Two years ago representatives from
Google, Microsoft, Yahoo!, Hewlett-Packard, NASA and the World Bank came together to form the
Random Hacks of Kindness (RHoK) program. The
idea was simple: technology can and should be used for good. RHoK brings together subject
matter experts, volunteer software developers and designers to create open source and
technology agnostic software solutions that address challenges facing humanity. On June 4-5,
2011 we’ll hold the third Random Hacks of Kindness
global event at five U.S. locations and 13 international sites, giving local
developer communities the opportunity to collaborate on problems in person.
The RHoK community has already developed some
applications focused on crisis response such as I’mOK, a mobile messaging application for
disaster response that was used on the ground in Haiti and Chile; and CHASM,
a visual tool to map landslide risk currently being piloted by the World Bank in landslide
affected areas in the Caribbean. Person Finder, a tool
created by Google’s crisis response
team to help people find friends and loved ones after a natural disaster, was also
refined at RHoK events and effectively deployed in Haiti, Chile and Japan.
We’re inviting all developers, designers and anyone else who wants to help
“hack for humanity,” to attend one of the local
events on June 4-5. There, you’ll meet other open source developers, work with
experts in disaster and climate issues and contribute code to exciting projects that make a
difference. If you’re in Northern California, come join us at the Silicon
Valley RHoK event at Google
headquarters.
And if you’re part of an organization that
works in the fields of crisis response or climate change, you can submit a problem definition online, so that
developers and volunteers can work on developing technology to address the challenge.
Visit http://www.rhok.org/ for
more information and to sign up for your local event, and get set to put your hacking skills
to good use.
Carlos Cuesta is a Product Marketing Manager in Mountain View,
focusing on Google Geo APIs (Maps, Earth, Fusion Tables, and Places). When he's not at work,
he spends his spare time hunting down the latest food trucks and street vendors, using Google
Maps, of course.