Seeing AI<\/a> leveraged machine learning, Microsoft Cognitive Services, Azure, and a host of other technologies. This year, seven hack projects sought to add new features to Seeing AI.<\/p>\nSimilarly, my treatment has been developed over 20 years, with numerous patient case studies, sophisticated medical equipment, and an ever-growing pool of professional experience and research.\u00a0 All of this was brought to bear to treat my case, handling the specifics as they arose.<\/p>\n
3. We tenaciously pushed through several setbacks, hardships, and challenges to achieve better results.<\/strong><\/p>\nWhen we talk with hack teams, we ask them \u201cWhat was the hardest challenge that you overcame in your hack?\u201d\u00a0 This often reveals a crucial breakthrough that they had that led to an insight that made the project possible.\u00a0 All hacks take twists and turns as they encounter challenges on their journey, and those are the things that end of being the valuable, defining points of the project.\u00a0 Hacking develops resilience and grit.<\/p>\n
Throughout the course of my treatment, I had several challenges \u2013 such as the weeks of bone pain, blood clots in my lungs, and a leaky chemo bag.\u00a0 It was the support of the team that made this all survivable and manageable, as well as persistent optimism.<\/p>\n
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4. We knew when to call in experts. <\/strong><\/p>\nEpic hacks tend to need skills and capabilities of experts not working directly on the project.\u00a0 In the Garage, we cultivate a team of advisors to share their skills and knowledge to help all projects move forward.\u00a0 We have experts in bot engineering, business model creation, and customer development, to name a few.<\/p>\n
For my treatment, we had a treatment question resolved through outside help.\u00a0 My wife used her social media network to find the NIH expert who had developed my treatment protocol.\u00a0 This cleared up the concern, saving me an additional six weeks of chemotherapy.<\/p>\n
5. We did whatever it took along the way to hit our milestones and reach the desired outcomes.<\/strong><\/p>\nOne of the hallmarks of hacking is to do whatever it takes to pull together a fast and workable solution to construct a proof of concept.\u00a0 It doesn\u2019t need to be elegant; it needs to work.\u00a0 Flexibility and the willingness to pivot to get the job done are critical.<\/p>\n
Throughout my healing, adhoc problem solving and the willingness to be flexible and pitch in was incredibly important. There were times when nurses visited on a holiday, when friends watched my young children so that my wife could visit me in the hospital, and when my mother had the pharmacy change their refrigeration policy on a medication.\u00a0 Whatever it takes.<\/p>\n
6. We supported each other at every step.<\/strong><\/p>\nGreat projects come from supportive teams who are committed to showing up.\u00a0 Sometimes it\u2019s emotional support through tough challenges.\u00a0 Sometimes it\u2019s working through the night to get the data in time.\u00a0 Sometimes it\u2019s making a store run to get necessary supplies or provisions.<\/p>\n
In my case, this showed up when people took my wife out for much-needed respite, in the three times per week when people dropped off meals for my family, when my parents flew 3,000 miles to spend three months with us, and when I received over 100 greeting cards, 1,000s of online messages, and dozens of in-person visits.<\/p>\n
7. This process helped the whole team learn and grow along the way.<\/strong><\/p>\nHand in hand with challenges to a project and trying new things, are the moments of learning.\u00a0 The times when you do something new or work in a new way that will forever change how you work every day.\u00a0 Strangers hacking together often become lifelong friends through overcoming challenges together.<\/p>\n
The cancer journey has changed our resilience, has strengthened our bonds, and given us a new perspective on life.\u00a0 This is in addition to how much we have learned about the medical system, our bodies, and how to take care of ourselves better. I was extremely fortunate in many ways– to be on an understanding team in a company with amazing benefits, to have a cancer that was so treatable, and to have the loving support of so many people through my family and friends.<\/p>\n
While deep in the trenches and experiencing the adrenaline of a hackathon, it is easy to overlook the human capital in favor of getting the code written. Yet we find it is the individual commitment and team cohesion \u2013 people working together effectively \u2013 is what makes the technology greater and the project even more viable. \u00a0And it saved my life.<\/p>\n
Try these seven non-technical ways to develop your teamwork skills and take your hack project to the next level.<\/p>\n
I hope that your hack is as epic as mine.<\/p>\n
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\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/08\/112975_One_Week_Drone_no_graphics.mp4<\/a><\/video><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Last week, I received some of the best news of my life.\u00a0 And the news came at a pretty exciting time.\u00a0 I received the phone call half an hour before the closing ceremony of Microsoft’s 2017 Hackathon, an event that my team puts on.\u00a0 For the Microsoft Garage, a team helping change the way the company works 52 weeks of….<\/span><\/p>\n CONTINUE READING \"Seven hackathon lessons learned from my battle with lymphoma\"<\/span><\/a><\/p>","protected":false},"author":26,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[5,6],"tags":[9],"class_list":["post-3721","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-garage-general","category-hackathons","tag-2017-hackathon"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"Seven hackathon lessons learned from my battle with lymphoma | Microsoft Garage<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n