The Hindu 16.12.2013
Techies develop apps for urban governance
A mobile application that enables the gamification of
garbage clearance — by providing bounty points to people who identify
and later clear garbage — was named the best of 45 entries at the end of
a two-day hackathon organised by the Commissionerate of Municipal
Administration at Anna University on Sunday.
The
event saw the participation of 190 software developers, who formed 45
teams, each envisioning, coding possible applications and later on
presenting their code to enhance urban governance.
At
the end of the marathon presentations made by the teams to a panel of
senior officials of the State’s municipal administration department, the
team of Vridachalem Pillay Subramaniam, Sesha Sendhil, Renuka
Srinivasan, S. Thirunavukkarasu and Charumathi Govindane wowed the
audience and panellists alike by completely re-thinking the aspect of
garbage clearance in their app ‘TrashIt’. Such gamification apps are
very popular in mobile ecosystems like Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS.
Senior
officials, including Chandrakant Kamble, commissioner of municipal
administration, Vikram Kapur, commissioner of Chennai Corporation and
Sudeep Jain, chairman and managing director of Tamil Nadu Energy
Development Agency, said the hackathon was an eye-opener in many ways.
“The
problems that the coders are addressing are old. But they are looking
at them with a fresh perspective. This helps us too,” said Mr. Kamble.
Mr. Kapur said some ideas presented by the coders — including an app
that would monitor garbage clearance — were already developed by the
civic agency using others developers and were being used at a beta
testing stage.
Several municipal commissioners were also present when the coders made their presentations at the end of the hackathon.
Another
application that won kudos was developed by a team of coders – Arun
Kumar Ramanathan, S. Arun Kumar, Rajeswari Krishnakumar, Ganapathi
Subramanian V. and Sudhakar Rayavaram, called ‘Know Your City’ that
allowed a user to locate public facilities of their Corporation through a
map. This app was named the second-best app of the event.
The
‘Code for Urban Governance’ Hackathon, jointly organised by the
Commissionerate for Municipal Administration and ThoughtWorks, was in
spirit similar to the hackathon organised by the Centre’s Planning
Commission.
All the project descriptions and the
codes developed at the hackathon are to be released as open source
material. They can later be accessed at the event’s wikipage at Github,
the online resource for coders.
Competition was part of hackathon at Anna University; apps on garbage clearance, facilities map, earn accolades.