Imagine Cup 2014 - Registration Open
Written by Sue Gee   
Monday, 16 September 2013

Microsoft has officially launched the Imagine Cup 2014 season and student teams can now register and start to work. The website has also been revamped with a new logo, but the three main competitions are staying the same.

The Imagine Cup, which is now going into its 12th year, took its name from the challenge it set students: "Imagine a world in which technology could be used to solve big social problems" - and over the years hundreds of thousand of student have taken up the challenge and devised amazing solutions using Microsoft technologies.

The latest version of the website no longer uses this original formulation, but its World Citizenship Competition preserves the ethos and still looks for "the best new software to address social issues".

The Innovation Competition is looking for "the next big thing" which is capable of "changing lives and giving people the thrill of seeing the future come to life right in front of them".

The Games Competition asks students to "join the global game revolution" and create "the next great game" and like the other two main contests lasts from now until July 31, 2013

The fourth competition that is currently open to teams has a deadline of October 25. This is the Pitch Video Challenge which asks teams to:

Record a video no longer than five minutes in which you and your team pitch your project. No slides, no charts, no pictures. Just you in front of a camera, telling your story, in any of our three competition categories: Games, Innovation, or World Citizenship.

At the end of the finals of this year's Imagine Cup, held in St. Petersburg, it was announced that next year's the event will be "going home" to Microsoft's Redmond headquarters in Seattle, USA. This will be the first time that the Worldwide Finals have been on Microsoft's home turf and the first time in many years that it has been in the United States. No doubt Microsoft will be hoping for more "local" entrants to its flagship competition.

To encourage students to get involved Microsoft has put together a slide dossier detailing what some it its alumni have achieved after their involvement in the Imagine Cup. It makes impressive reading:

 

 

The Imagine Cup is a great opportunity for students to showcase their programming creativity and ability. It's free to enter and involvement brings the benefits of the DreamSpark program - giving free access to Microsoft software and developer tools for learning, teaching and research purposes.

 

More Information

Imagine Cup Website

Imagine Cup blog

DreamSpark

Related Articles

Imagine Cup 2013 Gives Way To 2014

 

 

To be informed about new articles on I Programmer, install the I Programmer Toolbar, subscribe to the RSS feed, follow us on, Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or Linkedin,  or sign up for our weekly newsletter.

 

pico book

 

Comments




or email your comment to: comments@i-programmer.info

Banner


Microsoft Adds IQ Layer To Fabric
04/12/2025

Microsoft is adding a "semantic intelligence layer" to Fabric to add  that elevates Fabric from a unified data platform to a unified intelligence platform. The announcement says the extra layer w [ ... ]



Aspire Adds Support For More Languages
02/12/2025

Microsoft has announced support for more languages in Aspire. The .NET part of its name has also been dropped, and there's a new website rather than just the GitHub repository.


More News

 

 

 

 

Last Updated ( Monday, 16 September 2013 )