The international open data hackfest is happening December 3rd
at City Hall
It will be awesome. You're invited again.
Bring your friends. Sign up for the event.
What?
It's a gathering of cities around the world including Ottawa where we dreamt up ideas and build applications using public data.
Make applications like these!
Why is this awesome?
What if you had something that alerted you when to take out the trash?
What if there was a map showing all bike trails, pools (with hours), parks, childcare facilities, or any other city service?
What if there was a tool to report a broken traffic light and it told you when it was fixed, all without having to talk to someone, wait in a line, or fill out a form?
What if there was a service to show you a news feed for your block?
What if you could find neat Ottawa attractions, just by holding up your phone?
These are the kinds of ideas we turned into reality at the hackfest.
One problem we're having trouble with however is getting easy and free access to the public data these applications need. It's scattered across city hall's various department, usually held back by staff busy with other work, or just not in a standard format usable by your program.
The solution is open data: a movement to push governments to make public data freely accessible to the public.
Lots of other governments are in on this already, like Vancouver, Edmonton, Toronto, New York, San Francisco, and Washington. It's been proven to save governments millions and pave the way for beautiful new ways citizens can interact with their cities, services, and each other.
Ottawa Cityʼs IT subcommittee of councillors and city staff are on board and are rallying the public to help them set the way forward by developing applications for the community, by the community.
Who is this event for?
Developers
We need computer cowboys (and cowgirls) like yourself to wrangle data into something useful. That means visualization, notification, integration, etc., all in the name of doing something crazy and fantastic.
Designers
If you help out to make something snazzy, I will award you with a copy of Photoshop that will never crash.* We need people like you to make the rest of our work look amazing, feel intuitive, and have a smooth user experience. You know the drill.
Librarians
I heard you folks like books and eat catalogs of data for breakfast. You beautiful people are going to scour the earth for interesting data, help the rest of us figure out what’s important, and generally be useful.
Statisticians
YES! YOU ARE SO NEEDED. Seriously. While we can find it, blow it up, calculate it, and make it look pretty, we needs us some mean number crunchin’ to present meaningful visualizations. Join up.
Citizens
We need you the most. If it weren’t for you, this whole thing wouldn’t be happening. We need ideas, cheerleaders, and friends to spread the word.
Hackfest 2010
Tell me more about this event.
- Saturday, April 24th, citizens showed up at City Hall.
- They worked on an app.
- At 5:00pm, they participated in a show & tell.
- The media reported on the event.
- The public find out about all the beautiful work, users were gained, and everyone won.
If you have an idea for an app, or you want to contribute to a project, or you simply want to see what's being made, then you should definitely check our 2011 Internationl Open Data day Hackfest out. No matter your skillset or interests, there will be plenty of opportunities for you to learn and help the Ottawa community grow.
What to Expect
A lot will be going on. Expect to
- - Learn more about open data.
- - Find out how and when the city is going to officially release certain sets of data.
- - Meet & network with tons of cool people from Ottawa.
- - Voice your opinion & share your ideas with the people and media attending.
- - Find out about apps being created, and get to play around with them as well.
- - Help out with parts of the conceptualization, creation, design, advertisement and testing of apps.
- - Play around with unconventional and artistic uses of data like Turning bus stop information into music.
- - Participate in short and open tutorial sessions around designing apps like learning how to customize google maps to show the data you want to show.
- - Have lots and lots of fun.
What to Bring
Gadgets! Bring your laptops, mobile phones, phasers set to stun, etc. We’re trying to make this event very hands on, so feel free to bring all your wacky geektronics so that you can participate in all the fun. Don't worry if you don’t bring anything since there will still be tons of stuff to do.
Get started with the Hackfest right now
App Ideas
are still needed.
Not what’s in the realm of possibility? Check out existing ideas from Apps4Ottawa or those from New York City’s Big Apps contest for inspiration.
Data Sets
are being added to Ottawa’s Open Data Catalog! However, there’s lots more to be found in their primordial, not-easy-to-use form across http://ottawa.ca – help us find interesting data and request it on http://dataott.org where city staff will reply and help you find it.
The Wiki
is continually evolving but still needs help. Jump in and start contributing to the wiki by adding links to data sets, open data apps of note, or other useful and open-data-related information.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is all public data considered “Open Data”?
Simply put, it isn't. For data to be truly open, it has to be available with a license that gives users the right to use the data, merge it with other data sets, modify it, and re-distribute it.
Also, data should be available in a format that is easy for computers to read and manipulate. If the information is locked into a .pdf file, or spread out across several webpages, then it is very hard for someone to collect all of it and use it effectively. For a list of standard formats that are ideal for use, have a look at what Vancouver has put together.
This concept sounds ambitious. Has it been applied in governments before?
Of course! Open Data is not a new concept, and it has been applied before. For example, both the United States and the UK are using it on a federal level. On a municipal level, several cities such as Ottawa, San Francisco, Washington, Vancouver, Edmonton, and even Toronto have jumped on board. Each of these all maintain their own data catalog where citizens can download and use the data.
What data sets are currently available in Ottawa?
The City of Ottawa Data Catalogue contains the most up-to-date data sets available.
I don't want people seeing MY data!
Open Data is not about releasing ALL information that the government collects. That means that secure and personal documents, such as medical records, are never going to be accessible to the public. However, harmless data sets such as budget reports, park locations, and bus stop schedules are all candidates for being released.
What’s an App?
An application, or app, can either be classified as web-based or mobile. Let's consider both of these individually:
Web-based
These apps can be accessed by going to a website on your desktop or mobile browser. If you've used GMail, Twitter or Facebook before, then you have essentially used web-based apps. These differ from plain websites in the sense that there is an interactive and dynamic component to them-- they almost feel like you are using a desktop program such as Outlook, Word or Photoshop.
Mobile
These types of apps are not accessed through a website, but rather by a program that you download onto your phone. Apple has used this term extensively when referring to the games and utilities you can use on the iPhone or iPad. However, apps are not only for Apple! Smartphones such as Blackberries, Androids, and Windows Mobile phones also have the capability to have applications downloaded and installed on them. Each of these have their own "App Store", where you can browse and download apps that you want.
A "Hackfest" sounds scary. What is it?
Unfortunately, the term "hack" has gotten a bad reputation due to the media always using it in malicious contexts. In reality, hacking simply refers to innovating through unconventional means. Basically, it's figuring out awesome ways to create awesome things-- something that Open Data Ottawa is all about. Combine that with the word "fest", and you have an amazing event where people work together to create ways that make Ottawa kick even more ass.
Talk to us
Looking forward to high-fiving you when you show up, but until then you can reach us at:
Media
- Press Release April 24
- Centretown News March 30
- Ottawa Citizen March 8
- CHUO Radio (Around the Block) March 5
- Ottawa Citizen March 2nd
- Ottawa Sun March 2nd
- Le Droit Le 1er mars
Organizers
- Edward Ocampo-Gooding @edwardog
- Mary Beth Baker @bethmaru
- Daniel Beauchamp @pushmatrix
- Jonathan Rudenberg @titanous
- Alex Lougheed @alox

