 Kiitos kaikille. Minulla ei ole niin paljon ihmisiä, mutta se on tosi hyvä, koska meillä on tosiaan tosiaan, ja koko ajan, joten... Minä olen Ari Väntinen, olen jälkeen jälkeen järjestelmässä Krona-oppaa-oppaa Suomessa. Komptel. Olen tietysti hieman ottaa monia, tai ottaa monia. Ottaa monia jälkeen jälkeen jälkeen jälkeen. Tämä on yksityinen. Mennään. Olemme rauhdeja olemme olleet omaa koko ajan koko ajan. 500 ajan 45 paikalla jälkeen. Ja nyt koko ajan jälkeen jälkeen jälkeen jälkeen. Ja haluamme ottaa monia jälkeen jälkeen jälkeen jälkeen. Ja minä olen Retta jälkeen jälkeen. Ja miten koko ajan? Retta. Kiitos, Arri. Tämä on piikko, kiitos nähdä niin paljon ihmisiä koko ajan. Minä hakeen koko ajan jälkeen. Minä haluan koko ajan koko ajan jälkeen. Joo, pitää koko ajan jälkeen. Ja minä olen Koko ajan jälkeen. Ja minä olen Koko ajan. Minä olen koko ajan. Minä olen Koko ajan. Ja minä olen koko ajan. Minä olen ...prediktive analytics, algorithms, and each time you guys cycled and based on your performance, ...comptel we donate money. And so you put a real sweat equity in the MiHackIt program and that was great. We ended up to the sum with all of you guys. Let me get it right. 5226 euros. So on average it was about 20 euros per each cyclist. Great, thanks for that. So here we go. Here's the check from Comptel to MiHackIt program. And with his money I hope at least one high school student or youngster boy or girl, I don't mind, ...can experience and get inspired by technology and create something beautiful for all of us in the future. Thank you. All right, let the show continue. Well ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Slush Hacks. Do you know what this is? Do you know what this is? It's the top prize tonight and it comes with 20,000 euros in your pocket. Who wants to win? Who wants to win this? An amazing week in Helsinki ladies and gentlemen. A historical week for Finnish hacks. Never in Finnish history have we had such a large amazing hack in this country. This is the biggest hackathon in Europe. Is that a minute? And from now on we're going to make it the biggest hackathon in the world. Yeah, is that cool? And this has happened because we had an amazing collaboration. I'm going to put it here so it doesn't fall. Oh no, I'm going to keep it. Amazing collaboration between four hackathons. We had the people from architecture, engineering and construction have their own hackathon this week. We had people from industry focusing on energy and networks called the industry hack. And then we had the people from altus and the unbelievable long list of collaboration people. Bringing in over 500 people from 30 countries to that hackathon. And then we had the ultra hack with as many people from over 15 countries altogether. Over 40 countries, 1,000 hackers in this city. Isn't that cool? Yeah! I'm so excited about this event that I changed my name. It's MC Hacker. It's my real name, Shaker. I'm the MC of the evening. You can call me MC Hacker tonight. Just for you ladies and gentlemen. So we're going to start the evening and it's going to be a really exciting evening. We have 17 challenges, 17 teams, 17 pitches. They will have between 3 and 4 minutes to pitch. And tonight the jury, the jury members, where are you? Where's the jury? Are you awake? Good, 3 guys. Whatever you do, smile to this corner right here. Don't forget that. It's a bit like synchronized dancing or skating. You've got to be nice to the jury members. All right, good luck to you. Make a good decision. And we're going to get started, ladies and gentlemen, with the AEC Hackathon people. As I mentioned, it was the architecture engineering construction people. They were all weekend about 14 teams hacked solutions for real world industry problems at Tecla. Tecla is a really cool finished company. A lot of 3D animations of what you can do with construction. Very cool place in ESPO. The hacks varied from new immersive customer experiences and buying a home to better information management in facilities management. And apps for indoor navigation. The winner of that hack of the AEC Hack was Indoor Hackers. Get over here! The team was able to solve a big industry problem by creating easy to use interface and interacting with 3D building information models with useful features like indoor positioning, which is really, really hard to do. When your GPS doesn't work anymore and you're indoors, these guys are going to help you. Where are you? Are you ready? I'm going to give you three to four minutes. Come on, come on, come on. Give me a big hand. Big hand. Yes, yes. There's no registration needed because you already have the NFC tag that's used with the electric vehicle charges. So you just tap the NFC and you're good to go. It's affordable to implement. We can remotely update both the hardware and the app. And so why did we build this thing? Basically because Tesla and Nissan Leaf have created a huge momentum in electric cars. And the more cars people buy, the cues become bigger. Let's take a system look in the wild, what it looks like. So this is our working prototype. And as you can see, it already contains all the required elements. Tap, cloud, and the charger works seamlessly together. If you got interested, we have a live demo for you to show. Come to see us after the show. In the future we can also automatically update the route and reserve the charges automatically at the right intervals. We can also ask other users to reserve like free up a charger for us. And then we are looking for cooperation with electric charger providers and car manufacturers. And anybody really who's interested in electric vehicle charging. Thank you. Great job. Yes, Voistava. Great job. We all got a charge out of that. Thank you very, very much. And now ladies and gentlemen, we're going to start with our third hack group. This is a huge group of people. Over 500 people from 30 countries attended the junction hack over the weekend. How many of you attended the junction? Can I hear you? That's a big group. Autos, yes. I have to say that I'm a former auto guy myself. I wish you all very well. 140 projects ladies and gentlemen. It's really, really cool about this particular hack. They had 240 partner representative visited the venue to help these hackers with their projects. We have really, really cool hacks. We're going to start with the first one. One thing they asked me to mention is that they had a lot of student volunteers helping over the weekend. Any of them here today? Student volunteers? Oh, that's who you are. Student volunteers. There you are. Fantastic energy. This is Future Lab's challenge. And in this challenge, the objective of the Future Lab track was to build a device-based service. And the winner of the track was Oko or Okmuse. Get up here. Get up here. Give them a big hand. It solves a problem of not having to memorize sheet music. I love this. And you don't have to change the sheet music when you play. I want it now. You've got three minutes. Good luck. Did you know that it could take almost a year for a musician to memorize a piece for their performance? Let me tell you a story. I'm a musician. I was playing in an international piano competition. And I've played through the pieces that I knew not so well, really fine. And I started playing the last piece that I thought I knew really, really, really well. I started playing thinking about my victory and everything. But then I stopped. My memory went completely blank. I started again. I started playing. And I stopped at the same spot. The audience was completely silent. The judges were completely silent. I didn't know what to do. This is the piece I still remember by now. I was only nine years old back then, but I still remember this piece. Well, I'm also a musician. And I have to tell you that this is a common problem for all musicians, regardless of how professional they are. The problem of memory lapses in the middle of a performance. It's been scientifically proven that music memorization is a lot more difficult than memorizing, for example, lyrics or poetry. And that's because as you can see, there are four different types of memories involved while memorizing music. There's simply so much information to handle at the same time as you're performing. And that's why we created this app for Google Glass. OK Muse. What does it do? You're performing. You don't need a music stand anymore. You can perform at your own pace. It follows you. It follows your pace. You're playing faster. It goes faster. You're playing slower. It goes slower. It turns the music sheets for you. So you can access all your notes just by having the glass with you anywhere. And now here we have a basic diagram of how it works. But now I want to actually show how it works. So next slide. Yeah, so now you should imagine that you're a pianist. You put the glass on. You go to our app. You choose the piece and you start playing. Immediately when you choose the piece, the beginning of the piece is shown in the glass display. As you continue playing at your own pace and tempo, it automatically scrolls it for you. It's not distracting you because it's on the side of your vision. It's always for you to have a quick glance when you need to. And it actually is more visible because it's white on black, not black and white. So you can actually see it in your Google Glass. We've asked many musicians about the app. And they told that they would need it a hundred percent. And there was actually one guy coming to talk to us after Junction. He told guys at playing trombone. And I really think that I need this because you remember those military stands and all. We can understand him. This app can be used not only for professional musicians, but also for amateurs or people who learn music. Well, the number you see there consists of only symphony orchestra or professional musicians in Europe. Now, if you add to that, all the amateur musicians solo is even professional musicians from chamber orchestras, bands, other places. You see that the number rises really high. And we believe that there is demand. And we envision a whole orchestra with Google Glass just playing by it. Here's our team. We have the knowledge and the expertise to make this happen. And now it's all up to you to make this happen and hear beautiful performances wherever you go. Take a bow. Great job. You're musicians, right? We have performance next week. Yeah, they get a pizza from Julius Elgarov from Junction. And Emily Kanto from Futurize are giving pizzas to everybody who participated in this. Isn't that cool? Yes. Thank you very much. Very creative use of existing technology to get something really useful for Google Glass. Great. Thank you. Very, very cool. Give it a big hand. Can I try those glasses? Can I try that? Oh, wow. Oh, there it is, but that's for the nose. Oh, this is very cool. Okay, bye-bye. Very, very cool. So, hey, the next hack is the future payments with Klarna. Klarna