"What the Hack" is a set of challenge based hackathons that can be hosted in-person or virtually via Microsoft Teams.
Attendees work in squads of 3 to 5 people to solve a series of technical challenges for a given technology or solution scenario. Challenges describe high-level tasks and goals to be accomplished. Challenges are not step-by-step labs.
What The Hack is designed to be a collaborative learning experience. Attendees "learn from" and "share with" each other. Without step-by-step instructions given for the challenges, attendees have to "figure it out" together as a team. This results in greater knowledge retention for the attendees.
The attendee squads are not alone in solving the challenges. Coaches work with each squad to provide guidance for, but not answers to, the challenges. The coaches may also provide lectures and demos to introduce the challenges, as well as review challenge solutions throughout the event.
Would you like to host a What The Hack for your organization? The WTH format and content has been designed for hosting a hack with groups of 5 to 50 people. We welcome anyone to use the content here to host their own WTH event!
See our complete guide on "How To Host A Hack".
What The Hack is community driven. Here are our core principles:
- Anyone can contribute a new hack.
- Anyone can use the content to host their own WTH event.
- Anyone can modify or update a hack as needed.
- Contributing updates back via a pull request is encouraged.
- The content can always be shared with hack attendees (Only do this after the event is over!)
Would you like to contribute to What The Hack? We welcome new hacks and updates to existing hacks! We have developed a process for doing this.
See our What The Hack Contribution Guide to learn about the contribution and review process.
What makes a good hack? We have a guide that helps answer that question!
Hacks can focus on a single technology or focus on a solution scenario that features multiple technologies working together to solve a business problem.
Read our What The Hack Author's Guide for details on how to author a hack. The author's guide contains a set of markdown template files that help you quickly create new hack content that is consistent with the WTH format.
Here is the current list of What The Hack hackathons available in this repository:
- Intro To Kubernetes
- Advanced Kubernetes
- AKS Enterprise-Grade
- Azure Arc Enabled Kubernetes
- Azure Arc enabled servers
- Infrastructure As Code: Bicep
- Infrastructure As Code: ARM & DSC
- Infrastructure As Code: Terraform
- Infrastructure As Code: Ansible
- Azure Front Door
- Advanced Networking
- Azure Networking with Hub & Spoke
- Using BGP Networking for Hybrid Connectivity
- Azure Virtual WAN
- Azure Governance
- Mastering Linux
- Azure Virtual Desktop
- SAP On Azure
- Java on Azure App Service
- Rock, Paper, Scissors, Boom!
- App Modernization
- Microservices In Azure
- Serverless
- Migrating Applications To The Cloud
- IdentityForApps
- Mastering Linux
- FHIR Powered Healthcare
- Traffic Control with Dapr
- Azure Monitoring
- DevOps with GitHub
- DevOps with GitHub Actions
- Azure DevOps
- Open Source DevOps
- MLOps from Scratch
- Mastering Linux
- SQL Modernization and Migration
- OSS Database Migration
- MLOps from Scratch
- IoT Process Control at the Edge
- BI 2 AI
- This Old Data Warehouse
- Modern Data Warehouse - Covid 19
- Do You Even Synapse
- Conversational AI
- Databricks/Intro to ML
- Intro To Azure AI
- Driving Miss Data
- Advanced Networking
- Azure Networking with Hub & Spoke
- Using BGP Networking for Hybrid Connectivity
- Azure Virtual WAN
- Azure Front Door
This repository is licensed under MIT license. More info can be found here.