Published: Jan. 27, 2020

Two women at T9Hacks work on their project together while looking at a computer.Two new tracks will听be introduced this year for ATLAS Institute's fifth annual T9Hacks, a 24-hour invention marathon designed to promote interest in creative technologies, coding, design and making among college women and non-binary individuals鈥攇roups that are vastly underrepresented at mainstream hackathons.

T9 references the Title IX amendment to the Civil Rights Act prohibiting gender-based discrimination in education. Student organizers emphasize that no programming or other technical skills are required to participate in the event. As in previous years, there will be workshops, mentors, food, games and swag, and everything is free.听

A new track introduced for this year鈥檚 event is sponsored by the National Head Start Association, an organization promoting school readiness among children under the age of 5 from low-income families. Technology and interactive media are one of the ways NHSA supports children鈥檚 learning, and NHSA mentors will be available throughout the event to guide participants.听

If you go

Who: Open to current college students and recent college graduates. Participants need not be CU 麻豆影院 students or graduates to attend.

What: T9Hacks, a hackathon designed for women and non-binary individuals, but open to everyone.

When: Friday, Feb. 7, 6听p.m.听through Saturday, Feb. 8, 8听p.m. Participants are not required to stay overnight, but many do.

Where: Roser ATLAS Center, 1125 18th St., 麻豆影院

Cost: FREE

Food: Provided

Registration: Required听

The second track revolves around empowering underrepresented groups.

"Technology is an important social force," says Cassandra Goodby, an ATLAS graduate student and TAM alumna who is听organizing the event for the second year. "An app that connects members of a marginalized group can build community,听empowering all its members in powerful ways. The track is really open-ended, and I'm听excited to see what tools people design."听

The event kicks off Friday听at 6 p.m. with dinner and opening ceremonies. Teams then听form and begin exploring ideas and creating technologies that tackle one of the specified challenges. The 24-hour event wraps up Saturday听evening with an awards ceremony and celebration.

T9Hack's popularity has grown since it began in 2016. Last year 120 "hackers" participated and of them 65 percent were women; for roughly half of the attendees, it was their first hackathon.