2nd Place at the International oneM2M-Hackathon for Students from UAS Technikum Wien

Drei Personen lächeln in die Kamera auf einer Präsentationsfolie, die die Gewinner des zweiten Preises des OneM2M International Hackathon 2023 ankündigt. Ihr Projekt ist

12 March, 2026

Students at UAS Technikum Wien developed AI-based IoT solutions on an open-source platform as part of an international online hackathon, using the oneM2M standard to solve real-world industrial requirements.

A team of students from the Master’s program in Internet of Things and Intelligent Systems at UAS Technikum Wien took second place at the 5th International oneM2M Hackathon 2025. Alper Ramadan, Benjamin Karic, and Tahir Toy took part in the online competition as part of a course, which ran from October 13 to November 17, 2025, as part of the Mobius International Developer Contest, a global initiative to develop innovative AIoT (Artificial Intelligence of Things) services. The basis was the open source platform Mobius 4, developed by the Korea Electronics Technology Institute (KETI), which is based on the international IoT standard oneM2M.

The goal of the hackathon: to develop AI-supported IoT prototypes

The goal of the hackathon was to develop AI-supported IoT prototypes that address real industrial requirements while ensuring interoperability via oneM2M standards. Students, developers, start-ups, and SMEs worldwide were eligible to participate, even without prior knowledge of oneM2M.

The successful placement shows that students at the University of Applied Sciences Technikum Wien not only understand complex IoT and AI concepts in theory, but can also successfully implement them in an international context. The award ceremony took place on November 27, 2025 in Seoul and online.

Further Information:

5th International oneM2M Hackathon 2025

Master’s program in Internet of Things and Intelligent Systems

Faculty of Electronic Engineering & Entrepreneurship

IoT: UAS Technikum Wien sets new standard for healthy indoor air

Podcast episode: Making the Internet of Things vulnerable (#68 Harald Winkelhofer)

IoT weather station: Networked measurement systems for practical data analysis