Building a Bitcoin Education Platform, Contributing to Open Source, and Surviving a Hackathon
A few months ago, I didn't expect that I'd be spending my days debugging authentication flows, opening pull requests, analyzing backend architectures, and building a Bitcoin education platform during a hackathon. Yet here we are. What started as curiosity about Bitcoin turned into one of the most intense learning experiences I've had as a builder, and honestly, I wouldn't trade it for anything. This is the story of how I joined Hack4Freedom Lagos 2026, helped build BitPath, contributed to open source, discovered OpenCode, and learned that software engineering is often just solving one problem after another until things somehow start working. How I Ended Up Building in Bitcoin My interest in Bitcoin didn't start from price charts or trading. What attracted me was the builder ecosystem around it. I've contributed to open source before, so I already appreciated the value of collaborative software development. But what stood out about Bitcoin was how deeply open source is woven into the culture. In many ecosystems, open source feels like an option. In Bitcoin, it feels like a foundation. Everywhere I looked, people were building in public, contributing to projects, improving documentation, reviewing code, and helping newcomers find their footing. That environment made me want to participate more deeply. When the opportunity came to join the Hack4Freedom Lagos 2026 hackathon, I said yes. The Project: BitPath Our team worked on BitPath, an AI-powered learn-and-earn platform designed to make Bitcoin education more accessible. The idea was simple: Instead of overwhelming learners with technical concepts, BitPath uses conversational learning experiences, AI tutoring, quizzes, progress tracking, and rewards to help users learn Bitcoin and financial literacy in a more engaging way. Our stack looked something like this: Frontend Next.js TypeScript Tailwind CSS Zustand Backend NestJS PostgreSQL Redis Queue processing Additional Services Google OAuth OpenAI APIs Lightning Network