NSF and Mozilla Announce Winning Big Ideas for New Applications on a Faster, Smarter Internet of the Future

Mozilla Ignite names brainstorming round winners and opens development rounds.

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Mozilla Ignite names brainstorming round winners and opens development rounds

View video interviews with the Mozilla Foundation Director Mark Surman, ManufacturingHUB.org's George Adams, Director of the US Ignite Partnership Sue Spradley, GENI Project Director Chip Elliott and UCLA's Deborah Estrin.

Today, an open innovation challenge called Mozilla Ignite announced eight winning ideas for innovative applications that offer a glimpse of what the Internet's future might look like--and what the lives of Americans may look like as well.

Funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and hosted by Mozilla, the challenge called for stellar application, or "app," ideas from anywhere in the world that would advance national priorities such as health care, public safety, clean energy and transportation. This brainstorming round received more than 300 submissions examined by 38 expert judges, who awarded the eight winning teams prizes ranging from $1,000 to $5,000.

Hackanooga 2012, Chattanooga's first-ever hackathon, was held on September 14 and 15 2012. Presented by U.S. Ignite and Mozilla, and sponsored by EPB, Chattanooga Area Chamber of Commerce, the National Science Foundation , CO.LAB, Lamp Post Group and Easy Designs, the 48-hour event connected experienced web developers to Chattanooga's unique one-gigabit-per-second Internet speed. Some 80 hackers hailed across the country and overseas to form teams and leverage the power of the Gig to prototype apps that require high bandwidth or use big data. Potential projects have been identified in areas such as education, clean energy, healthcare and public safety. R. Morris, Chattanooga  

Also today, Mozilla Ignite enters the first of three development rounds inviting developers everywhere to make these winning app ideas and any other big ideas a reality.

The Mozilla Ignite Challenge, launched in June, is part of the Administration's US Ignite Initiative, a coordinated effort to spark next generation public sector applications.

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