Hackathons

Wikimedia hackathons play an important role energizing our engineering community and connecting it to local groups. We need more of them in different places.

The Wikimedia Hackathon model
The European Wikimedia Hackathon has become a reference:


 * Unconference model focused on hands-on work, training, and technical discussions.


 * Run in a different location every year, with different local organizers supported by the Wikimedia Foundation's Engineering Community team and experienced volunteers.


 * Lightweight organization focused on simplicity and effectiveness, with almost no overhead.


 * Budget for the organization approved in advance and complemented by travel sponsorship support from the WMF and different chapters.


 * Local organizers focus on local work. Global aspects like travel sponsorships and the program can be delegated to the community. The WMF helps where is needed.


 * Goals are measured by participants' satisfaction and tangible outcome. The amount of attendees is not a goal per se.

Welcoming newcomers
Hackathons are good opportunities to reach out to new contributors. Specific activities must be planned in order to introduce them to Wikimedia tech and the activities of the event. The registration form should help identifying newcomers and other participants welcoming an introduction, as well as more experienced contributors willing to help welcoming them. See T89392.

Note that there are different types of newcomers:


 * Junior developers interested in Wikimedia.
 * Not so junior developers interested in an international developer hackathon happening nearby.
 * Developer communities strong in technologies used in Wikimedia: PHP, JavaScript, Android, iOS... (T76325)
 * Local or international contributors of upstream projects used in the Wikimedia stack. (T76325)
 * Tech-curious contributors, not necessarily developers, but experts in some related area (web publishing, open data, geolocation, etc).

More hackathons
In theory, the Wikimedia Hackathon model can be replicated and adapted to different regions. Hackathons are welcome especially in Wikimedia and developer hubs like India, North America, Latin America, Greater China, Russia...

Wikimedia chapters are encouraged to play a key role organizing events in their territories, but the invitation is extended to all Wikimedia formal and informal groups. A team of three people playing well their cards can organize a successful hackathon.

Wikimedia organizations are strongly encouraged to support hackathons organized by others, sponsoring travel for technical contributors active in their communities.

Proposing a hackathon
If you want to organize a Wikimedia hachathon, share your intentions as soon as possible.

Create a wiki page at mediawiki.org with a succint draft describing:


 * promoter team
 * who is who, identifying a coordinator
 * experience organizing events
 * number of participants expected
 * possible venue(s)
 * proposed dates
 * plan for travel, accommodation, catering
 * supporting visa requests
 * booking/reimbursements for sponsored participants
 * transport between the venue, accommodation, and local attractions
 * suggestions for social events
 * support from Wikimedia and local organizations
 * Wikimedia and software development activity in the region
 * and how do you plan to attract them.

Share your plan at wikitech-l, wikimedia-l, and other relevant venues, asking people to leave feedback in the wiki page.

Real examples

 * Zürich Hackathon 2014 budget
 * Amsterdam Hackathon 2013 budget

Proposals
2014 | 2015

Selection process
Everything is flexible:


 * 1) Any candidate can share any proposal at any time.
 * 2) Proposals are discussed with the community in their wiki pages, escalating to wikitech-l if needed.
 * 3) The discussion remains open at least during 30 days, giving time to critics and alternative candidates to respond.
 * 4) The WMF Engineering Community team will facilitate the discussion and will announce new events officially.

Factors in play:


 * credible plan
 * trusting organizers
 * transparent, responsive, flexible
 * backed by their community track
 * promoting diversity
 * new locations
 * new organizers
 * potential for new participants and different focuses
 * welcoming risk
 * alternation between safer and riskier bets