is the objective of the future of payment. How do you make payment a lot easier? How do you make payment a lot more simple? And this is a really, really cool hack. Let's call it Tappalicious. Get over here. Tappalicious. Give them a big hand. They remove the hassle of having to pay for what you eat in restaurants. You know when the check comes, it's always a little bit problematic. Yeah. You have a solution. We have a solution. You have three minutes to tell us about it. All right, yes. So, hey everyone, we're Tappalicious and we're going to revolutionize the restaurant experience you guys have almost every day. So, why? Why are we making this? Basically, two problems. So, first one is waiting. No one likes waiting. You have to wait for waiters a lot. Second one is splitting the bill. You always end up with your friends doing complicated calculations, who pays what, et cetera. They've got to be an easier way, no? So, our solution. To give you a really clear image, I'm just going to walk you through it. So, it's basically an app that allows you to order and check out on your phone. So, you check, like you log in with any social media platform. It takes you to the check-in screen. This is where you go to the restaurant with your friends. You check in at your table using QR code or the NFC chip that's on your table. Your friends do the same thing. And in this case, it's our friend Robert. And he's sitting at this table with his friend Nortje. And they are checked in at this table. And they want to place an order. So, they go over to orders. They say, okay, we want to place a new order. Takes them to the menu. First, they want some drinks. So, they go over to drinks. They select some stuff. And they go over to the order overview. This is where you can see what you're about to order, what your friend is about to order, and the total cost of the order. So, they place the order. And this is the moment that the order comes in at the kitchen and they can bring over the drinks. So, they place a couple of different orders throughout the night and have a nice main course, et cetera. And at the end of the night, they say, okay, we want to go home. We want to check out. They can do this in the restaurant. They can even do this at home after they've left. So, they click checkout. They get the receipt. And they can pay their restaurant visit. Like, we have a lot of different payment methods, payment methods, but we, of course, recommend Klarna because it provides really easy one-click payment. And then we're like, okay, thank you for eating with tablicias. We hope you come again soon. And they can view their restaurant visit in their history for administrative purposes and all that good stuff. Okay. So, that's the user side of things. But what about restaurants? This is also super interesting. Okay, so, restaurants have their own panel in which they can, like, manage their menu and all that good stuff, right? But they also have analytics. Because, well, going back. Okay, so, they also have analytics because we have people login with social media platforms. That means we can get a lot of data from them. We can anonymously store and we want to do what Google Analytics did for websites. We want to do that for restaurants. What's also really cool is that we get a lot of data ourselves. So, what we can do with that is things like intelligent menus. Okay, so, say you really like cocktails and every night at 10 p.m. you go out to a bar, you have a cocktail. We know that you like cocktails because you do that every day. So, after you've done that for a while, you go to a bar at 10 p.m. and we can, of course, present you with recommended cocktails with this kind, of course, because you do that stuff a lot. Then also, I'm a Dutchie. I'm from Holland. If I go out to Italy, I don't speak Italian. I don't know what's on the menu. So, we know what country you're from. Tablishes knows what country you're from. And we can attempt to auto translate the menu for you to your native language. The possibilities are basically endless. These are just a few of the options you have. A better restaurant experience for everyone involved. Tablishes.com, thank you very much. You made us hungry. Stay here. We have a piece of delivery for you, too. In the query. Take a picture, guys. Pizza picture. You can go there, too. All right, yes. Looking hungry. Awesome. So, the counter track was super cool. It was all about the future of payments. We had some awesome company or awesome teams building awesome hacks for the weekend. Unfortunately, counter people are already on their way back to Sweden. But it was a truly cool track. And we were actually building a future. So, give one more big round of applause for the awesome teams. Thank you. Thank you, guys. Thank you. Yes, what a delicious service. Hey, this next one is really cool. It's health with if insurance. Well, it creates a preemptive health care service to support a health in your life. Think of, like, Siri for health care. So, you've got your social media and all the kind of stuff you put. Positive words and then you've got all this monitoring going on on, you know, your wearable technology. You know, you hack this and you find out, you know, are you doing well? Are you in good shape? And then if you are, if you are, your insurance company will give you a bonus or will give you some kind of perk. So, the people working on, who won this track in the insurance track here, health with if insurance, are a company called or a group called Lifestyle Rewards. Get up here. Man, good luck. You've got three minutes. Yes. Hello. We are Lifestyle Rewards team and we would like to help you to improve yourself. Do you remember the last time you had an interaction with your insurance company? Most people do not. As an insurance company, what if you would engage more positively with your customers? What are the problems we are facing today? They are that health data is hard to come by. It's expensive and there is a low penetration of biosensors. Traditional indicators like smoking, celery, diabetes become less effective than in risk management comparing to new methods. Companies would like better understanding of their customers. They need better risk management tools as well. Person social activity is a leading risk tool to determine, to say about the person's health. So, comparing to traditional tools like income, smoking and diabetes, it provides more information about the person's health. What is the solution? You can insurance company can set a list of goals for each specific customer and by meeting the goal you can get insurance benefits. For example, you can set social activity goal where you reward people by their positive social interaction. There is a huge variety of goals that could be set. So, as I said, by sitting in one of them, you can get various insurance benefits. Our product is an application that allows insurance companies to set goals for each specific customer. What is the value we provide? So, health data is hard to come by. And it's much cheaper and easier to get social media data. By interacting with the customer, companies can build more trustful relationship with them. Everyone uses social media. There is 20% of world population on Facebook. And comparing from 1% to 5% of biosensor penetration, it's a huge difference. How does it work? You choose your goal. And then you need to meet it. Meaning you need to succeed in all the criteria. Later you get bonus. So, either insurance benefits, either special offers. Together with employers and insurance companies, we would like to improve people's lifestyles by rewarding with them for their efforts. So, we are a lifestyle rewards team. And we want healthier and happier people. Thank you. How do you feel? Well, you were a bit nervous? Yes, of course. And you did great. Now you've got your pizza. Oh, thanks. We have also a great announcement from IF, something really interesting about your pitch. So, you're never going to believe this. We are so happy with your hack that we hope that last year we did a similar hack. And the thing that won, we actually developed that into an app across the Nordics with a multi-million euro campaign. It was on TV. We hope that we can continue to work with you guys, that we can do something similar with you guys and actually launch this as something great with a multi-million dollar or euro TV campaign across the Nordics. What do you say? How do you like about that? What do you say? If I knew that I would have prepared better for my pitch. Definitely. Thank you, Anders. From IF Insurance. My God. This is exciting. This stuff actually works. It's super cool. It's super cool. All right, ladies and gentlemen, the next hack was Future of Commerce with Shopify. Well, they wanted to build something that brings simple function and high value to merchants that enables them to do something they never thought possible. That that's a big, big hack. But I think these guys hacked it and really nailed it. Their products help sell products over chat using artificial intelligence built into when you chat. It sort of identifies the words and then with natural language processing and makes the shopping experience a lot more exciting. Please welcome chat first. Get over here. Yes, good luck. Three minutes. Thank you. Imagine the world. We do not need any mobile application to call an Uber to order a food to control your smart house. You need only chat to do this. Imagine the world. We can order anything you wish directly from salesmen through the chat. Imagine the chat first world. Hi, my name is Pavel and has my team chat first. We are a group of experienced professionals in different technologies. We on our team, we have future PhD on computer science. We have experienced growth hacker. We have great vision errors. We come here last weekend to participate in hack junction hackathon. For 24 hours, we created minimal viable product of what we called Siri for online and mobile businesses. And we actually won a future of e-commerce track hosted by Shopify on this. Why e-commerce asks? E-commerce is huge market. And even tiny, tiny piece of it is extremely impressive. So let's take owner of small shop. Every day he should answer a lot of questions from a lot of customers through various channels. And our shop owner is unable to lead an appropriate dialogue with all his potential customers. He lack of time and he lose his customers. He may be tired of annoying repeatable questions and he lose his customers. He may have insufficient knowledge in sales and he lose his customers. We had to stop it. We created a web service to automate communication between clients and company by constructing artificial intelligence robot capable to communicate on natural language. After that, we constructed a virtual sales assistance. We call it sales bot to assist shop owner on his way to shop to his customers. Let's see how it works. I mentioned your goal