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by jamesgagan 5228 days ago
As well, I'm pretty sure a lot of the "hacks" you see come out of hackathons are actually projects that were well underway before the event.
2 comments

That is a common type of hackathon, and usually the more enjoyable. Going from zero to something cool is fine, but joining up with an open source project for a few days and fixing problems and adding features can be a lot more rewarding, and a lot more useful.
This is commonly known as cheating. I'm fairly confident it doesn't happen very much.
>This is commonly known as cheating

I agree, I don't like to bring in existing code. Once I saw a friend of mine do (very obviously), still the jury was so impressed that they awarded him $25k in advertising for his bootstrapped startup. That moment I wished I had done the same thing:)

I'm pretty sure you're talking about some game, not hackathons.
Most of those I attend are aimed at competing over what you can create in x hours. If you've spent a week beforehand building it to present then it is essentially cheating. So yes, it is really a game.
Surely, it's hard to draw the line, what if you've written a similar thing before? or spent weeks coding in your head before hand?