TrackNet is a campus networking web app built around a simple problem: students go to events, meet people, and then lose the connection right after. They forget names, forget where they met someone, or do not know how to follow up because there is no context left.
The app fixes that by tying people to events. It shows upcoming events, lets users mark attendance, shows who else is going, highlights potential new connections, and keeps a history of previous attended events so users can remember who they met and where it happened.
The product is like nothing else on the market. The goal is to make campus networking easier before an event, during an event, and after an event. That is why the pages are built around event attendance, profile identity, network visibility, and previous event history.
The current prototype includes a login page, a home page, a profile page, a network page, and a previous attended events page. The frontend was built separately from the backend so the team could move fast on design and user flow while backend work continued in parallel. Firebase was used on the backend side for account and data handling.
For a hackathon project, this is the right scope. It is small enough to build, clear enough to demo, and useful enough to justify the idea. The app already shows the full concept in a way that a user can understand quickly.
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