and you want to buy a code. You open chat of the shop and just asking, hey, I want to buy a code. After that, shop determines that your goal and introduce you some trending course. And after that, it drive you all the way right to the checkout. It asks what size you need, where do you prefer, where to deliver it, how you to, I don't know, pay for it and other stuff. And perform checkout. Bam, it's done. You just bought a code through contextual user interface. Pretty cool, huh? Okay, our bots are completely omnichannel. It supports third party API, natural language and custom scenarios. For now, we support only several channels, but much more channels will be added soon. There are some competitors in this market, but we can beat them with seamless integration, easy scenario expanding and ability to actual sale through our chatbots. We platform a service, so we will charge shop owners for $40 per month. Also, we will charge additionally for custom scenarios for services of language engineer to improve these scenarios. We did a great job and our products almost ready. All what we need is seed round investment and partners to help us automate first clients. So please join us in chat first world. Thank you. Here's my contacts right anytime. Also, I want to invite my team here on the stand. Thank you. And you've got more pizza coming your way. Would you want to say something? Yes, take the mic and tell us Shopify. Hey, I'm Josh from Shopify. And we had an amazing weekend on the future of commerce track. Selfie time. Seven or eight hacks, all of which were improving merchants lives. And judging was really, really, really difficult. And we picked this hack because strong vision just to make the lives of merchants and consumers much easier. So extra round of applause for Pavel and team chat first. You're a big hand. Thank you, Josh, for that. Thank you very much. Super, great. The next hack had a wonderful partner for it. It had Uber part of this. It's called improving cities with Uber was this challenge. It's the use of the Uber API to build the best app with the most impact. Well, what can it be for Uber? Well, this one was a really cool one. It's Uber for kids. So how can kids use Uber and the Uber service, of course, with the permission of their parents and making the most of that service for the kids' needs? Very, very interesting application of Uber by what they called and they called themselves, well, Uber kids. Get up here. I got three minutes. Good luck. Yes. Hello everyone. I know you're going to be really excited about this because today we might actually change the future of Uber. I'm from a team called Uber Kids. And last weekend we participated in the junction hackathon. We were selected as the winners of the Uber track. We built a working prototype that uses Uber's API for the busy parents to take their kids back and forth from home to school, from school to the after-class activities. And we want Uber to do that for them. And we're calling it Uber Family. Uber Family also works as a safer alternative of the public transportation or the regular cabs. While the app is targeted at the parents, it is built for the kids, meaning that the kids themselves can request the Uber right without need of parents' interaction. Oh, damn, it's missing one slide. How it works is really simple that all the parents need to do is to preset the destinations for their child's trip. So, for example, I'm currently in the high school. I want to go home. I just open the app. I just choose from the list like home. I click it. Uber gets my current location and already knows the destination. While the parent gets notified when I call the Uber, when the driver picks me up, when we brought me to the destination. We conducted a survey where we found out that 75% of the parents find this as a problem. And interestingly, 100% of the parents who used Uber before would use this for their kids. Although we faced a drawback because currently under Uber's terms of service, this service would be against the terms of service because individuals under 18 years old cannot be in the Uber right alone. So we had to, for this reason, we pivoted our idea from the kids towards the family, especially on the elderly people who are unable to drive by themselves, so we enabled them to get around. Yeah, and this is the slide. This is how the app could look like, but actually it doesn't look like that. I want to say that regulations and rules of the service can change. We just need to think what people want and need. Yeah, while focusing on the future, because this is the only way how the change can happen. Thank you. Bring on the pizza. Great job, man. More pizza. So my name is Adam Oran. I'm from Developer Relations at Uber, and I just want to congratulate these guys. They've come up with a remarkable idea. It's amazingly simple. And one of the reasons that we chose them was not because of the simplicity that they could bring to our API and our application, but the idea that they were able to pivot during the hackathon, they found a problem with their idea. They didn't give up. They didn't throw it away and say, you know what, we can't build something for kids. They changed it around. They had a fierce spirit and built something that they could actually market and go and put on the app store tomorrow using our API and go to market with. So that's the fierceness, the entrepreneurial thing that we like to see done with our API. And this is just massive kudos to these guys for pulling off an amazing, simple, well-refined product in the course of about 48 hours. Super. Thank you guys. Thank you, Adam. Adam, when are we going to see Uber in Finland? Uber in Finland? It's here. I took an Uber to get here today. It works well. I haven't used it yet. It does? Yes. I'm so happy. And for my kids, when do I get it? As soon as these guys put something on the app store. You see, that's a promise. Tomorrow? Super guys. Thank you so much. Thank you, Adam, for coming. Thank you so much. Give him a big hand, everybody. Yes. I love that company. And the next hack is an unlimited, unlimited hack. And this track, the objective was to build anything that didn't fit into any of the other categories. And, well, this one was a really cool one. It actually allows people to learn coding in a fun and new way by competing against their friends. And these people are called Slush Smackdown. Come on up. Yes. Slush Smackdown is code school on steroids. We are bunch of geeks who love building stuff. But we felt that the barrier to learn coding is too high. And we want to pay forward and inspire others, especially non-techies, to start coding and building. So we build proof of concept that offers more social interaction and participation than any other coding platform. It's a gateway drug where people get addicted to coding before we move them on to harder things. So in Slush Smackdown, you build code, a logic to your character how they will wrestle against other people's code. We use the actual commands in the visual editor to teach people programming languages. And we show them in real-time updated JavaScript to make the transition to real programming languages easier. So let's test our code and challenge our dear friend Sikapankkiri. You always battle with real code against source code built by other people. And yes, Joe Rampage is teaching a lesson to Sikapankkiri. It took us 48 hours from the idea to launching the game and coding school on Sunday evening. And here's a couple of highlights I'd like to point out what we achieved over the junction weekend. Most coding environments offer either visual or textual programming. We wanted to combine them and make learning faster and easier by showing JavaScript updated real-time as you build your code. For more advanced students, we offer full-blown JavaScript editor where you can program anything. But we had to protect our servers from nasty things and we put the JavaScript interpreter into a sandbox. Most importantly, we wanted to motivate people by having real-time live interaction with their friends and other people online where they battle with their code and challenge others. We've been thrilled to see that people came to our coding school and, more importantly, that they've been bringing their friends along. So here are the stats from yesterday. We had almost 400 sign-ups there who had played almost 14,000 code battles. And they keep coming back as the average number of code battles per user is increasing and yesterday it was about 40 battles per user. And just before coming on stage, I checked the figures and now we are up to 30,000 code battles already. So we are thrilled that we have hit something important and really got people addicted to coding. We apparently ruined several people's work day and we are now looking forward to take coding forward and helping other people to start coding and getting inspired to build stuff. Thank you. You get a pizza! This time we have Julius. You're not yours. Come on, you shouldn't eat the guy's pizza, Julius. These guys from Aalto University, you know, it's terrible. Shame on you. Thank you, Andre. Cello, take your own. I'm hugely impressed. Turn off the microphone. I'm hugely impressed. With all our teams at the junction and especially smackdown. At first I couldn't believe that you could actually build that in 48 hours, but these guys did it. Huge round of applause to Junction and all the teams and especially smackdown. Respect! Very, very, very cool stuff. Hey, how many of you in the room are afraid or at least a little bit afraid of flying? Anybody? Just a little bit afraid of flying? Well, this next app or this next hack is going to help you out, ladies and gentlemen. This track was called the Aero track. The objective was to build something that would improve the travel experience. And this really helps your audio phobia. And of course the winner of the track was fear of flying. Come on up. Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. We're Coder Coded and we're here to present to you perhaps an idea to beat aviophobia. Fear of flying, that's an unspoken, very serious problem. It's been estimated that about 30% of people feel anxious at some stage when they're flying. And for example here, 15,000 attendees at Slush, 4,500 would feel uncomfortable flying here. And we are targeting and reaching these people in flight. New airplanes. They have Wi-Fi and they are equipped with a web server. When the passengers use their own devices to join the Wi-Fi, they are presented a landing page and we are introducing a new content category to this in-flight portal that the users, passengers can use the apps with their own devices. During the 48-hour hackathon, we built four different web apps that tackle different kind of fears. First one. Can the plane take it? We're going to attach an accelerometer to the web server. And when the plane is experiencing, you can see on the lower left corner, the plane is shaking and the trains are flying. And the passenger can see that everything is normal. The plane has been designed to actually take this. So the people who are afraid that the plane will break apart in flight can probably find relief from this kind of app. Next one. Mood meter. It might be embarrassing to actually admit to the cabin crew that you're afraid. Whether it's aviophobia or whether it's another passenger, for example, who's causing the anxiety. So we are providing you a mood meter, a very simple app, a slider, so to say, here, seen on the left side, that you can use to communicate with the cabin crew. And on the right side, you can see the cabin crew view where they can see this heat map of seats where when they see a lot of red coming in some parts of the plane, they can react in a discreet manner. So you don't have to shout out over people that I'm afraid. I think this is a very clever idea. Next one. It sounds funny. There are people who listen to all the sounds that the airplane makes and wonder whether it's normal. We are providing an airplane soundtrack that includes all the normal sounds that the plane makes. So when you're traveling, flying, and you hear different kinds of sounds, you're provided the sounds and the explanations for those sounds. So when you learn, your fear goes away. Fun in the turbulence. Yes, turbulence is something that a lot of people are afraid of. We thought that we want to make it the other way around. Turbulence should be anticipated, weighted. Something fun should happen during the turbulence. So we thought of games that would reward you if there's turbulence. And then we implemented another funny thing. We have a jolly face of a Finnish president wobbling in sync with the bumpy air. And of course, if this doesn't relax you, we also did a highly scientific study at Hack Junction and found out that there's a lot of people who also find this relaxing. Okay, this is Codercoded. Thank you. Well, really cool. Thank you. My wife thanks you. She's afraid of flying. Thank you so much for doing this. Yes, it's the right that you have to choose from. Pick one up and tell us. Aero. Well, thank you very much. First things first, you're going to need something to watch that down with. And second, Finna Finnavian reactor first got together thinking we need to encourage people from all over the world with talent and vision. We need to provide them with the one thing that's often missing. Is that opportunity to make a difference? That opportunity to redefine the next few years of an industry? These guys have shown the way. And these guys, not only did they push the envelope in terms of humor and functionality, but they're showing the airline industry that it is possible to be very, very customer oriented, very traveler oriented, and to create things that are native in-flight experiences. This is exactly what these guys want, because there's so much potential. And the more that onboard connectivity penetrates the industry, the larger the market for these types of experiences is going to grow. So, first of all, a really big hand for the team that won the Kota Kota team. Thank you. And second of all, I know that you guys have been thanked to no end, but we could not get out of here without being fed to Julius' team, Dan, Keke, Rico. Everybody, excuse me. Get up here. Get up here. Every single person. Henny, where are you guys? Come on. These guys have toiled, sweat, cried, bled for all of these massive events. And a lot of the guys are students. And look at what they've done. They've brought a whole bunch of corporations to truly think of the future and to invite the people that can actually make a difference. So, if these guys don't deserve a round of applause, who does? Yeah. Give it up. Lauda. Thank you. Thank you, Fernando. Thanks a lot, guys. Fantastic, guys. Thank you. Oh, more, more, more. You're hitting us hard. Yes. Thanks, man. Thank you guys. Okay. Strike a pose. All of you. Look at that energy. Give it up for these young people. Come on. Very, very cool. No, this is your show. All right. Now take a bow together. One, two, three, and take a bow. Yes. Yes. Give it a big hand. What energy. Thank you, Junction. Awesome. Thank you very much. Okay, now get off the stage, please. Enough already. Thank you. Thank you very much for that. Very good. All right. Ladies and gentlemen, then we're going to start with the last hack. This is also an unbelievable hackathon last weekend. The atmosphere was unbelievable. 500 participants, almost 20 countries involved. And 100 projects were built during a single weekend. Also amazing. All of these four hacks were just amazing. They all happened together, making it the biggest hackathon in Europe. Did I mention that to you before? Isn't that worth an applause one more time? It's amazing. It's amazing when you put your mind to things, what you can achieve. Ladies and gentlemen, from Ultra Hack, what's a really pretty cool thing is that I hear that the people from Ultra Hack can go and have something to drink. Isn't that nice? There's beer and stuff. You can come and pick it up. I was told to tell you that. Yeah, so we had a huge collaboration between, of course, startup students, technology associations, really super companies, and over 50 supporting partners. We're going to start with the 10th hack today on Health Games Track. And this was for the new children's hospital. The track challenge was, how to help children to experience a more enjoyable hospital visit with new technology. It's really stressful for a young person to go into the hospital. So how do you make that less stressful? With outcomes, a happier hospital environment could be created. These guys had a great idea for all children in need of rehabilitation in hospital, had a home, prepared at home. It's big fun and extensive opportunities to scale. Also for adult purposes, who gets a little bit nervous when they go to the hospital. Anybody? It's normal. And these guys are going to help you. And they're called Rihabu. Get up here. Hi, guys. So physical rehabilitation is boring and especially if you're a child. We're here to change that. Rihabu is our motion capturing game that works hand in hand with traditional physiotherapy. It disguises exercises into a fun game. And this can be done with PC and Kinect. With Rihabu, children would actually do what they are taught in physiotherapy. So we got happier kids, faster results and lower costs. Now we are going to show you a video of our demo. Hopefully. So this was exercise for upper back area. And the player must perform the move correct to proceed in the game. The demo was created in only 48 hours during the ulzerhack last weekend. So imagine what we can do if we get more time and more money. This is Buu, our mascot. Buu will guide and encourage players through the game giving voice instructions. So the game is suitable for every age and reading skills are not required. That's right. And right now we have an amazing team and workspace and we are really ready to make Rihabu happen. The finished game will include a huge movement bank, warm up moves and a stretching guide. We created our idea with the new finished children's hospital in mind. And we figured that if the best of the best loves it, then the rest of them are going to like it too. So we want Rihabu to be used in every hospital in the world. And the best part is of course that you can take it home and keep practicing after that. So physical rehabilitation is boring. We want to change that with Rihabu. Rihabu makes faster results, happier kids, lower costs. We have 16 seconds, so say hi to our gang. Thank you. Helsinki Hooligans. Thank you so much. We've got Beka Ladele from the Children's Hospital who wants to give you something. Thank you very much, guys. On behalf of the New Children's Hospital I really want to tell you that we were amazed, inspired and impressed about the level of all the three finalists. The games and apps they could create within 48 hours were great. And we are really looking forward to co-develop the game into real use in the future Children's Hospital. Thank you very much. Thank you, Rihabu. Thank you. Thank you for all those kids you're going to de-stress. And especially a lot of my friends are really stressed about hospitals. Thank you so much. Thank you so much. All right, our next track was a really exciting track. And it was the Smart City and Civic Tech track. Now, two organizations bounded their energies and brains together, the City of Helsinki and Open Knowledge Finland. As we know, Finland is known around the world for its openness, openness of systems. The City of Helsinki is a wonderful example of open technology and open systems that other small companies and big companies can plug into. Two joint forces in this track and it actually was the most popular and competitive in the Ultra Track weekend with 26 highly competitive teams. 26 teams were just in this track and we're going to see the best one coming up on stage in just a second. So the winning team and actually I saw them pitch. I got to tell you personally I think it's one of the best pitches I have heard so far. So I'm really speaking you up now. You were really good over the weekend. Don't disappoint me. You understand me? All right, all right. They brought groundbreaking solutions for citizens to influence. Citizen taking action and saying, hey, with this app I can influence the way my city works, the way my city could work better, how things could be cheaper, how things could be more fun, more useful, more functional. Well, we're going to give it to the butterflies to tell us about this butterfly effect. Yes. Okay, so I come from a city that is located between the border of Mexico and United States. Living there was a chaos. When I was a kid I really wanted to have a magic wand to fix all the problems because I felt that I didn't have any voice in my community. Now a few years ago I moved to Finland and I served in the urban planning board in Tampere. And, you know, Finland is a leader in education. It's the least corrupted country in the world, but still there is a gap between citizens and the city. So I started to think like, how can we enhance the urban planning process? And the answer was just right in front of me. Get the users to participate in the urban planning of their cities. They are the eyes of the city. You are the eyes of the city. So how do we do that? In the one hand we have a very outdated process of urban planning. We have phone calls, meetings, a lot of town hall meetings, et cetera. In the other hand we are living on an era where social media and open data are very important. And you know what's the funny thing about open data? It's like teenage sex. You think that everybody's doing it, but in reality no one is. And this is funny because the smart city industry, it's worth 20 billion dollars. And then we have also 3.7 billion users using mobile