Two Harvard University Alum Win Salesforce $1M Hackathon Prize At Dreamforce For Mobile Service To Create Reports
Two developers who met at Harvard University 15 years ago, are the winners of the Salesforce.com $1 million hackathon for its service to create mobile reports for sales people using the Salesforce.com platform.
The app, called Upshot, was developed by Thom Kim and Joseph Turian. The service parses data in plain english, connects via API and then presents results for the smartphone or tablet user. Users can also use Google’s voice capabiity to do queries.
The other winners were:
- Healthcare.lov came in second and won $50,000 for its service for helping people choose a health plan.
- The $25,0000 third prize went to Hirebase, a service that allows to highlight resumes with different colors and annotations.
- The fourth place $10,000 prize went to Salesfetch, a service for finding information across different services to get a full picture of the lead.
- And the $5,000 fifth prize was awarded to 2lemetry for its service that detects the identity and background of people as they approach a trade booth The service uses Raspberry Pi and a low power bluetooth device to make the detections.
Kim and Turian did a demo that showed an app that allows for reports to be created with drill downs on specific information points. Queries can be done on the fly by inputting into the mobile device or by Google Voice.
The hackathon began Monday with the start of the Dreamforce event. Dozens of teams participated. The teams were judged on their innovation, the customer experience, its business value and use of the Salesforce platform.
As a disclaimer, I was one of the hackathon judges.