Artificial IntelligenceWomen in TechHackathonCommunityMentorship
Student only
This hackathons is only open to students. Double check the event page for more information as this may mean only those from a particular university/country are eligible.
Event Type
in person
Organizers
Alex Johnson
alex@example.org
Jamie Rivera
jamie@example.org
Sam Chen
sam@example.org
Quality Score
Quality Score
72/100
High confidence
Organiser16/20
Event Maturity14/20
Sponsors18/25
Participants12/20
This event is for women with a STEM background only. Happy April Fool's Day! We're running an all-women vibe coding hackathon: build something that is absolutely working as unintended.
5:00 - π₯ kickoff + networking
5:30 - π€ introductions + presentations
6:00 - π§ team matching (forming teams irl, no need to match beforehand!)
6:30 - π§ begin building
8:00 - π demos + judging
9:00 - π End
π The Tech Bros is the worldβs first all-female, all-technical accelerator (8.7% acceptance rate), combining a fully-funded hacker house in Norway with six weeks of hybrid support to go from idea to MVP. Outside the accelerator cycle we run hackathons, co-working days, and retreats to spark entrepreneurship in technical women & demystify the startup journey.
π The Collective is building a thriving community for student founders across Singapore. We connect you with the investors, mentors, and capital you need to grow, and host high-impact events designed for founders.
π StartupX is a decentralised innovation platform connecting startups and corporates through real conversations and partnerships. We help you connect, collaborate, and build whatβs next.
π ACM-W Asia Pacific is a regional community dedicated to supporting and uplifting women in computing.
π ACM-W Student Chapter in Singapore extends this mission locally by building a supportive space for students through workshops, networking, and mentorship.
Operations12/15
Why this score
Strong organiser track record
Returning event
Well-sponsored
Missing data
Prize details
Code of conduct
everything working as (un)intended | Hackathon Radar