apps. So how does this connect? And this is where butterfly effect comes into connection. We want to create... There's a problem with the slides. We want to create a citizen-centered method of crowdsourcing. My slides are going crazy and I'm not even touching them. The citizen-centered method of crowdsourcing. Yeah? Crowdsourcing solutions for a more vibrant, innovative urban environment. So how does it work? In the one hand we have the community and the other hand we have the city of Helsinki. Then the butterfly effect comes in between that and it's the link that leverages open data, social media into a citizen, more participatory democracy. Now let's take Kala Satama. I think that is happening currently in Helsinki. They are building an urban area. They plan to build by 2030, 7000 dwellings, commerce, etc. Very controversial. So instead of waiting 15 years for everything to go on, users can start participating in the urban planning process. So how it works is they take a picture with an app that they already have in their phone, like Instagram. Take what they don't like, hashtag that as your plan, your city. This comes to our platform where people can vote and debate about the projects they have. Now as an architect, the most popular ones go on the top. And as an architect then I know where I want to build. But then I need to know why. And this is why we have created a complementary app. This app is a hub that adds practicality to the user. He can search for my parking near me, vote for proposals in the city. In the back end, we are measuring how the user behaves in the city and how they move through it. And this we provide as insight to our client, which will be able to make educated decisions in the planning of the city. Now our business model is very easy. The butterfly effect creates a free app for the community. The community generates data. With that data we open it for everyone, and provide insights to the city of Helsinki. The city of Helsinki in return provides funding for us. We also have other partners like real estate, tourism offices, urban industry and foundations such as Rockefeller Center and the Gates Foundation. Now we want 250,000 euros and strategic advisors that are as passionate and mission-driven as us. On the first year we want to accomplish 10,000 Instagram users and we want to provide insights to the city of Helsinki by the end of the year. Now how do we pull this off? My team is very international. We come from all over the world and we plan to replicate this in New York City, in Silicon Valley, in Australia. We can replicate this because social media and participatory design are scalable. We will then later provide the feedback from Helsinki City to open data to other cities. Now, if you don't have 250,000 euros but are as passionate and driven to co-invent the city in a more vibrant, innovative idea, start using the hashtag your plan, your city. Thank you. Light on time. Good job. Stay here. Do we have anybody? Yes, do we have a... Could you come on stage, please? He's tried to give you your prize. Come on for the photo op. Center stage, give her a hand one more time. Wasn't that a great, great pitch? Yeah, thank you. You want to say something? Yeah, so hi, my name is Tim. I'm from the Open Knowledge Finland. We did the track together with the City of Helsinki and the City of Helsinki together with Open Knowledge Finland really appreciate the diversity of the team. We appreciate the passion for learning that you showed over the weekend and we appreciate the use of open democracy. Use of open data for open democracy. So we are together with the City of Helsinki fans of you right now. Thank you. Participatory democracy. That was a really cool term. Thank you so much. Give them both a hand. Thank you so much. How many of you went to see or saw the Nieminen federer game on TV or went to see the game this week? Yeah, it was an amazing tennis match. One of the rare moments in Finland living here, I was stuck in a traffic jam before the game and I got there late. I was so pissed off. I used all the swear words I know in Finnish. God man, there's a traffic jam. I hate who has at least once been stuck in a traffic jam. Well, the next team has a solution for us all for all the cities in the world. This was the mobility as a surterist track by Telia Sinura. It was a dual challenge involving intelligent transport systems and automotive. Basically, what this team has done is brought an approach, a solution to encourage people to use public transportation with bonus points and at the same time create meaningful information and data for better city planning. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome points. Yes. Well, it's really exciting to be up here. My name is Darren and together with my team during UltraHack we developed points. Points is a simple idea to reward citizens that use public transport. The way it works is that whenever you use public transport like buses, trams or you spend time shopping centers you use parking spaces, you earn points that immediately go to your mobile phone and these points can be spent at the favorite retailers or shopping centers in the city center. We were looking at the open data from some cities and this is an example from Tampere. City of Tampere has a plan that nowadays they have 1.2 million transactions in traveling shops and they want to increase it to 2.2 million. 12% of that happens when people use bus and data shows that people that use public transportation spend more time and more money. So increasing that to 30% means more revenue and more green cities. So residents get these points. They immediately come to your phone, there's nothing extra and then you can spend these points at your favorite retailers or collect together with your friends and family. So let's say you have points from stockman that you don't want to use, you send them to your sister and she buys her favorite dress. The next part is creating a three-point incentive. So we have citizens, we have the city, now we need the third to work and that is businesses. Once we have all the incentives, now we take the data that we gather, all the information where people come from, where do they travel, how much they spend and then we give this back to the business and that's how our monetization and where we make the money. So businesses get to know their customers better, better retention, see which locations perform better in which parts and which areas of the city. What we built during ultra hack is right now live on Azure servers. We built a front and back end to do this. We have to summarize, I would like to remind that we have three points of incentive for citizens to spend their points and their favorite retailers get discounts for cities to have more public transportation, greener cities and use that data for better urban planning and for businesses to improve their customer relationship and get more data from how their customers are spending. We get the data, we give the data back and that's how we profit. So right now we're talking to the right people to deploy this in cities like Tampere and others. If you are one of those right people or just want to simply want to talk to us, come talk to us in that corner and we'll be happy to talk to you. Thank you. Very cool, thank you very much and we've got two people to give you your award for this track. Welcome to your friends on stage. We've got Mia Newkord from Taffy and Yone Sintöden from Teljesanara. The floor is yours, take a microphone. Thanks guys. What a brilliant idea to use the points. We all love to have points, don't we? So that's a great idea about using the data the way that you did and I believe that with your app the mobility as a service will be one step closer. Thanks guys. And there's your prize. Give them a big hand ladies and gentlemen. Very, very cool. Yes, congratulations. Very bright, very bright indeed. How many of you have at least once in your life given money to charity? How many of you? Oh you're a good crowd, you're a good crowd. And this next hack is really about how to make charities more interesting, how to embed charities in everyday life. The track was Creative Charity Track by Nenäpäivä. And how do you bring solutions that would make it more fun? Maybe a little bit of humor involved in just say please help us. Humor putting it into people's everyday life and this is exactly what the winner of this track did. They're called Donator. Donator, get over here. Yes. Good evening everybody. We are Donator.io. Four tech guys who want to use their skills to do good. For this we took part in the Creative Charity Track at UltraHack where we created a mobile application for the Nenäpäivä organization. Our application provides businesses and charities a way to join together and enable consumers to effortlessly do good. Charities are looking for new ways to reach more people. We want to help these charities in this and bring donating to the 21st century by using familiar features in social media. Smartphones and other devices are the platform for activating people to effortlessly do good. So how this works is you walk into a shop. Your phone vibrates asking you to check in. As you check in the shop donates the charity. You will also have the ability to match the donation. We have a real time feed where you can see what's going on around you. We also have a leader board to see who has generated the most donations. What we want is a way to enable all charities across the world to use our app for free. And that is something that we need your help with. We'd like to thank Slush, UltraHack, Nenäpäivä and our respective employers for the ability to be here. We are Donator.io. Thank you. Super. Do we have the award? Now there it is. Yes, you, honey, what's going to be your award. And you have your teammates with you. Get on stage, you guys. Give them a big hand. It's the whole team. Charities for the whole world making it easier. You, honey. Yes, on the behalf of Nose Day, Nenä Day, who are currently raising money somewhere to help others. Big thanks to all guys. Impressive 48 hours. As we know the raising money isn't easy. Special thanks because you spent your time even that your normal price is released and you still wanted to put your 48 hour effort and before that, so give these guys special big thanks. Congratulations. Thank you guys. This is close to our hearts. All of us have already once given money to a charity. Our next track is a very interesting one. How many of you have once been in an empty shopping mall? There was nobody there. Has that happened to you? I'm seeing that once in a while. I'm worried about it. How do we make the shopping experience more exciting by using digitalization, like exploding the concept of what it is to shop for the next millennia? That was the challenge of this track called the future retail track by Tieto. Well, these guys had a great time, a great team with an