What is the ECCE App Challenge?
The ECCE App Challenge is a coding competition held by Esri Canada to help promote innovation and creativity within the Centres of Excellence. Each year, teams of students at ECCE schools across Canada are tasked to create new and unique apps powered by Esri technology and open data to help address a problem related to a specific theme.
The App Challenge for 2018 will take place between February 16th and March 30th. Teams at each school will be given one week to complete their apps, and to submit the source code accompanied by supporting documentation, team profiles, and a video sales pitch for their app. These will be assembled and hosted in a GitHub repository used by the ECCE to showcase the apps created by each team. You may view previous years’ entries linked from the ECCE GitHub account homepage. You can view the source code of each app submitted, and starting with the 2017 challenge, you can view profiles of teams, access their pitch videos via YouTube, and interact with live demos of their apps. The results of the 2018 competition will be posted here after all teams have completed the challenge by March 30th.
Three external judges were invited to evaluate all of the teams submitted apps, documentation, and videos. Aggregated results will be used to rank the teams submissions, and select the winners with the best overall scores.
Final Results
This year’s App Challenge 2018 concluded on March 31st, and apps submitted by the competing teams have been assembled and published to our GitHub repository. You may visit the App Challenge 2018 web page on GitHub to view profiles of teams, access their pitch videos via YouTube, and interact with live demos of their apps.
Three external judges volunteered to evaluate all of the teams submitted apps, documentation, and videos. Aggregated results were used to rank the teams submissions, and select the winners with the best overall scores.
The winning team for 2018 is:
mapit.space from Simon Fraser University
Esri Canada is pleased to congratulate Alysha van Duynhoven, Anthony Lee, and Chris Yee, who win a trip to this year’s Esri User Conference in San Diego. Honourable mentions also go to the first and second runners-up:
Water3D, by Juan Carrillo, Anam Rahman, Jaydeep Mistry, and Stephanie Wen at the University of Waterloo
Marauders mApp, by Matthew Brown, Michele Tsang, and Anastassios Dardas at McMaster University
Challenge Guidelines
- Maximum 4 students per team
- Your app must use open data
- Your app must be based around on a pre-defined theme (to be announced to your team when you start the competition)
- Your team can choose any platform for development (e.g., Web, iOS, Android)
- Your app must include at least one Esri component (e.g., ArcGIS API for Javascript, ArcGIS SDK for iOS), although other additional technologies are encouraged
- Your team must produce a sales pitch video explaining what your app does, and why it is valuable
- Any source code that you produce for your app must be shared under the GPL 3.0 open source license
- Your team must submit a completed app to the ECCE program at the end of the week
How do I register?
In order to register your team for the ECCE App Challenge, you must contact the ECCE director at your school. Provide your director with the names and email addresses of your team members, and choose a team name.
What can I win?
After the judges have reviewed all of the submitted apps, a winning team will be chosen. Winners will be awarded an all expenses paid trip for all team members to the Esri User Conference in San Diego, California (July 9-13, 2018).
What’s Github?
Github is a website and hosting service based on the Git distributed revision control system. It allows you to easily share code and facilitates collaborative software development. You may create your own Github account so that you can easily download and contribute to open source projects. Please do not publish your App Challenge projects publicly on your own GitHub account until all submissions have been posted to the ECCE GitHub repository first. If you would like track your source code revisions as you work on the app challenge, you can uses a local Git repository to track changes and coordinate distributed revisions to the app’s code among your team members.
How do I submit my app?
Please email a ZIP file of your app and the required deliverables to ecce@esri.ca (if necessary, coordinate with us if you need to exchange large files). Once all submissions have been received from teams at all schools, they will be published in the the ECCE App Challenge 2018 Github repository.
Who are the judges?
Three individuals from key areas of education and industry were selected to volunteer as judges for this year’s App Challenge:
- Ian Wint – GIS Manager, City of Fort Lauderdale
- Dr. Josef Strobl – Professor and Head, Department of Geoinformatics, University of Salzburg
- Jan Willem van Eck – Chief Research Officer & Lecturer, Esri Nederland
What are “open data”, and where can I get them?
Open data are freely available data sets that anybody can use without restrictions. There are many different sources where you can obtain open data from, for example:
- Canada’s Open Government Portal
- Namara – Open Data from All Levels of Government
- ArcGIS Open Data
- Esri Canada Open Data Web App
- Open Provinces
- Open Municipalities
Where should I start..?
We’ve put together a series of videos to help you get started with the ECCE App Challenge:
App Challenge Introduction and Tips
App Challenge Resources
Getting Started with ArcGIS for Developers
Open spatial data sources
Introduction to the ArcGIS API for JavaScript
Designing Hosted Feature Services
Introduction to Web AppBuilder for ArcGIS
Introduction to AppStudio for ArcGIS
Tips for Sharing Content in ArcGIS Online
Please subscribe to the Esri Canada Centres of Excellence YouTube channel to keep up to date with the latest ECCE videos.
Once you and your team have come up with a general idea for your app, one of the best places to start would be the ECCE Resources page. You can find many useful developer-oriented materials to help you build your app by using the tags listed to filter resources. You can also check out some of the example projects from past App Challenges hosted on the ECCE Github page for inspiration. Lastly, if you need help to develop your strategy to succeed in the App Challenge, consider watching the free ArcGIS App Strategies training seminar.
Questions?
If you have any questions related to the ECCE App Challenge, please feel free to ask them in the comments below, contact your ECCE director, or contact us by email (ecce@esri.ca). Good luck!