After a weekend of intense coding at the 2015 NASA Space Apps Challenge that held
simultaneously in three Nigerian cities; Lagos, Calabar and Ilorin, the winners
of the challenge have surfaced.
At the pitch event that held at the City Hall, Lagos on Sunday, three
top teams emerged out of a total of 12 teams who pitched at the event
final. Teams developed solutions in four categories; earth studies, space
exploration, human health research and robotics.
Prize Money – $3000
Team Members – Alayaki Bilqis, Akingbade Ayobami and Morris Yewande.
Challenge – Robotics
The first prize winners, Team Akatsuki designed a robot, ROCKID using
the LEGO Mindstorm NXT. The proposition according to team lead, Yewande Morris,
was to design an astronaut assistant that can pick rock samples in space and
return them to space lab.
The ROCKID, Rock IDentifier, prototype for event was programmed to
identify barriers, pick color-coded cardboard payloads and follow a path of
pickup and delivery.
The Winner – Team Akatsuki
Prize Money – $3000
Team Members – Alayaki Bilqis, Akingbade Ayobami and Morris Yewande.
Challenge – Robotics
The
first prize winners, Team Akatsuki designed a robot, ROCKID using the
LEGO Mindstorm NXT. The proposition according to team lead, Yewande
Morris, was to design an astronaut assistant that can pick rock samples
in space and return them to space lab.
The ROCKID, Rock
IDentifier, prototype for event was programmed to identify barriers,
pick color-coded cardboard payloads and follow a path of pickup and
delivery.
1st Runner Up – Team Gear
Prize Money – $1, 500
Team Members – Gideon Ewa, Uduak Essien, Emem Brownson, Reuben Aniete
Challenge – Earth Studies
Team
Gear designed a mobile app, AgroCast, a crowdsourced agric information
portal that is publicly accessible. AgroCast, according to the team lead
Gideon Ewa, allows farmers report disease outbreak, view disease, their
symptoms as reported by other farmers and possible control measures.
AgroCast also features an open source API than can be built upon and
also the data curated from the app can be mined and deployed for
forecasts.
2nd Runner Up: Team Landmark Replug
Challenge – Earth Studies
The
third prize winners, Team Landmark Replug, also developed a
location-based crowdsource Agric application, Cropinator. There was no
prize money for the third position.
Event lead and partner at
African Technology Foundation, Oluseye Soyode-Johnson said the next
frontier is to track the projects and guide the teams in the coming
years. “African Technology Foundation and a couple of our partners will
be looking at how we can build a pipeline.” Soyode-Johnson said. “We are
looking to getting into them into programmes like DEMO Africa which
will give them more visibility and putting them into trade missions that
can take them to other countries. We’ll be keeping tabs on them to
build their applications more into commercially viable things.”
The 2015 Space App Challenge offered up 947 projects from 12780 participants across 133 cities worldwide.
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