innovative approach. Well, their solution will save us a lot of time, they say, in hassles and stores, making it a lot more enjoyable. Long store displays is our future and they are... Kuno, get over here! You're saving shopping malls. That's fantastic. Good job. Good evening. We are Team Kuno and we are here to solve the world's queuing problems, including yours. So, last week, six days ago, this Kuno didn't exist yet. We asked the users, we thought tomorrow we're going to go to the hackathon and we had no idea what we were going to do. We thought we'd go there with an open mind and we see, so we asked our users, what kind of problems do you have? Turns out, a lot of you have the same problems. Turns out that long queues cause aggravation and waste valuable retail experience time. What we then did was we set out to solve this problem of queuing and we came up with a name and we called it Kuno, deriving from the words, you know, an ancient Roman goddess, queen of the gods, who looked after the women in Rome and the word queue. So, Kuno means essentially no more queues. I would like to see by a show of hands who of you have had this experience of queuing at this event here today, slush. Because we were surprised after we came from UltraHack to see so many queues here. Recognize this? Turns out that even the organization itself was apologizing for the long queues. So, we're solving this. How big is this problem? According to our estimates, the average person stands in line for 17 days in a supermarket alone during a life period of about 50 years. So, what did we do? We designed kind of a game where people unwittingly participate in a game of keeping the queues as short as possible and that includes both the visiting audience as well as the personnel. So, Johan, how does this work technically? Okay, the technical ideas to use CCTVs inside the supermarket to capture footage of the queues. Then we upload this footage to the cloud where we will image recognition to estimate the queue length. This data is then downloaded back into the store where it's displayed inside the store on digital signage. So, we use the existing? Yes, we use the existing infrastructure inside the store. So, no hardware is needed? No new hardware is needed. All right. And here's a quick technical demo. And here's a picture of a queue I found on Google. And I did the image recognition myself and the estimates around 11 people. So, we actually just count the faces? Yeah, that's what I did here. I see. So, this is what it could look like on the store's display. Almost every store has a display with a layout or a blueprint where you could see actually the live footage of the queue length. Imagine having that here at the counters. Could look like this here in the back of the store. But it has tremendous benefits because you could actually help the customer pick at which moment is the right moment to go to the queue. So, you might want to delay the moment until the queues are soft. I don't see any timer here, but I'm out of time. Shit. Oh, sorry. Special thanks to our partners at Tieto. Sorry. Good job. I'm sorry, man. It's the rules. I'm sorry. I can't give you more time. It was fascinating. Thank you very much. Oh, and we have, of course, the Tieto Guru himself to give you a reward. Taneli. Thanks, guys. That's great. We really liked what the team did here, starting with nothing, not even the idea becoming clear yet. And then using these hack methods of asking people to define the problem going after what they identified and then using methods like playing on top of existing infrastructure and just hacking it together over the course of the weekend. That's exactly the kind of stuff that bigger companies should take note of and learn from that. Because there's great wisdom in applying these methods and that's how you change the world by just boldly doing and not stopping for anything. It's been awesome. Thank you, guys. Thank you. Super. Thank you very, very much. All right, I want to take another Gallop poll with you. Thank you, Taneli. Great job. Thank you. So nice seeing you here. How many of you shop at least once a month online? At least once a month. Twice a month. Three times a month. Four times a month. Five times a month. You should stop. That's too much shopping, man. Seriously. I mean, take it easy. I mean, come on. Yeah. Well, this track really tried to find ways in which we can make that entire experience of shopping online a lot more fun, a lot more seamless, a lot more efficient. This track was the next generation of e-com track by Posti. The winning team, and I saw this pitch, I hardly recognized him. He had a cap last time. Now he looks very clean and collect. You look very good. Are you ready? Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the super well-articulated solution by Paki. Hello. My name is Ville and I'm here to tell you about our service concept called Paki, which aims to unify the web shopping experience. Nowadays, the web shops can offer very clean, very beautiful, well-crafted and well-printed experiences, even emotional experiences. But then, during and after the checkout, something happens. The experience falls completely apart and suddenly the consumer who was dealing with the web shop is now forced to deal with shipping and banking companies and communication becomes scattered. Now this is a problem for everyone. All the parties included. For consumers, the experience becomes scattered and frustrating. For web shops, well, the checkout is the worst enemy of conversion and the lack of control over the communication can be a problem with web shops who have very strict brands and tone of voice. And for shipping companies, the communication problems, well, that causes a lot of useless work and unsatisfied customers because the communication just isn't there. But Paki aims to change all that. Now Paki is a service where you create an online profile with web shipping and payment info included, but you put them in just once. You can then use them in multiple web shops. Here we have a prototype of a Paki plugin that takes over the web shop checkout. You log in and all your information is there already. You confirm and basically that's that. And after that, you can follow all your orders. You can follow them in the Paki application, the mobile application. You have all your orders there, the new one pops in. Now here you can inspect what's inside your order and all the status updates it has. What's new here is that the web shop can customize all this. All the images, all the text, all the status updates can be customized by the web shop so the web shop can expand the whole brand to take over the delivery process. And when they actually are ready to deliver, the application asks you where will you be during that time so the packages go through more efficiently. To make all this happen, we also offer an application for the shipping companies who can plan their routes based on the Paki application users and they have a strict and clean access to all the consumer data of the receiver. So, benefits. Well, for consumers the experience becomes more harmonious, more unified and all the communication is in one place. And for the consumers this is free. Of course the standard shipping fees are there, but it's free. Web shops, well, they have a faster and quicker checkout and they have a better communication and they can brand the whole delivery process. For web shops this is commission based so we take a small cut out of every purchase. And shipping companies, well, it's less useless works because they can actually deliver the packages more efficiently and have a straight and clean access to the receiver's information. For them, they can use the application that you saw which is commission, sorry, license based or they can use the free API to track, to integrate this with their own applications and services. That was Paki and if you became interested just find me during the after party. Thank you. Very, very cool. Great job at Paki. Don't go anywhere. We have a prize for you. Don't go anywhere. We are YAKO with the prize. Take the microphone YAKO and tell us how wonderful you thought this was. Hopefully that's what you're going to say. This was the first time anybody was hacking any postal company in the world. So it was great to be part of this. Legally. It's great to be part of the show. We came here, we didn't know really what to expect. We had our new e-commerce cloud platform out there. We saw great progress from several teams. We went on the APIs, what we had. You really thought well through what's the value proposition for the consumer, for the retailer, for us as a logistics vendor. So you were the clear winners. We loved you guys and we really want to work with you going forward to see this happening for the consumers. Thank you. Fantastic, Paki. Take a group picture with YAKO. Get in there and take a decent picture of these guys all together. Viva posti. Viva Paki. Yes, look happier. Yeah, now you look very happy. All right, we're very good. Thank you gentlemen. Thank you very much. Give him a big hand. I really love it when big software companies, this is the world's biggest software company, they tend to be gray and boring. Start getting interested into some really cool stuff like sports. Any sports fans in the room. Any sports fans. Any YOKETIT fans. Oh, a few. Any blues fans. There are a few blues fans. Oh, you have cool fans. Oh, we have a few. Don't let that influence your decision, judge. All right, because the next guy is actually like me. He's a YP fan from Uvascular. I lived, yeah. And this app, this app is a super cool app that makes following sports a lot more and more exciting. Track is called sports and fan experience by SAP. And the winner of this track was a really, really cool company. And I'm not just saying that because they are YP fans. They were really exceptional in the work that they did. The judges tell us that they were extremely committed to executing the challenge throughout the contest. And what they found is a true love of sport and love of hacking. