Ask HN: What do you dislike about hackathons/startup-weekend type events?
im currently throwing around an idea for a 'startup weekend' type of event.
i've done several startup weekend events and I do have some gripes about it. while you do learn alot in those 48 hours of hacking/building a business model, it is very very stressful but rewarding. but i dont think it has to be that way all the time.
was wondering if anyone has any complaints about these type of events that have been to in the past.
7 comments
[ 98.9 ms ] story [ 2810 ms ] thread- give a chance for everyone to network with each other
- put people in situations where teamwork is needed
- put focus on creativity and make things fun. FUN is the focus here.
- learning is still the goal here but not in a stressful/lack of sleep environment.
Meanwhile, as everyone is broken down into little teams, very few people actually meet others; the worst case scenario of this is a lot of times people come with a few of their friends, and literally meet no one.
I thereby find myself going to events like this and purposely not joining a team and not entering the a-thon, and instead watching like a hawk waiting for the few moments when someone is taking a break (I then meet them).
On the other side, I've seen events like this work well: in specific, the 360|iDev game hack-a-thon is nearly perfect. As it is part of a larger conference, there are lots of chances to meet people, and in fact many people don't participate at all (as there is no real expectation to); of those who remain, they are clearly building "something fun", so the idea of "would this actually work" is irrelevant.
Once the intensity of building is over, that's when the real networking begins.