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UMOJAHACK AFRICA 2021: Over 1 000 students participate in Africa’s largest inter-university hackathon

UMOJAHACK AFRICA 2021: Over 1 000 students participate in Africa’s largest inter-university hackathon

Over 1000 students from 126 universities across Africa participated in UmojaHack Africa 2021, a virtual machine learning hackathon hosted by data science competition platform Zindi on 27 - 28 March.

Zindi said in a statement in April that more than $10 000 in prizes were awarded to data science students from 9 African countries, and more than 8500 submissions were made to solve three real-world machine learning challenges on Zindi.

Students from 21 African countries joined the event, representing Algeria, Benin, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Malawi, Morocco, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Tunisia, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

They participated in three different machine learning challenges: a financial resilience prediction challenge, a logistics challenge for African B2B service provider Sendy, and a computational biology challenge using the DeepChain™ platform developed by InstaDeep. The winning solutions developed by Zindi users will be shared with these organisations and deployed in real-world applications.

“Very happy with the outcome”

In winning second place in the Sendy Delivery Rider Response Challenge, Tony Mipawa, a data science student from the University of Dodoma, Tanzania, epitomised the spirit of Zindi and of UmojaHack A year ago, Tony was a data science novice until he participated in Zindi’s first ever Mentorship Programme in 2020. He has grown in leaps and bounds since then, as evidenced by his prize-winning submission in this hackathon, less than a year later.

“I’m very happy with the outcome,” Mipawa said at the awards ceremony. “My advice is, whenever there is an opportunity to learn, you should take it. Learning is all about passion; whenever there is an opportunity to learn, put your whole effort into it, do it well. Try to learn from anyone you meet. I would like to thank Zindi for what that mentorship programme gave me,” he added.

Global support

UmojaHack Africa 2021 was sponsored by some leading names in the global and African tech, AI and financial sectors, including InstaDeep, Standard Bank Group, Microsoft, DeepMind, NVIDIA, and Old Mutual. They were integral in making the event a success by offering financial and professional development prizes, contributing their expertise and excitement to the event, and supporting UmojaHack Africa 2021 through their own channels.

Microsoft’s Principal Director for Software Partnerships Chris Lwanga said the firm was incredibly excited about this event spanning over 100 African universities and helping thousands of African students leverage their data science and AI skills to solve African problems. “At Microsoft we believe in empowering every organisation and person to do more,” added Lwanga.

“Standard Bank is deeply invested in funding and implementing critical data science skills development programmes, such as Zindi’s UmojaHack Africa 2021 hackathon, to position Africa as a serious competitor in the world’s rapidly emerging data-driven sector,” said Adrian Vermooten, Chief Innovation Officer, Standard Bank Group.

InstaDeep CEO and co-founder Karim Beguir said his firm was delighted to support UmojaHack Africa again, describing it as “ an incredible initiative close to our hearts”. “Seeing students from more than 120 universities come together to collaborate on real-world machine learning challenges is truly inspiring. This is, in our opinion, the best way to accelerate AI growth on the continent. Hackathons like UmojaHack bring us one step closer to achieving InstaDeep’s mission: building an AI-first world that benefits everyone,” he added.

Zindi CEO Celina Lee said UmojaHack Africa has proven to be a game-changing event, especially when so many young people have been impacted by the global pandemic. “This is a chance for students from across the continent to come together to learn, compete, and have fun. UmojaHack is about building skills, creating new machine learning applications to solve problems that really matter, while forging new connections among the students as well as with industry. We are incredibly excited to see what the students come up with in just one weekend,” said Lee.

Aspiring data science students work on UmojaHack Africa 2021 problems at their universities across Africa

Zindi

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