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Dimfi. Yes. Ultra hack. It's so great to be here tonight. My name is Johan Nataskinen and I come from a startup called Binster. We have designed an app for all sports fans called Teamfi. What Teamfi does, it will change the sport world for good. And sorry, the clicker isn't working. Okay, we'll go without the slides. Well, okay, here we go. I'm a huge sport fan myself. And I noticed a problem. All the things I watched from social media and beyond was scattered. I had to get tickets from somewhere else. I had to get all the news from somewhere else. It drove us nuts. And we decided it was time to change that and started creating Teamfi. And now we have designed an app that will make it easy and fun to watch sports again. We have designed this multi-sport app where you can, with one click of a button, follow your favorite teams from different leagues, from different sports, all the way from the highest leagues down to the minor leagues. And for all the moms and dads, it's never been easier to follow how your own little David Beckhams are playing. With one click also, you get to follow your social media channels from your own favorite teams. You can have discussions and chats about those. You have all the stats in a nice and graphic way in our app. Also, if you're attending a game live and you miss a game-changing moment for some reason, and you want to leave it again at home, you can do so. You can do so, man. Yeah, you can do so by checking your highlight reel for the best bits of the games, and you can leave it again. Our business model is based on software as a service, because teams need to understand their fans better, and we offer them new ways to realize what their fans are up to and keep track of what they're doing. We have different toolkits for all the teams to help them to target marketing and get to know their fans better. We're now looking for advisors to join our team and help us create this globally, and if you're the one we are looking for, you can recognize us by these yellow shirts, or you can find us on Twitter at TeamFi. Thank you very much. Super job! Don't move, stay there. Mikke and the team, get over here. Mikke from SAP is going to say a few words. Congratulations, I'm volunteering as an advisor. Hello, okay. Well, folks, I'm really impressed what these guys went about and did. They executed excellently on three things out of which we had wished for two. We wished for consumption of a statistics API from Liga that gave them access to extended stats from Harkki in Finland, and they went about and did that, and then they went about and put the fan in the focus in a way that exceeded the expectations that we were having, and we're cool with that. But then those guys went beyond what we have stated. They went about targeting the global sports market, and targeting that to top 10 sports, they have 8 billion fans, and it's a 1.5 trillion dollar market. So guys, talk about business and fans. You really nailed it. So congratulations on my side, and give them a big hand. TeamFi. Thank you, Mikke. Thank you, team. I'm volunteering as an advisor to you guys. That's a promise. I know international sports really well. I love this stuff. Good for you guys. And our last hack. And then this is a really cool one. Anywhere, anytime, by Nordea. Looking at people's lives and looking at the multiplicity of financial transactions that can happen in everyday life and seeing how we can make these easier. And one transaction that I personally hate is having to buy a new car. Isn't that a really pain in the ass? You have to compare it. These people found a solution to make this a lot easier and very, very, very simply. Their hack in this track was, and the winner of the track story was, Autobuy. Get over here, guys. Tell us how you do it. Yes. Yeah. Tell me, tell me, tell me. Autobuy. The easiest way to buy a car. We are the winners of Nordea's Anywhere and Anytime Challenge at Ultrak. I'd like to start off by telling you the story of Lisa. Lisa is a normal Finnish woman and she is going to buy a car. Actually, Lisa's already found her perfect fit. Price level, etc. is suitable. However, Lisa is unsure will she buy the car or not. First of all, the seller of the car is a private person, not a company. Lisa isn't sure can she trust him. Above all, she wants to validate that this guy really is the owner of the car. Secondly, Lisa knows she will have to go through all the relevant history data of the car in order to make sure there's nothing suspicious with it. Thirdly, Lisa knows there's paperwork associated with buying a car, but she isn't really sure what. She is able to find it out, but actually she sees it as irritating and time-consuming. Now, we've been talking with people and noticed that Lisa is not the only one who faces these issues, and that's why we're creating order buy, the easiest way to buy a car. Order buy is a web platform which automatically guides you through the buying a car process. Order buy takes care of the paperwork, gives you a contract of sales, enables digital signature, digital payment. Here you can choose. One, pay directly. Two, take a loan from Nordea. Last but not least, Order buy automatically does the registration for you to traffic. Now, let's take a look at the demo. Timo, please. Thank you, Robin. Last week at Ulta Rack, we made a demo of what Order buy will look like. And first of all, we just entered her... Could we have a video, please? We just entered the registered number of the car, and then just after the payment... Sorry, there's no video, but I'll run you through. So just right after the payment, we get a nice info on the car. Is it insured? Is it inspected? Is there any problems in the history of the car? And you will be straight warned if there's problems. Like this car failed its inspection two years ago, and you're instantly warned you can talk it through with the seller of the car. Next, you'll just fill in some basic inputs, like the buyer of the car, the seller of the car, the price. And you'll get ready-made sales contact that you'll see just in a moment. As you see, really basic input fears reading. And now you have the sales contract here, ready-made for you, ready to be signed. Now it's a good moment to preview the document, make sure everything's okay, and go ahead and buy that car. You will be guided to sign the document with bank credentials, make the payment, and handle all the necessary paperwork towards traffic. And this is how easy it will be. Thank you, Timo. The easiest way to buy a car will cost 30 euros for everybody globally. We have a comprehensive team. One week ago, we had no idea we would be here. Now we have a place in Nord Stream startup accelerator, we already have a seed investor, and we're pitching at Slush. We are now looking for skilled developers to join our team. Let's go to orderbuy.fi, check out our demo and feel free to contact us. Orderbuy, the easiest way to buy a car. Give him a big hand, ladies and gentlemen. Super, and we got the Nordia, guys. Come on over, guys. Yes! What do you have to say about buying cars so easily now in Nordia? Yeah, it's almost beer time, so let's keep this short. So guys, we had a great weekend. We had a great team, especially we were very delighted to see how you validated your idea with the customers and how open you were for all the feedback you got. We definitely look forward to developing this further with you guys. See you on Monday at office. Welcome to our accelerator program. Fantastic. Thank you, Autobike. Thank you, Nordia. Ladies and gentlemen, that was it. 17 pitches, 17 teams, 18 amazing projects. Who's gonna win? Very exciting. I have no clue, actually. You just shut it for nothing. These guys are deciding. Come on, be rational. What's wrong with you people? Okay, we're gonna give you... Time to think, we're gonna give you about 15, 20 minutes. Why would you do something extremely important? Ladies and gentlemen, we're gonna start awarding the best mobile services in Finland prizes. Who's excited about that? Yes. Who's using at least one Finnish app on their phone? At least one Finnish. Who? Yes. You gotta be proud of that. A lot of great apps being developed in this country. There was an annual competition to find and promote the best new mobile services in this country. Winners are chosen yearly, as you all know, from the great apps that are developed in the Finnish market. Isn't it great to have the disco next door? It's really exciting to have that, man. I love it. Okay, the categories in this, ladies and gentlemen, are e-health, fitness, utility and entertainment, industrial internet, direct carrier calling, or what we call in Finnish, mobili maksu, and then the main category, the big, the beautiful category of this evening prize for the best mobile service in Finland, is the service with the best global potential. All right. The competition is organized by teleforum and the technology schools accompanied by large number of companies. The jury consisted of 10 different industry experts, and the chairman of the jury was minister of communications and traffic, Anni Berner. Today we have a representative from ministry, the ministry of transport and communications, and she is a unit director at the ministry. She is Päivi Antikainen. Terve tuloa. Where are you? Oh, there you are. Olkaa hyvä. Kiitoksia. Hello, everybody. Ability to create new innovative high-level services is one of the cornerstones of the national competitiveness. Those who are able to create user-oriented, easy to use services are the winners in the global competition in the end. The best mobile service competition is a great means to promote and to highlight national mobile services and their creators. I think that it also shows that the Finnish innovation is very much alive and kicking. It shows that the users, the customers have been heard, and it also shows that we are brave enough to aim directly to the global market, and we want to be at the top of the global market. So I wish the best of luck to all the people who took part in this competition. Thank you. Thank you, Päivi, for those opening words. Thank you very much. Give her a big hand, please. Thank you. Kiitoksia. I got it. All right, and we're going to start with the first category. And by the way, this is not a small prize. You're getting up either this super Lumia 950 for the winning team or the G6 Edge from Samsung. Very exciting prizes and plus the honor. Oh, there it is. Thank you. I wanted this. Can I get one? This is such a cool. These are such amazing devices. And the winning company, the winning app gets both of these plus the honor plus the trophy. It's really, really cool. All right, we're going to start with the first category and it's called e-health and fitness. There were 17 candidates in Finland. The top three are the following. Jogaja, Nona, for cancer patients. Jogaja is for yoga practitioners at home. And Sanokylla, Elin, Lwobutukselle, for trans class. Very, very important stuff. And I will ask Anders, stand back to come over here. Where are you? Anders? Here I am. Sorry, I didn't call you in time. I'm so sorry. So can we have the winner from Nona here? It's Nona here. All right, if not then on behalf of the jury, I just want to say that cancer is the biggest problem we have as a humanity. There's 14.2 million people dying from cancer every year. In Finland alone, we have 250,000 people diagnosed with cancer. Nona has made a breakthrough innovation in developing a mobile service. That helps in the patient healthcare and in the dialogue between patient and the hospital. We are very impressed by Nona. And therefore we want to give Nona this award for best mobile service in Finland for health and well-being. Good luck. Thank you Anders, standing back from the IF insurance. Nona doing an amazing. Oh, you're there. We are here. Get over here, get a picture, get in here. You're in the big hand, Nona. Helping people with cancer, ladies and gentlemen. We're standing back from IF insurance company, please. How do you feel? Super excited. We just feel to be here. It's a great honor. The whole team upset our designer, whose wife is giving birth in the hospital, so it's probably excused. We understand that completely. Onneksi alcohol, congratulations. Thank you. Super. Our story, ladies and gentlemen, is infotainment or utility services. There were 66 companies in this category alone. I would like to ask Jose Fernandez from Microsoft to join me on stage, please. Where are you, Jose? Jose from Microsoft. Here, give me a big hand. Jose from Microsoft. Good evening to everyone. And now there were three finalists in this category, Jose. And the finalists were Ehtasku. Could you give me the finalists, please, on the screen? Well, while they come up, I can tell you why this team won. Most of you... We don't know yet who won. Tell me why they won. Okay, but don't tell us who it is yet. Hold on, he's timed it, so we have Ehtasku. So for, you know, E-receives getting rid of your paper receipts. 