Skip to main content
  • New RFC Editor website is live

    Today we are launching the new rfc-editor.org website, the most visible part of a comprehensive overhaul of the tools that support editing and publishing RFCs.

    20 May 2026
  • IETF 125 Highlights

    More than 1500 participants gathered in Shenzhen and online for the IETF 125 meeting 14-20 March 2026 for more than 100 working sessions, an IETF Hackathon, and more.

    19 May 2026
  • Report from the 2026 RPC Retreat

    The RFC Production Center (RPC) retreat was a two-day strategic planning session taking place the week of April 20 that gathered the entire RPC team and IETF Administration senior staff.

    18 May 2026
  • A new suite of modern tools coming for editing and publishing RFCs

    After a number of years of work, the initial rollout of a modern suite of tools for editing and publishing RFCs, including an entirely new rfc-editor.org website, will take place in May 2026.

    12 May 2026
  • IETF Snapshot 2025

    Want to catch up on IETF activity in 2025? How many RFCs were published? How many Internet-Drafts were submitted? How many Working Groups were chartered or concluded? The latest edition of the IETF Snapshot provides a recap of IETF activity for the previous year.

    12 May 2026

Filter by topic and date

Filter by topic and date

IETF Hackathon in Chicago

11 Jan 2017

The essence of the IETF is that it is a place for people who both write code and specs.

IETF Hackathon 97
IETF Hackathon 97

The IETF motto is “Running Code and Rough Consensus”. With that in mind, a big part of our work is helping and encouraging for that code writing to happen. This happens at many levels: the IETF Hackathon focuses on open source projects and Internet technology, the CodeSprint is about IETF’s own tools and web services, interoperability events test specific pieces of technology, and so on.

We will be hosting another IETF Hackathon at IETF-98 which will take place in Chicago at the end of March. The Chicago Hackathon will run from Saturday March 25 to Sunday March 26, but will surely have follow-ups during the rest of the week. We will also get to demonstrate some of the results in the Bits-n-Bites later in the week.

So do considering joining this event. The signup page is here. You can keep up to date by subscribing to the Hackathon mailing list.

Hackathon is free to attend and open to the public.

And remember that what you do at these events is up to you. You decide what is the coolest tech thing that you need to implement! So don’t be afraid to add your own project or team!

I’ll say that again: add your own topic to the wiki, and work on it!

See Charles Eckel’s mail and the wiki for the details.

I would also like to offer IETF-98 as a place for various interop and test events. We typically have several at every IETF. Many people travel to the IETF anyway, so it is a convenient place to spend some time testing. Let us know if you are planning to do some testing, we may in some cases also be able to help with rooms, networking, and help publicise your event to other networkers!



Share this page