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TreeHacks is Stanford University's annual hackathon, hosted at the Stanford Engineering Quad. The event is fully student-run, and host's over 1000 students from all around the world every February. The event is well known for its extraordinary resources from industry and academia, including mentors from established tech giants and budding startups, and experts from non-profits and global research groups to help students with their projects.

History
TreeHacks was founded in 2013, with its first event held in February 2014. Since then, there have been 5 iterations of TreeHacks, and an upcoming event February 14th-16th 2020.

//Stuff to include: hackpacks, open source, speakers

More History
The first HackMIT had around 150 attendees and took place in January 2013 at the Stata Center as part of MIT's Techfair, a technology fair and corporate expo for MIT students.

HackMIT 2013
HackMIT was also held in the September of 2013 with 1000 attendees. The event featured Tom Lehman of Genius (formerly Rap Genius) as a keynote speaker and Sequoia Capital as the event's title sponsor.

HackMIT 2014
In October, HackMIT 2014 invited 1000 undergraduates as well as Adora Cheung, then-CEO of Homejoy, and Alexis Ohanian, co-founder of Reddit, as keynotes. Highlighted sponsors of HackMIT 2014 were Amadeus, Google, and Uber.

HackMIT 2015
HackMIT 2015's theme was experimentation, and teams built projects ranging from an Apple Watch air guitar to computer vision analysis tools for security camera footage. Keynote speakers this year included Liz Fosslien, author of webcomic Out of the Office, and Jack Conte, musician and co-founder of Patreon.

HackMIT 2016
The 2016 event focused on inclusivity and featured a random lottery admissions process combined with selected application reading. Keynote speakers included Sanjit Biswas, co-founder of Samsara and Meraki, Inc., and Dina Katabi, MIT professor and director of the MIT Center for Wireless Networks and Mobile Computing.

HackMIT 2017
HackMIT was held in September of 2017, and over 1200 hackers came together from all around the world. Keynote speakers included Steve Huffman, co-founder and CEO of Reddit and Kyle Vogt, Founder and CEO of Cruise Automation.

Projects
Over the years, HackMIT has seen a wide variety of hacks, ranging from new web and mobile app concepts to novel hardware/software interfaces to machine learning and computer vision projects. In particular, HackMIT emphasizes building working prototypes rather than business plans or ideas, and participants are encouraged to be open about the technical challenges they faced in the judging process.

Some notable projects from past HackMIT events include:


 * Lean On Me, a mental health platform which matches users to peer supporters
 * Controlio, an app that allows users to control their computer via SMS and voice control
 * Project Naptha, a browser extension software for Google Chrome that allows users to highlight, copy, edit and translate text from within images.

Blueprint
The HackMIT organizing team also hosts a high school hackathon, called Blueprint, on MIT's campus in the winter. In past years, this event has featured separate learning and hacking days, with students at MIT volunteering to teach classes on introductory web and mobile app development.

Open Source
HackMIT has developed open-source software for the hackathon community, releasing all of their internal and external tools on code.hackmit.org. HackMIT software like HELPq and Gavel has been used by dozens of events.

Puzzles
Since 2014, HackMIT has released an annual admissions puzzle, similar to an online puzzlehunt that guarantees admission to the first 50 teams.