112, Suomi for the emergency service, and Fult, which was an amazing service for home delivery food. And the winner is... Ehtasku! Tell us why they won. Why this team won? Most of you, for sure, already went through the process. Sometimes quite annoying, you're underling papers to claim your travel expenses, your related business expenses. So with the work this team did, you can get rid of all that by just using your mobile phone. When you do expense, just tick a button and then that's it. No more lost receipts, no more unclaimed expenses, and so easy. Thank you guys, wonderful job. Keep going, your... Well, these are the trophies. Great job. Congratulations, great job. You know, a big, big hat. No more paper receipts, I love this company. I want that app. Thank you so, so much. And then in the third category is entertainment services, 35 companies in this category. And I would like to ask the representative from Sanoma, Handa Johde, to join me on stage. Give her a big hand. All right. Should we look at the finalists together? Let's look at the finalists. And the finalists in these categories were Knomia, social fashion discovery app, then Tunemiö, practicing music app, and then Ventura, the Uber of Travelling app. And the winner is in this category, ladies and gentlemen, Ventura, Uber of Travelling. Hanna, can I ask you, why did we give this prize to this... Why? Yes, Ventura is an application that encourages the travellers to step out of the tourist straps and to explore the new destinations, new people, new experiences. It has a strong social dimension, and it makes it the Uber of Travelling, and also connects the people travelling and the local people in a wholly new way. Congratulations Ventura, pretty well done. And they are off to be photographed, and they will be picking up their devices from the picture point in that direction. Hanna, will you take them there with me? Please follow them. Thank you very much. All right, in the fourth category, ladies and gentlemen, we have industrial internet, internet of things. In this category, it was a tough competition, but with only 13, but great companies in this, in this. And so I would like to ask, you know, Mika, Yakonaaho from IBM. Where are you, Mika? Yes, come on up, give him a big hand from IBM. If anybody knows something about IoT, it's IBM. I would hope so, yes. Indeed, indeed, an amazing company doing a lot of work in this field. So should we take a look at the finalists together? Let's go, yeah. So the finalists were in this category. Number one, so we have... We had Haltion, Thing C1, so developer device for internet of things, the indoor atlas, indoor positioning services, and then Kempe Art, mobile control, mobile welding application. Winner is Indoor Atlas! Woo! Get over here, guys! Why are we giving this to them? The cool thing about the services is based on magnetic positioning, and they made an international breakthrough, especially indoor mapping. And basically where GPS doesn't work, this is where this innovation does. So congratulations. Give it up for your dad! All right, you're off to get the photograph. We can take a photograph here and then a photograph there. Fantastic. So our next category, ladies and gentlemen, congratulations once again, is service utilizing direct carrier billing, which is in plain finish, mobili maksu! We love mobili maksu. And for this I'm going to ask Petri Aaltonen from FICOM to please join me on stage. Give him a big hand from FICOM. Petri, should we take a look at who are your finalists in your category right here? Let's take a look, shall we? So, we are Tori Pistefi, our free online marketplace from Finland as many people know. Feli, the new payment method, especially for bus tickets in Turku, and then NetiAuto, online car classifies, and the winner is, why did we choose them? Feli is the perfect example of a service in which mobili maksu minen is the most natural way to get payment done. Easy and safe for both, end user and the merchants. We are looking forward to see something like this in the Helsinki Metropolian area too. Congratulations! Give it up again! I got it. Yeah, you gotta put it like that. All right. And now ladies and gentlemen, the moment we've all been waiting for in this competition was the service with the best global potential. 27 Finnish companies were battling for this top prize in the best mobile services in Finland. And I'm gonna ask Marco Nurmela from Samsung to join me on stage, please. Marco, please, come on up. Give him a big hand. Samsung, you know that company, don't you? An amazing company. We're gonna look at the finals. Yes, absolutely. Let's take a look. Who were the finalists? We had, oh again, it was Yogaya doing yoga at home. Then Ventura, again an amazing company, and again the Nona, the cancer, the patient treatment. So, the winner is... Look at it. Yeah! There they are, get over there. On eksolko. Congratulations, congratulations. Congratulations. Yeah, this award goes to a forerunner in online and wellbeing applications. It provides a personal guided service, live yoga classes and wellness classes to your own webcam in your homes. We definitely see a big international potential here. And that's what the award goes to you. Congratulations. Thank you so much. That is fantastic. A big hand. Take a picture first, I'll have a question for you. You are our big evening's winner from Finland, the greatest potential, the greatest international potential from your service. Could you please tell us something about the service? I mean, yoga at home, how does that work? It works really well. Show me. Thank you so much for this. It's been so great working with such an innovative concept. And especially with a team that is so passionate about bringing positive change in the people's lives. We launched the app two months ago, and now we have users in over 50 countries. And the biggest credit really goes to them, to our users in all over the world, because with them and with their help, we've been able to develop the service. So thank you. That is super cool. Hey guys, can I take a selfie with you? Absolutely. Looking at the audience? Are you ready? I'm sorry. Now you know my passcode. Don't tell anybody. Are you ready? Get in, get in, get in, get in. Everybody start yelling back there. Closer. Closer. Closer, closer, closer. Yes, thank you very much. Thank you. Congratulations. Yoga at home. 50 countries are ready. Now ladies and gentlemen, it is really the moment we've all been waiting for. We're going to ask the member, Miko, did you want to come and say something for UltraHack? Miko, the super UltraHack man is on stage. Hey, are you excited? UltraHack, are you excited? Yeah, yes. I would like to thank all the UltraHackers, our partners, our great contestants for the amazing competition we had. It was not a competition. It was a community working together, engaged together. So I would like to give big hand to all partners, all contestants, all volunteers, all people involved with the production. Let's give a big hand to UltraHackers. It's an amazing crowd. It's an amazing setting. I would like to ask the volunteers, all the production team, come here on stage. All the volunteers, everybody from UltraHack, get on stage now. Involved with the UltraHack. A family portrait, get out of here. Come on, come on, come on, we need a photo. It was an amazing weekend in UltraHack. All people, you honey, you honey, come on. You honey, get there in the middle, you honey, in the middle. In the middle, on the ground. In the middle, on the ground. Okay, now everybody say UltraHack! Ladies and gentlemen, amazing team, amazing UltraHack. Unbelievable weekends. An unbelievable week for Finland in hacking. Thank you, you are amazing too. Thank you. Now we have a little small piece of business. Who's gonna take this home? Who wants this? Do you want it? Do you want it over there? Anybody? If nobody wants it, I'll keep it for myself. It comes with 20,000 euros tonight for one of the 17 amazing hacks that we've heard tonight. I want you to give a huge round of applause for all 17 pitches. Everybody, weren't they amazing? Amazing! They were just amazing. Unfortunately, the rules of the game is only one team can take this home with 20,000 euros in their pocket. And now we await the announcement of the jury. Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, please join us. Thank you so much. It's been awesome. Thank you very much for arranging this. This is the first time and boy, has it worked well. So thank you very much for joining us. Let's give a big applause for UltraHack. Slash one more time, thank you. And here with me, I have Timo from Inventure. Tim from China all the way. My name is Klaus Mikunilsson from FEBAN. We had a hard decision choosing the winner from all the 17. We had been through the stressful too much pizza and coke, but we love the one. But we have one winner, and we're really glad to announce it. Hopefully the entrepreneurs will hear it from here as well. Ladies and gentlemen, I think it's time to announce the winner. The best marketing name ever, it is the winner of UltraHack 2015 is Slash Smecto! Good job man, good job. The motivation for winner. We had a lot of great opportunities and alternatives and hopefully many of these will become great startup successes. But of course it's the time of getting into coding. Let's share the good word and enjoy the good gamification model of coding. So congratulations, hopefully it will be a big one and have the main stage next year. So congratulations, big applause. All right, let's party it! Let's be an even bigger hack for Helsinki and Finland. Thank you very much, bye bye.