Bogdanov is intent on applying his programming savvy to improve the delivery of healthcare and education.
by Jordan Chapman
Stanislav Bogdanov 09, M.B.A. 12, M.A. 14, is many things. Hes a self-styled degree collector; hes a co-founder of a technology company, Boglio; hes an educational technologist in Swirbul Library; and hes a hackera really good one.
No, not that kind of hacker. Bogdanovs most recent successes include first- and second-place finishes at the 2013 Android Codefest and InnovateNYP: the First Hackathon for NYC Hospitals. The combined winnings for both placements tally up to $26,000.
Wait, hack-a-what? Spelled and pronounced as one word, a hackathon is a software development competition. Teams vie to create a solutionoften in the form of an appto a particular problem or dilemma. Participants work around the clock to create a working prototype from scratchof their application to present to judges.
Whether an organization or company organizes it, they usually want to solve a problem or generate more creative ideas about their product or services, Bogdanov said. Most hackathons do have a bucket list, or wish list, on what the organizers really want you to focus on.
At the Android Codefest, hackers used Intel developer tools to create applications that addressed pressing social issues faced by the United Nations Foundation. Bogdanov and his team came up with adviceMAMA, an app that would allow expectant mothersparticularly those who dont have easy access to medical careto subscribe to pregnancy tips via text message, or to ask Mobile Alliance for Maternal Action (MAMA) volunteers questions about their pregnancy.
InnovateNYPorganized by NewYork-Presbyterian Hospitalinvited participants to develop solutions for enhancing myNYP, the hospitals online patient portal.
Under the team name Bogney, Bogdanov and his partner, John Kinney, created Intermed, an application to address the isolation and anxiety patients can face while in a hospital setting. The app would allow patients to connect with fellow patients based on interests or conditions, interact with friends and family through social networks and access tools that promote relaxation and meditation.
Though both applications have yet to come to public use, Bogdanov is intent on applying his programming savvy to improve the delivery of healthcare and education. Health and education; nobody has found the best way to improve them or disrupt them using mobile technology, he said.
Through Boglio, Bogdanov and his partner Louis Di Meglio who also attended Adelphihave developed a handful of educational and personal health apps.
Before starting Boglio, Bogdanov developed the library section of Adelphis mobile app, AU2GO, which is now managed by the Universitys Office of Information Technology. Now hes helping to organize Adelphis first hackathon, scheduled for the spring of 2015.
Adelphis hackathon will invite students to develop applications that improve their educational experience by enhancing the services already provided in Swirbul Library. The library is a specific area of education that is changing a lot right now when it comes to its role in泭academia, Bogdanov said. Its notoriously the area [of education] that changes the slowest名ere looking for creative new ideas on how mobile technology can be used to improve our services.
The best part? Anyone can get involved. After attending a lot of hackathons, Ive become acquainted with quite a lot of tools that allow people who dont know how to program to visually put together a mobile application, he said. Most of the people that attend hackathons have no experience, they just have ideas.
In this way, Bogdanov finds hackathons even more effective than traditional programming courses because they involve hands-on learning, creative problem solving and collaboration.
I think one of the biggest trends in the field is the ubiquitousness of it all, Bogdanov told blogger Wendy Boswell in an interview earlier this year after adviceMAMA won the Android Codefest. It is truly inspiring that anyone with enough determination could pick up some tools, learn a language and develop a killer application.
For further information, please contact:
Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director泭
p 516.237.8634
e twilson@adelphi.edu