TreeHacks is Stanford's premier hackathon. The country's brightest engineering students are flown to Stanford's campus to build solutions to the world's largest challenges for 36 hours straight. Join us for our 12th year to dream and build the future!
TreeHacks 2026: Call for Judges & Mentors! 🌲 We are looking for judges and mentors to share their expertise and guide over 1000+ hackers at TreeHacks 2026! *Not open to undergrads and must. Join us as a Judge/Mentor at TreeHacks 2025, Stanford University's annual hackathon, happening February 14-16! 🎉 What You'll Do: Guide promising projects with a focus on long. The Best Beginner Hack prize recognizes the outstanding achievement of a team with limited prior experience in coding or hackathons.
This category celebrates the journey of learning and discovery, rewarding teams that demonstrate impressive creativity, effort, and progress in their first hackathon endeavor. Tree Hacks is a testament to the power of technology to transform lives and make a meaningful impact on the world. As a judge, he was privileged to witness the exceptional talent and dedication of the young innovators who participated, and he certainly places no doubt that their ideas will go on to shape the future in profound and meaningful ways.
TreeHacks 2019's keynote speaker was Scott Forstall, the founder of iOS, and Jamie Hyneman from the MythBusters attended as a final judge. Other notable speakers include Jeff Dean (lead of Google AI) [8] who presented a keynote during TreeHacks 2014, Andrej Karpathy (director of AI at Tesla) who was a final judge during TreeHacks 2018, and. Amanuensis won the BIG IDEA: Best Technology-Enabled Patient Safety Solution at this year's TreeHacks.
TreeHacks was held at Stanford University February 17-19 and gathered over 1,600 hackers from across the global. Paul Tang, MD, adjunct professor at the Clinical Excellence Research Center at Stanford University, served as the judge and held a workshop on patient safety technology at the. What happens if you get 1000 hackers competing to save the Amazon Rainforest, and make 'Tree'-Hacks live up to its name?
The largest collegiate hackathon in the U.S. 11 months ago And the winner is The judges have weighed in, and we're excited to share the news! Go to the TreeHacks 2025 gallery to congratulate the winners and check out all of the awesome submissions. Even though the competition is over, you don't have to stop coding.
Update your portfolio to inform your followers about new projects and get. Honored to be a judge at Stanford University's TreeHacks 2025 over the weekend. Having participated twice as a hacker myself over the last two years, it was wonderful to give back to the tech.