Zindi’s UmojaHack Africa 2021 to open to all university students across Africa

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Captured at Zindi office on 07 Aug, 2019 by Zindi. Additional information: 1/80, f2.8, iso250 with a EF-M22mm f/2 STM at 22 mm on a Canon EOS M50.
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Zindi has announced it will host the second UmojaHack Africa, a virtual machine learning hackathon, on the weekend of 27 March 2021 on its website www.zindi.africa.

The event will be open to every university in Africa to help them solve real-world problems using machine learning and artificial intelligence, for a chance to win prize money for themselves and their universities.

“The UmojaHack is a unique, first-of-its-kind event, bringing students from across Africa together for one weekend to learn, compete, and have fun,” says Celina Lee, CEO of Zindi. “The talent and dedication of the students is on full display during these hackathons, and it makes one feel very optimistic about the future of data science and AI on the continent.”

The 2021 event builds on a successful year of virtual university hackathons at Zindi. After the first UmojaHack Africa in March attracted more than 1000 university students from 56 African universities in 15 countries, Zindi hosted another 10 country-specific events in Rwanda, Ghana, Senegal, Algeria, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Tunisia, Morocco, Nigeria, and Egypt over the course of the year.

In 2020, 2159 African students participated in a Zindi UmojaHack event, making a total of 10 004 submissions to the Zindi platform to solve 10 real African problems, such as predicting when a client will make a vehicle insurance claim, identifying marine animals to help understand climate change, and identifying positive and negative sentiment in Arabic dialect text.

Zindi events were sponsored by AWS, Google, H2O.ai, InstaDeep, and Microsoft, among others. Zindi also works with partner organisations across the continent such as Data Science Nigeria, IEEE Tunisia Section and Egypt Section, AIOX Labs, and many more.

“What makes this platform amazing is that Zindi is tackling African problems.” Says Lawrence Muthoga, Developer Audience Lead Africa at Microsoft. “As someone who lives and works on the continent, the only thing that will really solve African problems is African solutions. So it’s wondrous to see 1000’s of students get online and take on these challenges, to see the overwhelming reach and the work being done. When we talk about young people changing the future, this is it.”

The UmojaHack events demonstrate the power of platforms and virtual communities like Zindi to leverage the power and passion of a new generation of African data scientists to solve problems and make a difference in Africa through AI.

To participate in UmojaHack Africa 2021, follow Zindi on social media channels to be informed when applications open, and talk to your university lecturers or data club presidents to make sure your university is enrolled.

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