Report from the OpenAI hackathon

On March 3rd, we hosted our first hackathon with 100 members of the artificial intelligence community.

OpenAI

On March 3rd, we hosted our first hackathon with 100 members of the artificial intelligence community.

On March 3rd, we hosted our first hackathon⁠(opens in a new window) with 100 members of the artificial intelligence community. We had over 500 RSVPs arrive within two days of announcing the event—if you didn’t make it this time, please RSVP again in the future!

Thank you to Cirrascale⁠(opens in a new window) for providing GPU machines during the hackathon.

Our applicants included high schoolers, industry practitioners, engineers for nonprofits (not just at OpenAI!), researchers at universities, and more, with interests spanning healthcare to AGI. We could only accommodate one hundred people this time so we tried to pick a balanced crowd with a wide range of backgrounds and levels of experience. In particular, we strove to achieve gender balance; many attendees told us that this kind of representation made a positive difference for their experience of the hackathon.

Two people seated in armchairs holding and talking into microphones

Aerial shot of a group of people sitting around a large table, working on their laptops

After the talks wrapped up, the hacking began. Over the course of an 8-hour code sprint participants authored dozens of AI projects on topics ranging from safety to healthcare. Some of our favorites:

Person looking over the shoulder of people sitting around a table with laptops