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Guardian Hack Day November 2017!

This article is more than 6 years old

We’re back again for another hack day! Over today and tomorrow the Guardian Digital team will be working on ideas to change the way we tell the news.

 Updated 
Wed 29 Nov 2017 11.05 ESTFirst published on Tue 28 Nov 2017 06.58 EST
The hack day begins...
The hack day begins... Photograph: Philip McMahon/None
The hack day begins... Photograph: Philip McMahon/None

Live feed

Finally the spirit of hack day award (an Amazon Echo) goes to Mateusz!

That’s all for today, time for a drink. If you’re interested, come back tomorrow for a few more screenshots and photos!

Most ambitious failure went to Antonio’s team - their hack to give app users more control over the notifications they receive was working 5 minutes before the presentation, but sadly crashed part the way through the demo.

Winner of the ‘Avant Guardian In Perpetuity’ award is Max, with Guardian on Tap! His hack allowed people passing tube stations to swipe a guardian distribution point, and immediately get the days news downloaded onto their phone. Kinda like the evening standard, but, you know, cool and digital!

Voting begins...prizes this year are for ‘overall best hack’, ‘most ambitious failure’ and ‘Avant-Guardian In Perpetuity’. Here’s the trophies.

Excitingly, AWS (who kindly gave us a space to hack in yesterday) are also giving out some prizes...!

Hack Day Trophies! Photograph: Philip McMahon/The Guardian

And finally! Michael Barton has blown us all away with his double hack. Phase 1 is a hack that changes the process of sshing into a specific box in our AWS accounts (currently a bash command to search for boxes, copy, write stuff, paste, hit enter process) into a single step, that even supports paging!

Phase 2, very related, took the guardian homepage and turned it into a techno rave. AMAZING!

Nathan from user help has been working on a hack that changes the guardian so that it not only reports on bad things happening, but provides ways people can possibly help improve the situation. Reading about homelessness? Donate to a charity that helps! Angry about a politician? Sign a petition!

Don’t just get angry, change the world!

The liberal bubble - are you in it? Susie suggests that with things like Brext and Trump outside, it might be safer to stay safely inside it.

Feeling sad about the state of the world? Susie’s hack will reassure you - instead of being faced with the horrors of twitter search results, the guardian bubble will reassure you with a picture of Jeremy Corbyn announcing that he was quitting twitter.

Please leave me in my bubble, it’s nice here!

Thomas has been experimenting with image recognition, enabling readers to find guardian content related to the physical world around them. Wondering what to cook with the ingredients in your fridge? Just point your phone camera at them and Thomas’s hack will find you the perfect guardian recipe to match.

Paul and Iona have been thinking about readers who want to support the guardian but find the £5/month minimum monthly contribution too much. With their hack, those who are unwaged or students will be able to give a reduced contribution to the guardian or buy a digital subscription at a reduced rate

Regis has been hacking on Ophan, the guardian’s tool for learning about how readers are viewing our content, making it much easier for users to work out where the traffic for a particular piece is coming from.

Adam Fisher presents ‘I’ve got the keyboard, I’ve got the secret’ (or ‘mice are evil’) - enabling mouse fearing users to navigate the guardian using their keyboard. It’s an accessibility revolution! Never mind that only 25-50% of page views come from devices with a physical keyboard - it’s just like vim!

Nick Satterly presents ‘License me’ - investigating the use of licenses in open source projects at the guardian. He used S3 and Amazon Athena (also possible in excel, but not as fun!) He discovered that just 100 out of 968 of our open source projects are correctly licensed.

‘If it doesn’t have a license it’s not open source’

The Video Hub revolutionises the video watching experience on The Guardian. Developed by Gustavo, Tom, Matt, Elvis and Marty, it makes it possible to add a reaction to a video (this makes me outraged/sad/laugh) whilst watching, as well as making it easier to find related videos after watching something embedded on an article page.

Make your guardian notification experience more awesome! Antonio, Monica & Priscilla have built a settings page which allows readers to control which types of notifications they receive. With this hack, you’ll be able to banish royal wedding related notifications forever!

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