"TechWave" – a New Five-Day Festival for Students

May 9, 2025
Next week (from May 12 till May 16), VILNIUS TECH university will host "TechWave," a festival open to all students of all higher education institutions and Vilnius residents, for five days straight. Participants can expect a variety of activities and game tournaments, a meeting with a famous comedian, all-night fun, and performances by renowned artists. The event organizers promise it will be a fantastic prelude to summer.
 
"We, as students, organized this event thinking about what we ourselves would like. Each day will be different, but all of them will be full of action and good vibes.
 
It's worth coming because it's not just about fun, this festival is an opportunity to be together, relax from lectures, and just have a good time. There are many entertainment options, so each participant will find something interesting at this event," says Danielė Papečkytė, one of the event organizers.
 
An Old Tradition Reimagined
 
"TechWave" is an old tradition revived by the new VILNIUS TECH Student Representation after a decade, previously called "Gediminas Days". This generation of the representation decided to give it a more modern concept, offer more activities, and give it a new name.
 
"When considering the name, we wanted it to reflect the spirit of our university, but also be modern, engaging, and recognizable to everyone, so we came up with "TechWave."
 
Wave symbolizes the beginning of summer – that moment when students finish the course and welcome summer, freedom, and new experiences. The English name was chosen because we aim to involve international students, strengthen community diversity, and create an event where everyone feels at home," says D. Papečkytė.
 
The VILNIUS TECH Student Representation assures that students from other universities and colleges are especially welcome at the festival.
 
"We aim to promote collaboration between different higher education institutions and want to create a broader student community. We believe that such events bring people closer, encourage new acquaintances, and improve the experience," says a representative of the Student Representation.
 
Five Days of Fun
 
The festival will kick off on Monday (May 12th) with an opening ceremony in the courtyard of VILNIUS TECH. In the Student Village, it will be possible to learn about the fields of study offered by the faculties, discover various university clubs, and participate in various activities.
 
This Monday evening will also feature a conversation "Not About Grades" with the famous comedian Evaldas Jasaitis. The Student Representation assures that there will be talk about choices, discoveries, and all the things that somehow disappear amid the rush and deadlines. No pressure and no test after the event!
 
On Tuesday (May 13th), there will be a car orienteering event, which is not a competition, but a night adventure! Tasks, clues, and adventures around the city without a map or GPS – only your team and puzzles to solve along the way. Therefore, this competition is a good opportunity to test yourself and experience fun adventures at night.
 
On Wednesday (May 14th), there will be a great opportunity to move not only for sports enthusiasts but also for dodgeball lovers who simply want to have a good time – there will be exciting competitions, and the winners will be awarded prizes.
Those who like to compete without getting up from their chairs will be able to compete for prizes in the CS2 game tournament.
 
Thursday (May 15th) will be one of the biggest events of VILNIUS TECH University – "Night to unite," which will feature various activities, meetings and discussions, sports and computer games competitions, and a disco.
 
Like any good event, it will end with a powerful concert, so on Friday evening (May 16th), the groups "Black Biceps," "jautì," and the performer Orestas will ignite the fun with their music, making your body dance on its own. Fans of soft and gentle music will be able to sway gently to the songs of the group "Mėlyna."
 
"TechWave is not just an event – it's the result of our year-long work and what unites us all. It is a space where we, as students, can showcase our creativity, energy, and passion. Therefore, we want people who come to feel not only the atmosphere of the event but also our dedication to what we do," says D. Papečkytė.
 
You can follow the event program on the official "TechWave" Instagram page. Registration is required for some events.

