Hack Day: Where Journalism Meets Innovation

A showcase of innovative ideas and technical skills at our latest hack day, featuring projects that push the boundaries of journalism and technology.
Hack Day: Where Journalism Meets Innovation
Photo by Mohammad Rahmani on Unsplash

Hack Day: Summer of Sport, Fall of Democracy

Summer of Sport

Recently, colleagues across the product and engineering department, as well as other parts of the organisation, came together for another exciting hack day. For our first hack day of 2024, we kicked off with a grand theme around all the major events of the world, including sport and upcoming elections around the world.

Hackers played around with the idea of using python programming language and real-time mobile telemetry data to influence the outcome of UK elections. They proposed a bold new journalistic geometry, added fun polls, quizzes, and newsletters sign-ups to the live blog, as well as posed the question: “Can bedrock do what CAPI can do?”

And that’s only 4 of the 19 amazing hacks produced and presented over the two-day event!

Winning Concepts and Designs

Here is a selection of our winning concepts and designs from the day:

Best Conceptual Hack: Guest

A new ‘dinner party’ puzzle from Freddie, Abo, Chloe, Ara, Ilhan, and Andrew, where readers need to find the right seating plan for a list of guests from the week’s news. Expect to meet politicians, athletes, actors, musicians, and more - dead and alive!

Dinner Party

Best Technical Hack: favicon-rendering

Rhys created a hack involving favicons, the small icons in the top of a browser that indicate the current website. The Guardian’s favicon currently displays their logo, but some websites use favicons to communicate information, like Gmail’s unread email count. Rhys wondered about further possibilities for The Guardian’s favicon and developed a hack with two parts:

  • A counter in the favicon for unread liveblog entries, which would appear on liveblogs.
  • A more experimental demo that displayed a tiny version of the Guardian article being read entirely within the favicon. This included a Guardian header, real-time scrolling, all the article text, and images.

Favicon

Most Entertaining Hack: Guardian Priority

The Guardian only publishes a small handful of puzzles every day, but hundreds of articles containing thousands of paragraphs of text. “Priority Puzzles” is a browser extension from Simon which converts paragraphs into playable crosswords. Simply click on any paragraph, and its letters are arranged into a square grid, words are found, and clues are generated using AI.

Priority Puzzles

Best Past the Post (Most on Theme): Big Event in July

Jamie worked on a way to include tennis scores in our liveblogs. Journalists often write live updates of games in tennis matches that include scores written in a consistent text format. We can parse this format into structured data and display the scores using a tabular representation at the top of the blog.

Tennis Scores

As always, we would like to extend a well-deserved congratulations to all the winners, as well as a huge thank you to everyone who participated and the many people behind the scenes who help make our hack days happen.

A Few Thoughts from Our Director of Engineering, Mariot Chauvin

Hack day is an excellent way for organisations to experiment quickly with innovative ideas and for participants to develop technical skills and improve cross-discipline collaboration.

We have been organising hack days regularly at the Guardian for the last 15 years, and they are always a special moment. A moment suspended in time, in a technological digital world evolving at an accelerating, frantic pace, and within news organisations disrupted in their business models.

What I found remarkable with this edition is the fact that the four winners are representative of the necessary evolutions of a news organisation to adapt to the transformation of the media industry value chain: structuring content, building a distinctive gaming experience, and using technology as an edge.

Hack Day