At a Weekend Hackathon, NYC.Gov Goes Search-Centric
BY Nick Judd | Tuesday, August 2 2011
There's an interesting trend in the way new government websites look lately. With Utah.gov, consumerfinance.gov, and small handful of others, they're beginning to look — well, better.
Hoping to get in on that trend, on July 30-31, the city and the coworking space General Assembly co-hosted a hackathon hoping to get ideas from Gotham's burgeoning tech community about what the city's web portal should look like and what it should do. A hackathon, for the non-geeky, is a day- or weekend-long event that challenges technology-minded folks to get together and build software that serves a specific purpose, proves a specific concept or makes use of a specific programming library or set of data. At the end of the event, teams get together and show their work; sometimes, as with last weekend, it's arranged as a competition, with prizes and bragging rights for the winners. Civic hackathons in the past have largely focused on what people can do with data or tools a city provides — this is a bit different in that it asked participants to develop concepts for what the city should do with its own web property.
Reporters who were there for the Daily News, Fast Company and the Village Voice described a motley array of developers in the room to compete for the prizes and plaudits given to the best ideas. The group at the event included people from Victoria's Secret, the new transportation startup Uber, and a team from Manhattan, Kansas — as well as local open government regulars like the World Economic Forum's Noel Hidalgo and OpenPlans' Philip Ashlock.
The concepts leaned heavily towards simple, Bing-like search interfaces, similar to Utah.gov. One team's concept turns NYC.gov's homepage into a Bing-like search interface. Another proposes that the city develop a question-and-answer site.
That would be a radical shift from the city's current look, but it's uncertain if City Hall will go that far forward; at the event, according to folks who were there, city Chief Digital Officer Rachel Sterne cautioned that there's no guarantee that what came out over the weekend will make it into a final design.
Mashable has a list of the teams and concepts that won the competition.