Team Hawk Interview: Part 2
Part 2 of my interview with Team Hawk is up now! Check it out above.
Spotlight Imagine Cup: Team Walk2Help
Team Walk2Help is a Bulgarian team entering the World Wide Imagine Cup with a neat Windows Phone 7 application. They aim to help reduce carbon emissions while helping out charities.
I was able to sit in on Walk2Help’s presentation, and got quite a bit of insight as to what the project is about. They built a Windows Phone 7 application that tracks the amount of CO2 you save when walking. When you walk, you earn “credits”, that you can then redeem on their website to help charities. The more people walk, the more carbon we save, and the more people we’re able to help.
While they may not have made it much further in the competition, they did an amazing job building their project. The app is available now on the Windows Phone marketplace. Just search fro Walk2Help and make a difference.
If you support Walk2Help, please vote for them in the People’s Choice Awards here.
Until next time,
Patrick Godwin
Spotlight Imagine Cup: Team Hawk

(Photo from Tom Ziegmann’s Flickr stream)
This Imagine Cup is special in more ways than one. After all, it is the first time the worldwide event has been held in the United States. It’s also the first time Iraq has had a presence at the World Wide finals.
Team Hawk, a team from Iraq, has traveled far and faced many challenges to come here to the United States. They built a Windows Phone 7 application for easily registering and tracking refugees in camps.
The team aims to “help refugees change their life for the better”. By registering refugees, they are able to get them welfare. Until a refugee is registered at a camp, they are essentially non-existent. Team Hawk wants to speed up this process, and help them get welfare as quickly as possible.
I sat down and interviewed Team Hawk. You can watch part one here:
While they may not have made it further, they still have overcome amazing obstacles and have great ideas. You can support them by voting for them in the People’s Choice Award voting here.
Until next time,
Patrick Godwin
Spotlight Imagine Cup: Team LifeLens
One of my favorite things about the Imagine Cup is the amazing goals many projects carry. The spirit of the competition is in the innovative thinking of each of the competitors. They come together with the common goal of “Solving the world’s toughest problems”.
Team LifeLens exemplifies this theme greatly. They have decided to tackle Malaria, hoping to make detecting the disease a relatively simple and affordable task. They developed a Windows Phone 7 application that takes pictures of different blood samples and sends them up to a cloud service for processing.
The cloud service then uses computer vision image processing to count the blood cells in the sample. It then goes through and searches for infected cells. The algorithm they developed is currently 98% accurate, as opposed to 62% accurate when they started.
Since arriving in New York for the finals, the team has been excited. They feel that they are “one of the stars of the show”, which they really are. They, along with the over a hundred competitors are all winners on their home turf. Whatever happens now, they’ve all succeeded greatly.
Team LifeLens was featured on CNN the day of the 2011 Opening Ceremonies. They, along with some other Imagine Cup competitors, presented their projects to the world. You can take a look at it here:
You can read the full article here.
LifeLens is already in talks with organizations to promote and test the solution they’ve developed. They believe that, after the Imagine Cup, they can change the world.
If you support their cause, please vote for them in the People’s Choice Awards here. I’ll be bringing constant updates about them, and other competitors, as a part of my coverage of the World Wide Imagine Cup Finals with the Student Partner Social Media Team. You can follow our coverage using the #mspsmt hashtag.
Until next time,
Patrick Godwin