Galerija

Related news

New doctoral dissertation
New doctoral dissertation
VILNIUS TECH Library invites you to follow the published new dissertations. The dissertation „Interaction between currency market evolution with monetary policy instruments in the age of digitisation“ („Valiutų rinkos evoliucijos sąveika su monetarinės politikos instrumentais skaitmenizacijos amžiuje“) prepared at VILNIUS TECH by Tomas Pečiuli. The dissertation was prepared in 2020–2026. Scientific consultant – Assoc. Prof. Dr Asta Vasiliauskaitė. The dissertation was defended at the public meeting of the Dissertation Defence Council of the Scientific Field of Economics in the Aula Doctoralis Meeting Hall of Vilnius Gediminas Technical University at 10 a.m. on 10 June 2026. The emergence of decentralised cryptocurrencies has created fundamental challenges for traditional monetary policy systems. Although these digital assets have the potential to increase financial inclusion and efficiency, their volatility and the lack of centralised oversight create systemic risks that cannot be properly managed using classical models. This dissertation presents an integrated hybrid analytical framework designed to quantitatively assess the impact of cryptocurrencies on monetary policy transmission mechanisms, providing policymakers with empirically grounded tools to analyse this evolving financial domain more effectively. The dissertation is divided into three main parts. The First Chapter summarises the theoretical role of cryptocurrencies in modern monetary theory. The Second Chapter presents and substantiates a new methodology that combines machine-learning techniques with advanced econometric modelling, specifically using an Elastic Net machine learning model with ARIMA residuals and MSGARCH specifications to capture regime-dependent behaviour. The Third Chapter empirically validates the framework using data from cryptocurrency markets and central bank policy operations. The empirical results show a significant asymmetric policy transmission effect, with the price of Bitcoin reacting by USD -15,348 to a 1% change in the Federal Reserve interest rate. The analysis also identifies critical volatility thresholds (σ>80%) at which cryptocurrency fluctuations increase inflation risk. These results indicate the growing systemic importance of cryptocurrencies in monetary policy dynamics. The study contributes to the emerging field of digital asset economics. The integrated modelling approach helps overcome the long-standing limitations of analysing nonlinear financial phenomena. Practical applications include real-time financial stability risk monitoring systems and evidence-based guidelines for regulatory interventions. The modular structure of the framework allows for future expansion by incorporating evolving market structures and new digital assets. The dissertation’s results have been presented to the scientific community in eight peer-reviewed publications in scientific journals and conference proceedings. This work provides central banks with essential analytical tools to maintain monetary stability and to promote responsible financial innovation in the digital era. Doctoral dissertation readers can search via VILNIUS TECH Virtual Library.
More
New doctoral dissertation
New doctoral dissertation
VILNIUS TECH Library invites you to follow the published new dissertations. The dissertation „Research and application of machine learning methods for migraine attack prediction“ prepared at VILNIUS TECH by Viroslava Kapustynska. The dissertation was prepared in 2021–2026. Scientific consultant – Prof. Dr Šarūnas Paulikas. The dissertation was defended at the public meeting of the Dissertation Defense Council of the Scientific Field of Electrical and Electronic Engineering in the Aula Doctoralis Meeting Hall of Vilnius Gediminas Technical University at 2 p.m. on 9 June 2026. Migraine is a complex neurological disorder characterized by strong inter- and intra-individual variability, which makes early forecasting difficult using only clinical observations. Wearable biosensors combined with machine learning offer new opportunities to detect subtle physiological changes that may precede migraine attacks and to develop individualized prediction models. This dissertation investigates migraine analysis and next-day prediction using physiological recordings collected under real-life monitoring conditions. Data were obtained with the Empatica Embrace Plus wearable device and include electrodermal activity, pulse rate, skin temperature, and movement-related signals. The analysis focuses on nocturnal recordings, since the night period provides a more stable physiological context with fewer external disturbances. Nights were standardized using sleep-based contextual selection and consistent night-level rules. The experimental framework is organized in two stages. In the first stage, a window-level binary classification task is used as an exploratory methodological analysis to examine how design choices influence model performance. Night recordings are segmented into analysis frames ranging from 5 to 120 minutes, statistical features are extracted, and the influence of signal preprocessing and feature representation is evaluated across several classifier families, including Random Forest, XGBoost, histogram-based gradient boosting, support vector machines, and k-nearest neighbors. In the second stage, the research evaluates next-day migraine prediction based on whole-night recordings. This stage refines the experimental methodology to obtain more reliable estimates of predictive performance under a stricter validation framework. The analysis focuses on the effect of temporal aggregation while comparing the same classifier families under consistent evaluation conditions. The results demonstrate considerable variability across participants in achievable prediction performance and optimal modeling configurations. Shorter analysis frames generally preserve informative short-term physiological changes, whereas longer windows tend to smooth these variations. Signal preprocessing shows a window-dependent effect and does not consistently improve performance. Overall, the results highlight the importance of temporal resolution, rigorous validation, and individualized modeling for wearable-based migraine prediction systems. Doctoral dissertation readers can search via VILNIUS TECH Virtual Library.
More