here.

  • Okay, so my name is Vince, uh, native San Franciscan, Born and raised.

  • And I guess no, I'm aspiring deliver, you know, currently looking for work.

  • And, uh, yeah, that's pretty much it.

  • Hi.

  • My name is Jin, Like, gin and tonic.

  • Like the alcohol.

  • I'm also a native San Franciscan.

  • Like Vince.

  • I'm also cut using freak.

  • Oh, camp to learn and try and learn how to program a type of backgrounds.

  • Is this admin?

  • But I want to make that leap into the development space.

  • So it's my first act trying to learn as much as possible.

  • All right.

  • Next.

  • Jennings Bryan Stinson.

  • I am not a developer currently in the Air Force.

  • I had 13 years this month stuff trying to learn something new for you to get out.

  • So I'm gonna go with years left, wannabe developer.

  • So learning with free coke and a couple of the resource is and it's my 1st 2nd awesome.

  • My name's Reuben.

  • Um, I'm a native San Franciscan by moving those for Yeah, I'm not built for either I can put in here.

  • Um, and then I transitioned over to a logical now trying to transition over software.

  • And so, yeah, I used Let's start with Rico camp.

  • So thank you, Quincy.

  • Um, but yeah, uh, just been working on react.

  • And it's also my first time.

  • I thought it's been just a find, like, getting talk with sponsors.

  • It's cool.

  • Yeah.

  • And I'm Austin and I I got green chemical engineering decided that wanted to switch to software engineering.

  • And so, yeah, I relied heavily on free code can for that.

  • And now I work at a human FBI, which is a start up in San Mateo, And, um, so I have, ah, open source projects.

  • You don't know job script exercises and run a meet up react meet up in Berkeley.

  • So, Well, prolific bunch and yeah, from very backgrounds.

  • A little disproportionately from San Francisco.

  • Yeah, just go.

  • Well, tell us a little bit One way.

  • All right.

  • So in our efforts failed, so Yeah, so go ahead.

  • Go on.

  • The app.

  • So it's, uh, sick pics.

  • So, yeah, What sick pics is is it's a game for anyone who can.

  • Anyone can play.

  • Um, So right now, So we have this created game button where you can click and create a game.

  • Right now, there's a button below this is no games available.

  • But if there's a game available than anyone can join, um, join a random game that someone else has created, and what the game is is once it starts, you could have any number of people that have joined that game, and you need to take a picture of whatever it tells you to take a picture of whoever takes that.

  • The picture of that thing first wins, and it will notify everyone that you won or lost, and then it will take you back to the home page.

  • So it's kind of like a blazing, fast machine learning image recognition scavenger hunt that you could play with your friends or throughout the world.

  • So if any of you would like to play phones out, Kate So yeah, let's go ahead.

  • And what?

  • You're elegant.

  • So it's s I C c Dash p I C c s sick dash picks dot Net life i dot com Sick Fixed enough.

  • Don't come And so you can.

  • Once you get there, you could join a random game.

  • Sorry.

  • Sick pics.

  • It's just two seats right there might consider an easier spelling bee.

  • Oh, I'm sorry.

  • It's gone.

  • All right.

  • Okay.

  • All right.

  • So it looks like we have six players in this game.

  • Are you guys in?

  • Good to go.

  • Yeah, go ahead and start.

  • All right.

  • We gotta take a picture of ketchup.

  • Oh, high speed turning their Can't compete with honors.

  • E absolutely denies.

  • Permission thio way.

  • You could go back and re joints.

  • I lost.

  • Ah, Winner.

  • Who won?

  • I lost too.

  • Maybe way.

  • Hey, other.

  • They're in.

  • The kids have already?

  • Yeah, I might have ended up in a All right, Let's do it again.

  • Guys.

  • Ready?

  • Let's create that game.

  • Wait.

  • You have given all right?

  • There's definitely less phones in here than they are.

  • All right, let's do this.

  • Use photo.

  • I think we owe you have to take one.

  • That is probably gonna get past All right.

  • So, yeah.

  • Um, yes.

  • Oh, right now, anyone can create a game, and when you join the game, you just join any kind of random game.

  • So, yeah, what we tried to do was make sure to clear out for the demo and get the game go until but anyone with the the U.

  • R L just go ahead, create a game and anyone conjoined.

  • And then whoever creates the game has the control to start.

  • And so right now what we have in our database as the options are catch up in a coffee.

  • So that way, you know that we have it, but yeah, with the clarify a p I we could add all kinds of things with all kinds of different models.

  • So, um yeah, all right.

  • Worried that you might if you know, if you opened it up, they might end up with, you know, requests for images in their people in, like, for images.

  • So the images don't Images are all local, so we're not doing anything with the images.

  • We're not sending them.

  • And the ones in the in our database are just a coffee and a catch up.

  • Not like a pickup truck on fire.

  • What other kinds of images do you think you'd load in there to kind of expand the scope of the game?

  • What other kind of images do you have?

  • An example of thought.

  • So dog she dog.

  • Oh, yeah.

  • So really, it's kind of just limit.

  • Oh, we're limited by Is the clarify FBI.

  • So right now, our model, we have a model of the food model, and we just have catch up in coffee, but yeah, we could get it Seems fire.

  • Take a picture of a pickup truck.

  • Yeah, you not to not to open up the ability, tell load photos.

  • It's we do we would control, like, what's available to be done.

  • Yeah, and then right now, So, like, all the whole game is client based in terms of like, determining whether you want or not.

  • So, um, which is kind of fun with just the fact that we can have but almost the whole game client side, which is kind of a lot of fun.

  • What's the?

  • Obviously, it has, like, real time component.

  • So, like, what did you use for that?

  • Um, anyone else?

  • Yeah.

  • So we used to Sarah.

  • Um, so Sarah's I mean, anyone listening?

  • Doesn't know yet time.

  • Uh, it's a graphical NPR back in database that has, uh, real time capabilities.

  • So that's that's exactly why we chose to build the game, you know?

  • Yes.

  • That's like when the permit applications for it.

  • Um, yes.

  • So one of the examples we would say, for example, showing the number of people that are in the game, you subscribe to, uh, users that have, ah, game I d of the game that you you just created the game that you're a part of.

  • And so any time that the post grass database changes, you automatically get those changes whenever someone wins.

  • We're just like I said, the games is completely client base.

  • So whenever someone updates the state react that they want way, just update that in the database.

  • So none of that.

  • No one's gonna take a picture somewhere and put in push toward Davis.

  • Yeah, yeah, So and then we also subscribe to the status of the game.

  • So if when it's pending and someone pushes start the game, then it will update for everyone.

  • The fact that it's started in progress, and then when someone wins it updates to say that the game is finished and who the winner was.

  • So yeah, we could We could expand and to, you know, have user names or names.

  • Or also like you can choose which game that you want to join.

  • Perhaps a lot of different ways we could expand on the way how we want development process like, I guess.

  • How did you decide what you're gonna build.

  • So we started.

  • Yeah, we started E.

  • I think we had, um, a prize in mind already, like clarifying Missouri

everyone.

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