Programmers looking to claim the bragging rights and token $5,000 grand prize can register here. The competition’s 3 preliminary rounds and the finals will be held throughout January. Here’s some sample questions from last year’s competition, and a review of the finals.
Sure, many of the world’s best programmers already have comfy jobs or are too busy running startups to compete, so the winner might not be “the best”. Still, this is a great way for independent hackers, and especially those from outside the US, to make a name for themselves. Personally, I think some other tech companies should put up their best talent and try to steal the show from Facebook. Imagine the story if Google or Microsoft won the Hacker Cup.
Though procedures were smoothed out for the finals, Facebook’s first Hacker Cup in 2011 may have done more to hurt the company’s image than help. A Quora thread by Andrew Brown details how competitors weren’t sure of answer submission time limits or format. The Hacker Cup system also buckled under the massive traffic, causing competitors to miss submission deadlines.
Expect Facebook to be better prepared this year, and use the competition to sift out engineering talent from beyond the elite universities where it recruits directly.
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