BitView wins Rep. George Latimer’s 2025 Congressional App Challenge in New York’s 16th District
Rep. George Latimer has named Saihajbir Singh, Griffin Chan, and Ishan Gheewala of Ardsley High School as the winners of the 2025 Congressional App Challenge in New York’s 16th District. Their app BitView is a web-based video interview platform that allows users to host real-time, high-quality interviews directly in the browser.
When asked what inspired the creation of BitView, the students said, “We were inspired by how common remote interviews have become—and how complicated most platforms make them. Between sending Zoom links, installing apps, and dealing with awkward interfaces, the process often feels clunky. We wanted to create something smoother. BitView was our answer: a browser-first experience that loads instantly, looks clean, and just works. The idea came from our own experience applying to internships and summer programs, where even simple interviews felt needlessly complex. We wanted to build something recruiters and students like us could use right away with zero friction.”
The 2025 Congressional App Challenge marked another record-setting year for the program. A total of 394 Members of the U.S. House of Representatives hosted App Challenges in their congressional districts, the highest level of participation in the program’s history. More than 13,800 students from across the country participated, submitting over 4,600 original apps focused on real-world challenges ranging from health and accessibility to education, sustainability, and civic engagement.
The Congressional App Challenge is an official initiative of the U.S. House of Representatives that encourages middle school and high school students to learn to code, explore computer science, and build practical technology solutions for their communities. Each participating Member of Congress selects a winning app from their district, and winning teams are invited to showcase their projects to Members of Congress, staff, and industry leaders at the annual #HouseOfCode celebration on Capitol Hill.
The Challenge is proudly bipartisan and reflects a shared commitment to expanding access to STEM education and preparing the next generation of American innovators for the future workforce. The program is a public-private partnership made possible through funding from the Broadcom Foundation, AWS, Infosys Foundation USA, theCoderSchool, Apple, and others.
The 2026 Congressional App Challenge will launch in May, and eligible students can pre-register for the competition now.
