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The first annual National Day of Civic Hacking took place across the United States on June 1 + 2. In Chattanooga
Open Chattanooga, a local group of civic hackers, and the Chattanooga Public Library offered citizens, creatives, entrepreneurs and techies a chance to hack local public data during the largest-ever national convening of civic hackers.
Photos from 4 June 2015 at Civic Hall for NYCParks TreesCount! Data Jam in partnership with BetaNYC. Support for this event is provided by the Mayor's Office of Technology + Innovation, NYC Open Data, our host Civic Hall, Microsoft Civic, and CartoDB.
This was NYC's fourth National Day of Civic Hacking event.
NYCpublic.org Design Hackathon at the Shelby White and Leon Levy Information Commons as part of the National Day of Civic Hacking. Photographed by GIRLRAY.
Photos from 4 June 2015 at Civic Hall for NYCParks TreesCount! Data Jam in partnership with BetaNYC. Support for this event is provided by the Mayor's Office of Technology + Innovation, NYC Open Data, our host Civic Hall, Microsoft Civic, and CartoDB.
This was NYC's fourth National Day of Civic Hacking event.
Photos from 4 June 2015 at Civic Hall for NYCParks TreesCount! Data Jam in partnership with BetaNYC. Support for this event is provided by the Mayor's Office of Technology + Innovation, NYC Open Data, our host Civic Hall, Microsoft Civic, and CartoDB.
This was NYC's fourth National Day of Civic Hacking event.
Photos from 4 June 2015 at Civic Hall for NYCParks TreesCount! Data Jam in partnership with BetaNYC. Support for this event is provided by the Mayor's Office of Technology + Innovation, NYC Open Data, our host Civic Hall, Microsoft Civic, and CartoDB.
This was NYC's fourth National Day of Civic Hacking event.
The Municipality of Princeton and the library have collaborated to organize the first Code for Princeton Civic Hackathon. In honor of National Day of Civic Hacking, we will come together to build solutions for our community, using publicly-released data and new technology. We will have programming classes for kids, workshops, and space for hardware aficionados.
The event will bring together civic hackers, local government, developers, designers, makers, community organizers and anyone with the passion to make their city better. Anyone can participate; you don’t have to be an expert in technology, you just have to care about your neighborhood and community. Registration required at codeforprinceton.org/
The Municipality of Princeton and the library have collaborated to organize the first Code for Princeton Civic Hackathon. In honor of National Day of Civic Hacking, we will come together to build solutions for our community, using publicly-released data and new technology. We will have programming classes for kids, workshops, and space for hardware aficionados.
The event will bring together civic hackers, local government, developers, designers, makers, community organizers and anyone with the passion to make their city better. Anyone can participate; you don’t have to be an expert in technology, you just have to care about your neighborhood and community. Registration required at codeforprinceton.org/
The Municipality of Princeton and the library have collaborated to organize the first Code for Princeton Civic Hackathon. In honor of National Day of Civic Hacking, we will come together to build solutions for our community, using publicly-released data and new technology. We will have programming classes for kids, workshops, and space for hardware aficionados.
The event will bring together civic hackers, local government, developers, designers, makers, community organizers and anyone with the passion to make their city better. Anyone can participate; you don’t have to be an expert in technology, you just have to care about your neighborhood and community. Registration required at codeforprinceton.org/
Photos from 4 June 2015 at Civic Hall for NYCParks TreesCount! Data Jam in partnership with BetaNYC. Support for this event is provided by the Mayor's Office of Technology + Innovation, NYC Open Data, our host Civic Hall, Microsoft Civic, and CartoDB.
This was NYC's fourth National Day of Civic Hacking event.
Photos from 4 June 2015 at Civic Hall for NYCParks TreesCount! Data Jam in partnership with BetaNYC. Support for this event is provided by the Mayor's Office of Technology + Innovation, NYC Open Data, our host Civic Hall, Microsoft Civic, and CartoDB.
This was NYC's fourth National Day of Civic Hacking event.
Photos from 4 June 2015 at Civic Hall for NYCParks TreesCount! Data Jam in partnership with BetaNYC. Support for this event is provided by the Mayor's Office of Technology + Innovation, NYC Open Data, our host Civic Hall, Microsoft Civic, and CartoDB.
This was NYC's fourth National Day of Civic Hacking event.
The Municipality of Princeton and the library have collaborated to organize the first Code for Princeton Civic Hackathon. In honor of National Day of Civic Hacking, we will come together to build solutions for our community, using publicly-released data and new technology. We will have programming classes for kids, workshops, and space for hardware aficionados.
The event will bring together civic hackers, local government, developers, designers, makers, community organizers and anyone with the passion to make their city better. Anyone can participate; you don’t have to be an expert in technology, you just have to care about your neighborhood and community. Registration required at codeforprinceton.org/
Photos from 4 June 2015 at Civic Hall for NYCParks TreesCount! Data Jam in partnership with BetaNYC. Support for this event is provided by the Mayor's Office of Technology + Innovation, NYC Open Data, our host Civic Hall, Microsoft Civic, and CartoDB.
This was NYC's fourth National Day of Civic Hacking event.
The Municipality of Princeton and the library have collaborated to organize the first Code for Princeton Civic Hackathon. In honor of National Day of Civic Hacking, we will come together to build solutions for our community, using publicly-released data and new technology. We will have programming classes for kids, workshops, and space for hardware aficionados.
The event will bring together civic hackers, local government, developers, designers, makers, community organizers and anyone with the passion to make their city better. Anyone can participate; you don’t have to be an expert in technology, you just have to care about your neighborhood and community. Registration required at codeforprinceton.org/