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Related: About this forumThis 17-Year-Old Coder Is Saving Twitter From TV Spoilers (Spoiler: She's a Girl)
Imagine you forget to watch a new episode of Game of Thrones the night it airs. Even if coworkers stay mum about important plot points, Twitter is abuzz with spoilers. Fortunately, there's Twivo, a new program that allows Twitter users to censor their feeds from mentioning a certain TV show (and its characters) for a set time period. Jennie Lamere, a 17-year-old girl, invented the software last monthand won the grand prize at a national coding competition where Lamere was the only female who presented a project, and the only developer to work alone. Internet: Meet the reason we need more women in tech.
Lamere is a high school senior from Nashua, New Hampshire, who likes building robots, hiking, and entering "hackathon" competitions. At her all-girls school, the Academy of Notre Dame in Massachusetts, she's the only student participating in these sorts of events. Hackathons (which have nothing to do with illegal hacking) bring together programmers, developers, and designers, who compete to code an innovative new program in a limited amount of time. Lamere entered the TVnext Hack event, put on by the ad agency Hill Holliday in partnership with Mashery, in Boston on April 27 along with about 80 other competitorsall of them male, according to Lamere and one of the judges. (Mike Proulx, a spokesman for the event, says he believes other women participated, but didn't present completed projects.)
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"We marketed the hackathon to the entire developer community, and the demographics of the participants mirror the demographics of the community itself," Proulx, the event spokesman, tells Mother Jones. "We had a diverse demographic, but obviously the majority of the people were male." In addition to being the only woman, Lamere was the only solo competitor in the hackathonevery other project was created by a team, Proulx says.
Lamere took her subcategory, "best use of sync-to-broadcast" and then the overall "best in show," which earned her swag including iPad minis and an Apple TV. She beat out professional developers sent by the event's sponsors, including ESPN, the Echo Nest, and Klout. She came up with the idea for Twivo the night before the competition, and it took her 10 hours and 150 lines of code to complete. It works as an extension to the Google Chrome browser: A user can type in the key words she would like to block, and for how long, and make those Tweets disappear. In the screenshot below, Twivo has blocked out Twitter references to one of Lamere's favorite TV shows, Lifetime's Dance Moms (the Twitter accounts that are more prominent, like the official Dance Moms account, automatically appear larger.) Once a user is done blocking the show, the Tweets reappear. Lamere says the program is still in demo form and won't be ready for another two or three weeks, but she's already been approached by Furious Minds, a tech company that intends to help her market the final product.
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http://www.motherjones.com/media/2013/05/meet-17-year-old-saving-you-game-thrones-twitter-spoilers
Lamere is a high school senior from Nashua, New Hampshire, who likes building robots, hiking, and entering "hackathon" competitions. At her all-girls school, the Academy of Notre Dame in Massachusetts, she's the only student participating in these sorts of events. Hackathons (which have nothing to do with illegal hacking) bring together programmers, developers, and designers, who compete to code an innovative new program in a limited amount of time. Lamere entered the TVnext Hack event, put on by the ad agency Hill Holliday in partnership with Mashery, in Boston on April 27 along with about 80 other competitorsall of them male, according to Lamere and one of the judges. (Mike Proulx, a spokesman for the event, says he believes other women participated, but didn't present completed projects.)
...
"We marketed the hackathon to the entire developer community, and the demographics of the participants mirror the demographics of the community itself," Proulx, the event spokesman, tells Mother Jones. "We had a diverse demographic, but obviously the majority of the people were male." In addition to being the only woman, Lamere was the only solo competitor in the hackathonevery other project was created by a team, Proulx says.
Lamere took her subcategory, "best use of sync-to-broadcast" and then the overall "best in show," which earned her swag including iPad minis and an Apple TV. She beat out professional developers sent by the event's sponsors, including ESPN, the Echo Nest, and Klout. She came up with the idea for Twivo the night before the competition, and it took her 10 hours and 150 lines of code to complete. It works as an extension to the Google Chrome browser: A user can type in the key words she would like to block, and for how long, and make those Tweets disappear. In the screenshot below, Twivo has blocked out Twitter references to one of Lamere's favorite TV shows, Lifetime's Dance Moms (the Twitter accounts that are more prominent, like the official Dance Moms account, automatically appear larger.) Once a user is done blocking the show, the Tweets reappear. Lamere says the program is still in demo form and won't be ready for another two or three weeks, but she's already been approached by Furious Minds, a tech company that intends to help her market the final product.
...
http://www.motherjones.com/media/2013/05/meet-17-year-old-saving-you-game-thrones-twitter-spoilers
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This 17-Year-Old Coder Is Saving Twitter From TV Spoilers (Spoiler: She's a Girl) (Original Post)
redqueen
May 2013
OP
ismnotwasm
(41,977 posts)1. Cool
I love these kind of stories.