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Google Code Jam was an international programming competition hosted and administered by Google. [2] The competition began in 2003. [ 3 ] The competition consists of a set of algorithmic problems which must be solved in a fixed amount of time.
In 2010, the program was modified into Google Code-in. After the 2014 edition, the Google Melange was replaced by a separate website for Google Code-in. [5] Mauritius, an African country, participated for the first time in 2016, and was noticed for its strong debut [6] and in 2017, produced its first Grand Prize winner. [7]
On 16 August 2013, every Google service went down for five minutes; that is from 22:52 to 22:57 UTC. The outage caused internet traffic to drop forty percent worldwide. [9] Between 23:51 and 23:52 UTC, 50–70% of requests to Google received errors. It has been estimated that the blackout could cost Google around £330,000. [9]
That same month, Europe's top court also upheld a 2017 decision in another antitrust case against Google, where it was ordered to pay a €2.4 billion fine. Advertising is crucial to Google's ...
Google Code Jam: 2014 champion, [31] 2015 champion, [32] 2016 champion, [33] 2017 champion, [34] 2018 champion, [35] 2019 champion, [36] 2020 champion, [37] 2021 6th place [38] and 2022 champion [39] In Round 1B of the 2012 Google Code Jam, he achieved a perfect score in just 54 minutes, 41 seconds from the start of the contest.
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Google Code Jam is not open for Google employees, they go to other competitions like Facebook Hacker Cup; Google has since 2014 a team-based competition called Hash Code, it may be interesting to note it here; Dam-io 17:45, 1 March 2019 (UTC)
TOJam or Toronto Game Jam is an annual game development event held at George Brown College in Toronto, Canada each spring, usually the first weekend in May. The event is named for the common abbreviation for Toronto ("T.O."), and the term for an impromptu performance (" jam "), borrowed from jazz .