Have an idea for an app, website, dashboard, or simple game? What if you could bring it to life in just a few hours—without needing to code?
Join us for this hands-on AI-powered build session on Saturday, March 15, where you’ll:
✅ Create a live, shareable data dashboard—no programming experience needed
✅ Explore AI agents and learn how they can generate entire applications
✅ Transform your dashboard into an AI-generated web app, website, or game
✅ Experiment with cutting-edge AI models that go beyond ChatGPT
This session is part hackathon, part workshop, designed to help you learn, build, and experiment with AI-driven development tools. Plus, enjoy lunch on us and compete for prizes for the best dashboards, apps, websites, and games! Additionally, we’ll generate impressively realistic videos, show you how to unlock powerful abilities through advanced techniques for ChatGPT and more advanced AI agents, and walk through a few surprising technologies and applications (good, questionable, and bad).
📅 Date: Saturday, March 15
📍 Location: Yukonstruct
⏰ Time: 10:00 – 3:00 (Doors open at 9:30)
Whether you’re a beginner or a tech enthusiast, you’ll leave with a working project and a new understanding of AI’s potential.
Visit Tech Yukon’s website to explore the full lineup of the AI & Data Series!
About the Facilitator – Eugene Chen
Edmonton-based Eugene Chen has spent over a decade in the design and development of data visualization tools, and more recently completed his MSc in Computing Science with a published, Top 3 paper on using AI in puzzle games for IEEE’s AAAI conference on Artificial Intelligence and Interactive Digital Entertainment. He has been exploring the direct role of AI in software development and data visualization, and built a collaborative generative AI platform that uses different AI models in 2024. Eugene’s public work has been shared in media outlets like the New York Times, CBC, NPR, and CTV. He is the Chair of the Canadian Open Data Society and a member of Canada’s Multi-Stakeholder Forum on Open Government. After spending a decade as the CTO of a successful data visualization firm, he has transitioned to contracting on technical management and development work, most recently with Natural Resources Canada and Code for Canada.