Apps for Good: Worthy Web Hackathon Winners Aim for Change

Hailing from Germany to Indonesia, the winners of the Worthy Web hackathon used Blazor, Angular and React to help make the world a little brighter.


This content originally appeared on Telerik Blogs and was authored by Jessica Kent

Hailing from Germany to Indonesia, the winners of the Worthy Web hackathon used Blazor, Angular and React to help make the world a little brighter.

If the past 15 months have taught us anything, it’s that there is no replacement for genuine human connection. With the pandemic confining most of our interactions to the virtual realm, people felt a distinct loss of community—creating room for new methods of communication and collaboration.

It was under these unique circumstances that we launched the Worthy Web hackathon, a six-week competition that challenged the developer community to build apps for good. Beginning on April 7, participants had the option to use either Telerik UI for Blazor, Kendo UI for Angular or KendoReact UI components to create apps that will make the world better. And boy, did they deliver.

With 1,187 contenders from 83 countries—and a total of 36 projects to choose from—the judges had no shortage of options for the eight prizes. After five panels of judges selected the top three submissions from their respective categories, an overarching team (including Progress President and CEO Yogesh Gupta) made the final selections.

The Winners: Ranging From Good, to Good, to Good

The first of the three main prizes went to Zindagi, an app designed for blood donation management that the team will ultimately expand to include blood banks and donation campaigns. Using Blazor, Zindagi’s creators built an app that offers a solution to surges in requests for plasma and blood donation.

Zindagi homepage says, 'Donate Blood, Save Lives.' and has buttons for Register Now and Contact Us.

Zindagi

The top use case of Angular went to EcoVille, an environmentalist application that helps users take part in local cleaning events, find nearby recycling centers and monitor their carbon footprint. After adding more functionalities and testing some edge case scenarios, the developer behind EcoVille is certain that the app will help promote a clean environment.

EcoVille shows an event for beach cleanup

EcoVille

The best use of KendoReact was awarded to Working Conditions Improvement Check. With this app, users can measure the impact of a corporate social responsibility (CSR) project for worker rights in Pakistan and Vietnam, building a bridge between workers and brands.

Working Conditions Improvement Check shows various charts displaying checkin statistics

Working Conditions Improvement Check

In the bonus categories, White Tent—built to help local food outlets maximize their sales of surplus, non-expired food—won for Best Implementation of Reporting, while Kendo Habits—a tool that makes habit-building fun—took the top spot for Best Documented Use of Test Studio.

Help Brew, an app created by a team in India to connect people to local shelters, community kitchens and other needed resources, won Best Documented Use of Fiddler Everywhere. Best Mobile Support went to The Better Future Club, which helps volunteers support non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and charities based on their skills and time. SCUP: Smart Checkup won for Best App Modernization, with developers using KendoReact to design a smart telemedicine platform that provides vital signs and historical values.

Fostering Goodness, Promoting Change

Of the many changes that were brought on by the pandemic, our collective shift in focus is perhaps the most meaningful. We’ve started looking inward and reflecting on how we can make our communities better.

With the Worthy Web hackathon, developers had the opportunity to think about what was important to them, and to showcase how they would improve the world around them. From blood donation to habit-building, the competition proved that there are so many ways to bring about positive change. Using our products, participants were able to build apps that could lead to a better tomorrow—something we can all look forward to, especially now.


This content originally appeared on Telerik Blogs and was authored by Jessica Kent


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