[Webinar] How to Protect Sensitive Data with CSFLE | Register Today
I’m happy to announce Confluent will be hosting another Kafka Summit Hackathon on May 7th in New York City! The free hackathon will take place a day prior to Kafka Summit NYC and is designed to help the community learn how to build streaming applications with Apache Kafka®.
Whether you’re a beginner or a seasoned expert, join us to create cool stream processing applications, chat with fellow Kafka committers and developers, and maybe win a prize in the process!
Here are the key details:
Kafka Summit Hackathon New York City
When: Sunday, May 7, 2017 from 6:00 PM to 10:00 PM (EDT)
Where: New York Midtown Hilton – 1335 Avenue Of The Americas, New York, NY 11019 – View Map (Sutton South)
How to join: Hackathon Registration
We’ll have food, drinks and prizes for participants, along with Kafka developers on hand to help you with any questions. Interested? Then register for the hackathon.
Want to know more? Read on below for more details.
Last year, we hosted the Kafka Summit Hackathon to create new connectors for the Kafka community. More than 100 participated and it was so fun, many stayed long after the 10pm close.
The winners of the 2016 Kafka Summit Hackathon were:
This year’s theme is microservices, and notably microservices implemented with the Kafka Streams API or with Kafka producer and consumer clients for programming languages such as Java, C/C++, Python, .NET or Go.
The goal: to combine the power of stream processing with the agility and composability of microservices.
We’ll be looking for applications that demonstrate how you can quickly build services that would be challenging to write without Kafka. They might leverage Streams API features such as interactive queries, session windows and streaming joins.
The Streams API in Apache Kafka, introduced in version 0.10, is the easiest way to process data in Kafka. Since its initial release in summer 2016, more and more companies across industries such as finance, travel, advertising, gaming, cybersecurity and social media have been leveraging the Streams API to build mission critical, real-time applications that power their core business – all the way from small to large-scale use cases that handle millions of events per second.
Technically, the Streams API is a powerful yet easy-to-use Java library that allows you to build “normal” applications (e.g. in the form of microservices) for your stream processing needs that you can package, deploy and operate however you want, rather than forcing you to build out separate processing clusters or similar special-purpose infrastructure. Even so, your streams applications with Kafka will be elastic, scalable, distributed, fault-tolerant and secure – think: “a cluster to go.” On top of that the Streams API provides your applications with database functionality such as the first-class abstractions for streams and tables, fast and fault-tolerant state management as well as interactive queries to access the latest processing results – think: “a database to go.” You can leverage features such as windowing support, sessionization, event-time processing and highly performant joins for streams and tables. And of course, the Streams API is 100% compatible and integrated with Kafka.
In addition to the Kafka Streams API described above, there’s a vibrant ecosystem and community that provide application developers with Kafka clients for essentially all popular programming languages, including Java (shipped with Apache Kafka), C/C++, Python, Go, .NET, NodeJS and more – see the Kafka Clients overview in the Apache Kafka wiki.
Interested in the hackathon but not sure what to build? Here are a few ideas to jumpstart your creativity:
Still not sure what to build? During registration we’ll help connect you with other participants so you can work as a team to come up with and implement a project.
Entries will be evaluated by a panel of judges at the end of the hackathon based on creativity, features, and completeness.
Prizes will only be awarded to entries that open source their code, making it available on a code sharing site like GitHub or Bitbucket.
Is attendance restricted to Kafka Summit attendees?
No, this is a community event and anyone is welcome to register and participate – it’s free.
Do I need to be familiar with the Kafka Streams API?
No previous experience with the Streams API is required, but we encourage you to review some of the resources listed below to get some basic familiarity with the framework. This will let you focus on designing and writing your streaming applications during the hackathon.
Do I need to know what I’m going to build before I arrive?
No, although it will help you get up and running more quickly if you come with a few ideas. We’ve provided some examples of possible projects in the “Project Ideas” section above to give you an idea of the types of applications you might build with the Kafka Streams API.
Can I work in a team?
Absolutely, and we encourage it! To help form teams, you can include projects you are interested in building with your registration. We’ll connect you with other participants with similar interests at the beginning of the event.
What type of food will be provided?
Light dinner and drinks.
Am I required to submit my code or open source it?
You are not required to do either, but to be eligible for the prizes you must publish your code under an open source license. We recommend the Apache v2 License, but other popular open source licenses are acceptable.
How complete are projects expected to be at the end of the hackathon?
The hackathon is just one evening, but enough time to get a prototype up and running. We hope this will motivate you to get started on a fully featured Kafka Streams application, but the expectation is to only have a prototype by the end of the night.
Will a skeleton or demo application be provided to help get started?
Yes, example applications for Kafka’s Streams API (in Java and in Scala) can be found in the Confluent Examples repository. Examples for non-Java clients are typically available at the respective project websites or GitHub repositories. We encourage starting from such demo application so you can make the most of the time during the hackathon.
Who will be available to provide help with Kafka’s Streams API or with non-Java clients (e.g. C/C++, Python)?
Kafka committers, Confluent engineers, and community members will attend the event to help you go from design to implementation of your application.
How will projects be judged?
Near the end of the hackathon we’ll ask you to give a brief overview of what you’ve built and provide us a link to the repository. No need for a fancy demo, just a quick summary. A small panel of judges will select the most outstanding project, based on creativity, features, and completeness.
The Kafka Summit Hackathon is a free event, but all attendees must register. Head over to the Kafka Summit Hackathon NYC website for more details and to complete your registration.
The hackathon will be most productive if you’ve done a bit of prep work so you can get straight to coding. Here are some resources you might find useful.
The Streams API in Kafka
Kafka clients for Java, C/C++, Python, etc.
Interested? Register now.
Join Confluent at AWS re:Invent 2024 to learn how to stream, connect, process, and govern data, unlocking its full potential. Explore innovations like GenAI use cases, Apache Iceberg, and seamless integration with AWS services. Visit our booth for demos, sessions, and more.