JCT’s 45-hour hackathon for women also featured technology to help detect when babies are left in parked cars and a flying defibrillator that can be summoned by phone.
The 45-hour hackathon brought 140 religious women together to develop potentially lifesaving technologies, which included a flying defibrillator and technology to detect babies left in parked cars.
Women’s hackathon students develop image-processing technology to improve lives
Women’s hackathon students develop image-processing technology to improve lives
Post-event, participants can enter the LevTech Lab Pre-Accelerator to further develop products or create their own startups.
A participant in the Jerusalem College of Technology LevTech Entrepreneurship Center’s fourth annual women’s hackathon, May 2021. Credit: Jerusalem College of Technology.
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(June 1, 2021 / JNS) Nearly 25 percent of senior citizens in Israel live alone, causing a potentially fatal situation when one of them falls and needs immediate assistance.
To help solve this problem, a group of religious women taking part in the Jerusalem College of Technology LevTech Entrepreneurship Center’s fourth annual women’s hackathon developed an innovative solution that was crowned the winner of the competition.
Women’s hackathon participants developed a number of innovative technologies, including a vibrating bracelet that alerts the hearing impaired of incoming rockets.